Waterville woman organizes inaugural Maine Book Festival

Over 100 attended the inaugural Maine Book Festival, in Hallowell. (photo by Jonathan Strieff)

by Jonathan Strieff

More than 20 vendors from all over Maine filled the Stevens Commons lawn, in Hallowell, on Sunday, October 1, for the first Maine Book Festival. Well over 100 attendees circulated among the stalls of local authors, crafters, and book sellers throughout the day-long event in the warm autumn sunshine. Besides the vendors, the event featured book and poetry readings, presentations from varied literary organizations and live music.

The Maine Book Fest was created by Maddie Smith, a 22-year-old Waterville resident who operates The Banned Bookstore, an online and pop-up book store featuring titles that have been banned from schools or faced other forms of censorship. Smith said the idea to celebrate the rich diversity of writers, publishers, and readers in central Maine came from attending a similar festival near Cleveland, Ohio.

The morning began with a welcoming address by Virginia Marriner, the executive director of Literacy Volunteers of Kennebec. Marriner praised the enthusiasm of the event participants before detailing some of the work her group does. For 50 years, the mission of LVK has been to improve reading, writing and literacy skills of adults so each individual may reach their potential.

photo by Jonathan Strieff

Volunteer tutors offer learner-centered guidance for overcoming all kinds of barriers to literacy, from promoting family literacy and early childhood intervention, to working with English as a Second Language learners, adults with learning disabilities, as well as high school equivalency degree coaching. Marriner spoke extensively about the impacts low literacy can have on peoples lives, from poverty rates and employment challenges to increased incidences of incarceration, and encouraged participants to support the children’s programming LVK does to help create lifelong readers.

The group has installed “StoryWalks,” posted pages from children’s books, along popular walking trails in Augusta, Hallowell, and Gardiner, as well as built “little library” free book boxes throughout the city to help increase access to books. LVK will be hosting a children’s book giveaway Trick or Treat event on Saturday, October 28, from 1:30 – 3:30 p.m., at the Lithgow Public Library, in Augusta.

The next presentation was led by three members of Z about creating and maintaining a book club. The three members took turns speaking to both the joys and pleasures of participating in a book club as well as the logistics involved in managing the group. The Lone Pine Book Club meets in person monthly to discuss a selected book. A far greater number of members participating online using the Fable app to share their opinions between in person meetings. Besides the enjoyable discussions, and discovering books one would never otherwise read, the three members agreed the greatest aspect of book club participation was the sense of community built over time with the other members.

When asked, most festival goers included building community as a primary reason for attending the event. Will Neils, of Appleton, portrayed the value of the event in somewhat darker terms.

“I’ve traveled all over this land,” said Neils, “and I’ve never seen the level of belligerent ignorance out in society today. The only antidote to that is knowledge because knowledge is power.”

Jonathan Strieff is a freelance contributor to The Town Line.

Issue for September 28, 2023

Issue for September 28, 2023

Celebrating 35 years of local news

Young man shows that one person can help save lives

The ribbon cutting ceremony held on September 23, 2023, in Palermo, was for a lifesaving resource added into the Recreational Field, on the Turner Ridge Rd. Family, friends, fellow scouts, first responders and law enforcement officers from Palermo and neighboring towns were present to celebrate this vital resource… by Roberta Barnes

Town News

Landowners seek moratorium on power line development

CHINA – The Sept. 25 China select board meeting began with a request from two landowners on the section of Parmenter Hill Road known as Moe’s Mountain. They seek a China moratorium on power line development, like those adopted by Albion and Palermo voters in the hope of influencing the proposed LS power line…

Resident proposes intervener status in LS Power issue

PALERMO – The Palermo Town Council met Thursday, September 21, to finalize the necessary preparations for the special town meeting scheduled for the following day to vote on a proposed transmission line moratorium ordinance…

Select board discusses changes in town operations

VASSALBORO – At their Sept. 21 meeting, Vassalboro select board members debated at length three changes in town operations they hope will benefit residents. One they approved: changed town office hours, effective at the beginning of the next calendar year for a 90-day trial (see box)…

HVAC main topic for school

VASSALBORO – A main discussion topic at the Vassalboro school board’s Sept. 19 meeting was HVAC – heating, ventilation and cooling – with the emphasis on cooling. Vassalboro Community School (VCS) was uncomfortably warm during the September hot spell. Assistant principal Tabitha Brewer said teachers in the top-floor classrooms were invited to move their classes to cooler spaces elsewhere in the building…

Name that film!

Identify the film in which this famous line originated and qualify to win FREE passes to The Maine Film Center, in Waterville: “If you build it, he will come.” Email us at townline@townline.org with subject “Name that film!” Deadline for submission is October 5, 2023…

Webber’s Pond

Webber’s Pond is a comic drawn by an anonymous central Maine resident (click thumbnail to enlarge)…

PHOTO: First day at China Primary School

CHINA – Students in Mrs. Dunn’s class had an amazing first day of school at China Primary School! They got to make crowns to celebrate the occasion, and everyone was smiling at the end of the day…

PHOTO: Football season in full swing

WATERVILLE –Waterville Junior High School running back, Alex Roth, #17 (eighth grader), during a recent game vs. Brunswick, held in Waterville. (photo by Galen Neal, Central Maine Photography)…

Golf Fore Kids’ Sake raises $31K

BELGRADE – Big Brothers Big Sisters of Mid-Maine’s 2023 Golf Fore Kids’ Sake, at Belgrade Lakes, presented by Kennebec Savings Bank, raised over $31,000 on September 1, to support one-to-one youth mentoring in Kennebec Valley…

SNHU announces summer 2023 President’s List

CENTRAL ME – Southern New Hampshire University (SNHU), in Manchester, New Hampshire, announces the following students to the Summer 2023 President’s List…

Ashley Carrier graduates from Shenanhoah Univ.

MADISON – Ashley Carrier, of Madison, was among the 1,143 students who graduated from Shenandoah University, in Winchester, Virginia, during the 2022-23 academic year. Carrier earned a bachelor of science degree in public health…

Local happenings

EVENTS: UVD event rescheduled

OAKLAND – The United Valley Democratic (UVD) Committee ‘End-of Summer’ Event will instead celebrate Autumn on Saturday, October 7, at 327 Stevens Shore Road, in Palermo. It was originally scheduled the day the hurricane passed close to Maine’s coast, when many residents lost their power…

EVENTS: 5th Annual Nosh & Knock Off set

WATERVILLE – The Waterville Public Library is planning to get away with criminal mischief again this October as it hosts Nosh & Knock Off: An Interactive Mystery Event – an evening of mystery and magic at the Waterville Public Library, on Saturday, October 28, 2023! This 5th annual fundraiser will be a live-acted, not-to-be-missed once-in-a-lifetime event!…

EVENTS: KVCOG schedules household hazardous waste pickup dates

KENNEBEC VALLEY — The Kennebec Valley Council of Governments, based in Fairfield, plans to host Household Hazardous Waste Collection Days in October in Kennebec and Somerset counties…

CALENDAR OF EVENTS: Historical Society to hold raffle

VASSALBORO — Vassalboro Historical Society with be holding a fundraising Raffle September 9 – October 8, starting with Vassalboro Days and ending with a Quilt Show weekend. A quilt will be raffled off as well. Over $2,000 worth of prizes donated by businesses and individuals across the Vassalboro community… and many other local events!

Obituaries

SIDNEY – Norman “Norm” F. Poulin, 83, of Sidney, passed away peacefully on Monday, September 18, 2023, at the Androscoggin Hospice House, in Auburn. Norm was born in Sidney on October 11, 1939, the son of the late Alfred and Desange (Bernier) Poulin… and remembering 12 others.

Up and down the Kennebec Valley: Agriculture – Part 4 (new)

KV HISTORY — Continuing with the agricultural theme, this article will move readers north on the west bank of the Kennebec River from Sidney to Waterville and will focus on 19th-century cattle breeders… by Mary Grow

Up and down the Kennebec Valley: Agriculture – Part 3

KV HISTORY — This subseries began last week to talk about some of the central Kennebec Valley’s agricultural pioneers whom Samuel Boardman named in his chapter on agriculture in Henry Kingsbury’s Kennebec County history… by Mary Grow

Up and down the Kennebec Valley: Agriculture – Part 2

KV HISTORY — Last week’s essay was about early farming in the central Kennebec Valley, as reported in local histories, with emphasis on Samuel Boardman’s chapter on agriculture in Henry Kingsbury’s Kennebec County history. This week’s work describes one important farming family and detours to talk about Boardman and another historian who contributed to Kingsbury’s opus… by Mary Grow

Up and down the Kennebec Valley: Agriculture – Part 1

KV HISTORY — Families who settled the central Kennebec Valley in the 1700s were, of necessity, farmers: one of the first actions was to clear enough land to raise food crops, for both people and livestock. Alice Hammond wrote in her history of Sidney, “In the late 18th century, almost every Sidney home would have been a self-sufficient farm, with oxen, dairy cows, sheep, chickens, and steadily expanding fields that provided food for people and livestock…” by Mary Grow

Common Ground: Win a $10 gift certificate!

DEADLINE: Wednesday, October 12, 2023

Identify the people in these three photos, and tell us what they have in common. You could win a $10 gift certificate to Hannaford Supermarket! Email your answer to townline@townline.org or through our Contact page. Include your name and address with your answer. Use “Common Ground” in the subject!

Previous winner: Mary Jane Vigue, Winslow

Town Line Original Columnists

Roland D. HalleeSCORES & OUTDOORS

by Roland D. Hallee | That is the beginning of the popular child’s rhyme about lady bugs. But I’m getting ahead of myself. Many years ago, when our kids were growing up, we did a lot of camping in our popup camper. Every year, after the campgrounds closed, usually on Columbus Day weekend, we would take our “last picnic of the year”…

CRITTER CHATTER

by Jayne Winters | I wasn’t sure what this month’s column would be about, but I needn’t have worried. Don always has a story or two (or more) to tell about the critters and experiences at the Duck Pond Wildlife Care Center…

Peter CatesREVIEW POTPOURRI

by Peter Cates | Soprano Lily Pons (1898-1976) sang at the Metropolitan Opera at least 300 times between 1931 and 1960 and had a knack for using mass media to advance her career…

I’M JUST CURIOUS

by Debbie Walker | Recently I was given a book called Thinking of You, by Molly Hatch. As you flip through the book there are flowers and their meanings pictured. When the flowers along with each type of flower slides up the picture it looks as though they are a bouquet in a plant pot…

FOR YOUR HEALTH

(NAPSI) — Lady Gaga has been living with a silent disease – migraine – for most of her life, having been diagnosed when she was 14 years old. Her migraine attacks were so severe, she was often bedridden for days. She couldn’t read or keep lights on and would have to be alone in a quiet room for hours, or sometimes even days, until the pain subsided. Lady Gaga continued to experience migraine attacks into adulthood and the disease has impacted all aspects of her life…

SNHU announces summer 2023 President’s List

Southern New Hampshire University (SNHU), in Manchester, New Hampshire, announces the following students to the Summer 2023 President’s List.

Talon Mosher, of Winslow, Alisha Barrette, of Skowhegan, Candice Eaton, of Waterville, Alyson Cass, of Waterville, Matthew Bandyk, of Jefferson, David Gerry, of Fairfield, Stormy Wentworth, of Fairfield, and Jacob Colson, of Albion.

Those named to the dean’s list include: Carrielee Harvey, of Waterville, Robert Farrington, of Augusta, and Ashley Parks, of Anson.

The summer terms run from May to August.

FOR YOUR HEALTH: Lady Gaga Wants People with Migraine to Know They Are Not Alone

Lady Gaga

(NAPSI)—Lady Gaga has been living with a silent disease – migraine – for most of her life, having been diagnosed when she was 14 years old. Her migraine attacks were so severe, she was often bedridden for days. She couldn’t read or keep lights on and would have to be alone in a quiet room for hours, or sometimes even days, until the pain subsided. Lady Gaga continued to experience migraine attacks into adulthood and the disease has impacted all aspects of her life.

“By the time I was 25, I was dealing with other medical conditions along with my migraine. The combination of pain from migraines and managing these other conditions had become so difficult that I was barely functional. And the migraines were now much more present. The hardest part about dealing with this change in my life is that it was now not once a month that I was getting migraines, but much more frequently.” This is the first time Lady Gaga has spoken about her experience with migraine, and she hopes that sharing her story will help empower others to be more vocal about their migraine pain. Migraine, which affects nearly 40 million Americans, is considered the second-most disabling condition worldwide.

Lady Gaga spoke to her doctor and began taking Nurtec® ODT (rimegepant) as an acute treatment for migraine. “I’m so grateful to my family, friends and fans for going on this journey with me throughout the years so I can share my story and hopefully it will help more people find the relief they need,” said Lady Gaga. You can learn more about Lady Gaga’s migraine story and Nurtec ODT at nurtec.com/ladygaga.

WHAT IS NURTEC ODT?

Nurtec ODT orally disintegrating tablets is a prescription medicine that is used to treat migraine in adults. It is for the acute treatment of migraine attacks with or without aura and the preventive treatment of episodic migraine. It is not known if Nurtec ODT is safe and effective in children.

IMPORTANT SAFETY INFORMATION

Do not take Nurtec ODT if you are allergic to Nurtec ODT (rimegepant) or any of its ingredients.

Before you take Nurtec ODT, tell your healthcare provider (HCP) about all your medical conditions, including if you:

• have liver problems,
• have kidney problems,
• are pregnant or plan to become pregnant,
• are breastfeeding or plan to breastfeed.

Tell your HCP about all the medicines you take, including prescription and over-the-counter medicines, vitamins, and herbal supplements.

Nurtec ODT may cause serious side effects including allergic reactions, including trouble breathing and rash. This can happen days after you take Nurtec ODT. Call your HCP or get emergency help right away if you have swelling of the face, mouth, tongue, or throat or trouble breathing. This occurred in less than 1% of patients treated with Nurtec ODT.

The most common side effects of Nurtec ODT were nausea (2.7%) and stomach pain/indigestion (2.4%). These are not the only possible side effects of Nurtec ODT. Tell your HCP if you have any side effects.

You are encouraged to report side effects of prescription drugs to the FDA. Visit www.fda.gov/medwatch or call 1-800-FDA-1088 or report side effects to Pfizer at 1-833-4Nurtec.

I’M JUST CURIOUS: Meaningful bouquet

by Debbie Walker

Recently I was given a book called Thinking of You, by Molly Hatch. As you flip through the book there are flowers and their meanings pictured. When the flowers along with each type of flower slides up the picture it looks as though they are a bouquet in a plant pot.

Flowers have always been quite symbolic. It is said they celebrate, commemorate, and communicate beyond words alone. A lot of the meanings involve regions and culture. I’m using the Victorian language for the wisdom of these flowers.

Forget-Me-Nots represent “Cherish Good Memories”. There is a legend in which a knight and his fiancée were picking flowers by the Danube. The knight slipped in the water before he was swept away, he tossed a bouquet to her and shouted “Vergiss Mein Nicht” (forget-me-not}. The flower stands for our innate loyalty and consistency in our lives.

Pansy, it has to do with French for “Thought” and “Think Freely” and in the Victorian floral dictionary it means “You occupy my thoughts”. They also grow from a European wildflower also known as heartsease, Johnny-Jump-Ups and other whimsical names. It is said the pansy reminds us of our individuality .

Poppy – The ancients regarded sleep as a healer and consoler of human nature. Remember this wisdom when you are down and give into sleep, so you wake up with fresh perspective. The poppy represents, “Remember to Rest”.

Dahlias were grown by the Aztecs as an edible crop. The Victorian’s saw the dahlia as a symbol of dignity and elegance. Besides being edible, some are still harvested in Central America for potato-like roots. They say when you see this flower, remember to stand tall and bold, “Never Doubt Your Worth”. There is much more to you than meets the eye.

Hyacinth, the Victorian flower dictionary had many meanings for it but I am coming in for “Practice Self Forgiveness”. Colors could determine games and play, jealousy, sorrow, or forgiveness. Forgive yourself when slip up and adjust your course as you move forward.

Lavendar represents “Seeking Serenity”. Romans used it to scent their baths and homes. After the fall of the Roman Empire washing fell out of favor and became a forever deodorant. The fresh scent and oils became clear for clearing the air and your mind.

Lilac represents pursuing your passion. The blooming reminded the Victorians of the beauty of youth and first love. The message of lilac is never forgetting what captives you in your youth and keep looking for ways to pursue what you love.

Jasmine represents “Be Lovely and Kind”. Robert Tyas in The Sentiment of Flowers reads “There are some persons endowed with a disposition so happy that they seem to be sent into the world to be the bond of society. There is so much grace and ease in their manners that they adapt themselves to every situation. The Jasmine seems as though it had been created to express the quality of amiability. Sometimes we make the strongest impression simply by being accommodating and likeable, Just like Jasmine.

I’m just curious what your favorite flower is. I hope your fall has improved since I left Maine on September 21. It had rained every day I was there. But I am back in Florida now. Have a great week. Contact me with any questions or comments at DebbieWalker@townline.org.

REVIEW POTPOURRI – Soprano: Lily Pons

Lily Pons

Peter Catesby Peter Cates

Lily Pons

Soprano Lily Pons (1898-1976) sang at the Metropolitan Opera at least 300 times between 1931 and 1960 and had a knack for using mass media to advance her career.

My first exposure to her was via a Columbia 45 rpm extended play album that Mother played at home and which went in one ear and out the other, since my opera musical sensibilities were pretty limited during second grade (I did give every record in the house a listen, being a record-holic since the age of two, if not earlier.).

However, in seventh grade, I was developing a love for classical music and was gifted a pile of 78s by a family friend that included her Victor shellac of Caro Nome from Verdi’s Rigoletto and a Columbia Masterworks 78 set featuring 4 Arias from Donizetti’s Daughter of the Regiment.

I played these numerous times and find them generally unsurpassed . Lily Pons sang with exquisite delicacy, her trills and high notes were technically phenomenal and she was quite knowledgeable about the history of the operatic literature.

Evidence of this is the fascinating essay she wrote about the background of the Daughter of the Regiment, the sopranos who performed it in earlier years and its technical challenges, that was included with the 78 set on Columbia.

She recorded numerous sides for Victor Red Seal during the 1930s before signing with Columbia around the time of her marriage to conductor Andre Kostelanetz (1901-1980) in 1938. As her Columbia discs were best sellers, Victor released a set of her earlier records for them in 1943 in the certainly justifiable attempt to capitalize on her success with Columbia and one in which she would also benefit.

The set, Victor Red Seal M-702, consisted of three 12-inch 78s and a 10-inch one, and very fragile; the mix of different lengths by manufacturers even in an album with cardboard insulation around the records themselves was not particularly conducive to the prevention of breakage.

The contents were a combination of arias from operas of Mozart, Rossini, Rimsky-Korsakov, Ambrose Thomas and, of course, Verdi and three semi-classical concert pieces, including a very beautiful Last Rose of Summer.

Operatic high points were an aria from Mozart’s Abduction from the Seraglio, currently my favorite Mozart opera, and duets with baritone Giuseppe De Luca (1876-1950) in Verdi’s Rigoletto and Rossini’s Barber of Seville. The other selections failed to make an impression despite her vocal prowess, especially the Rimsky Le Coq D’Or Hymn to the Sun in which her trills and gentle dynamics failed to communicate the haunting Oriental mystery of that Russian opera aria.

Pons and Kostelanetz divorced in 1958. During the ‘50s and early ‘60s, she made guest appearances on such TV shows as the Ed Sullivan Show and What’s My Line.

Lily Pons died of pancreatic cancer in a Dallas, Texas, hospital in 1976. She was 77.

Legendary saxophonist Charlie Parker once compared the lyrical beauty of fellow musician Johnny Hodges in his own playing of the soprano sax in Duke Ellington’s band to the singing of Lily Pons.

Many of her recordings and broadcasts can be heard on YouTube.

Up and down the Kennebec Valley: Agriculture – Part 4

Milking cows in the 19th century.

by Mary Grow

Cattle

Continuing with the agricultural theme, this article will move readers north on the west bank of the Kennebec River from Sidney to Waterville and will focus on 19th-century cattle breeders.

Samuel Boardman and E. P. Mayo, in their chapters on agriculture in Henry Kingsbury’s Kennebec County history and Rev. Edwin Whittemore’s history of Waterville, respectively, provided lists of Waterville’s pioneer cattle-breeders, partly but not entirely overlapping.

Both historians mentioned Dr. Nathaniel Rogers Boutelle (June 13, 1821 – Nov. 23, 1890). Dr. Boutelle was previously included in this series in the Nov. 24, 2022, article on local graduates of Jefferson Medical College.

Mayo wrote that Boutelle’s father, Hon. Timothy Boutelle, was one of the two men responsible for bringing Ayrshire cattle into the area. (The other was John D. Lang, of Vassalboro.) Nathaniel Boutelle and William Pitt Addison Dillingham (see last week’s article) were among early importers of Jerseys, “now so popular among us.”

Dr. Boutelle was active in town affairs. Chapters in the history of Waterville list him as, in 1839, one of Waterville’s first fire-fighters; in 1866, one of 19 members of the legislatively-chartered Ticonic Water Power and Manufacturing Company that in 1868 oversaw building of the Lockwood dam; and in 1873, among organizers of the Waterville Library Association.

In 1875 he and his wife, Mary (Keely) Boutelle (April 6, 1833 – Feb. 14, 1920), were members of the committee (including several other women) who decided where to locate the Soldiers’ Monument honoring Civil War dead. From 1884 until his death, Boutelle was president of Waterville’s Ticonic National Bank (his father was president of the older Ticonic Bank from 1832 to 1855; in 1902 his son George was president of Ticonic National Bank).

* * * * * *

Availability of Ayrshire and Jersey cattle, plus Devons (introduced by Joseph Percival and his brother) and Durhams (imported by Col. Reuben H. Green or Greene, of Winslow), meant that “many of our farmers of moderate means were able to obtain valuable specimens of their several breeds, and the success of agricultural operations in this vicinity are [sic] largely due to them,” Mayo said.

Joseph Percival (Jan 31, 1813 – Feb. 7, 1898) was the second son of William Percival (1786 – 1859), who came from Massachusetts to Winslow in 1804 and in 1807 moved to Cross Hill, in Vassalboro, where he farmed for the rest of his life. William married Elizabeth “Betsey” Fairfield (Feb. 26, 1785 – Oct. 13, 1858) on Dec. 20, 1805.

Four of William and Betsey’s eight children were boys, all of whom were involved, to some extent, in agriculture. Warren, the youngest (March 27, 1819 – July 19, 1877), stayed in Vassalboro and bred Cotswold sheep, Mayo wrote. Sumner (1805, or c. 1808 – July 23, 1869), Joseph and Homer (March 27, 1816 – Apr 6, 1898) moved north to Waterville.

Two different historians, Mayo (above) and Kingsbury, made references to Joseph “and his brother,” without naming the brother. Kingsbury said Joseph “and his brother” ran a general store from 1835 to 1859; then Joseph went into farming, specializing in breeding Jersey cattle (and Cotswold sheep, Mayo said).

After the Maine legislature incorporated the North Kennebec Agricultural Society on July 1, 1847, Mayo wrote, Joseph Percival was its first treasurer and Sumner Percival was a trustee. Sumner Percival was the society’s second president, and a later president was Joseph Percival (though since no date was given, he could have been a son or nephew of the first treasurer).

The Oct. 16, 1862, issue of The Eastern Mail (found on line at Colby College’s ever-helpful Digital Commons) listed prize-winners at the North Kennebec Agricultural Society’s annual exhibition. Homer Percival’s Devon heifer got second place for dairy cows, and his undescribed cow placed fourth; and in a separate heifer judging, his three-year-old took first place in that age category.

Joseph and Sumner were both in Waterville’s earliest fire department, with Dr. Boutelle. Joseph held many municipal offices, including first selectman for at least one term around 1861, and served three terms as Waterville’s representative to the Maine legislature, in 1850-52 and again in 1861 (the 30th, 31st and 40th sessions).

Sumner and Homer worked primarily as bankers. Sumner was cashier of the Ticonic Bank and later first cashier of the Peoples’ Bank, organized in 1855. Homer succeeded Sumner at Peoples’ Bank in 1859; was the first treasurer of Waterville Savings Bank, organized in May 1869; and when three banks merged to become People’s National Bank in March 1865, he became that bank’s cashier, serving until 1893. His son, J. Foster Percival, succeeded him and held the position when the bicentennial history was finished in 1902.

* * * * * *

In the chapter he wrote on Waterville in the Kennebec County history, Kingsbury credited George Eaton Shores (March 27, 1812 – May 14, 1910) with bringing the first Hereford cattle to the central Kennebec area, working with Hall Burleigh (then of Fairfield, according to Mayo, and later of Vassalboro). Shores is also on Boardman’s list of agricultural pioneers.

Shores, Kingsbury wrote (in 1892), “belongs to a class of men who stand at the very sources of national prosperity, but whose ranks in New England are becoming alarmingly thin—the successful farmer.” Mayo called him “one of the men who has ever been in the front rank of agricultural effort in this section.”

Active enough at 91 to ride in the 1902 centennial parade, he was identified in another chapter in Whittemore’s history as “the oldest citizen who was a native of Waterville.”

Shores was the younger son of James Shores, who in 1809 bought a 200-acre farm in western Waterville (by 1892 partly in Oakland). Kingsbury wrote that James raised his son to be a farmer, and George “liked it, stuck to it, has given it the intelligent, faithful service of a life-time, for which devotion it has given him pleasant occupation, a handsome competence and a vigorous, happy old age.”

George Shores inherited the family farm in 1856. By 1867, Mayo said, he had made it one of the best farms in town; but he left it to move to “the village as it was then called,” buying 160 acres that included Oak Hill.

(Whittemore’s description says Shores bought “most of the land between College and Main streets, from the railroad station to the top of Main street hill.” This information should be helpful to those who remember where the Waterville railroad station used to be, on the east side of College Avenue about where the Mid-Maine Homeless Shelter now stands.)

Shores’ Herefords won many prizes at fairs, Kingsbury and Mayo wrote. He sold one pair of white-faced yearling steers for $300, a sum Kingsbury called “surprising” and Mayo called “astonishing.”

Shores and his first wife, Sophia (Wyman) Shores (April 12, 1810 – Feb. 22, 1855), had seven children, of whom only one, Amasa (1839-1926), was still alive in 1892 and was “a farmer on the old homestead.” (Consumption, or tuberculosis, killed the other children, and Sophia died of the same disease, according to Kingsbury.)

Cattle breeds raised in Central Maine

Ayrshires are dairy cattle, originally from Ayrshire in southwestern Scotland. The first Ayrshires in America came to New England in the 1820s.

Ayrshires

Wikipedia describes Ayrshires as medium-sized; white and red, with the red varying from “a shade of orange to a dark brown”; and capable of producing up to 20,000 pounds of milk a year. The article summarizes information from an Ayrshire Cattle Society paper to say that they are popular because of their “longevity, hardiness, and easy calving.”

The Devon, named after a county in southwestern England, has a more complicated history. An on-line history of Red Devon cattle says Julius Caesar found their ancestors when he invaded Britain in 55 B. C. The article says they “were possibly brought by the Phoenicians, around four hundred years earlier, to trade for Cornish tin.”

A New South Wales (Australia) government website calls the breed “prehistoric and thought to be descended from the original cattle in Britain.”

South Devon

Wikipedia distinguishes American Milking Devons, North Devons and South Devons. The article on American Milking Devons says in 1624 Edward Winslow brought “three heifers and a bull” to the Plymouth Colony. The Australian website says the breed’s “hardiness and practicality” made them a logical import for the colonists.

These animals’ descendants spread along the east coast. In the early 1800s, other British breeds were imported and cross-bred to improve the stock, especially in New England where the breed was concentrated. Devons were used as draft animals and to provide both milk and meat.

Red Shorthorn Durham

Durhams are commonly called Shorthorns. The breed was developed by crossbreeding in Durham county in northeastern England in the late 1700s. An on-line history says brothers named Charles and Robert Colling started by breeding cows named Cherry, Duchess, Strawberry and Old Favourite with a bull named Hubback.

The on-line Encyclopedia Britannica describes breed characteristics as “short horns, blocky conformation, and colour ranging from red, red with white markings, white, or roan resulting from a mixture of red and white hairs.”

The first Durhams imported into the United States came to Virginia in 1783; an on-line source says the breed “became favorites of the pioneer, furnishing meat, milk and power.”

Hereford

The Hereford, yet another red cow with white (in the 1700s and now; in the 1800s, interbreeding produced some that were grey or grey and white), came to America from Herefordshire in England’s West Midlands. One source says the breed probably was “founded on the draught ox descended from the small red cattle of Roman Briton and from a large Welsh breed once numerous along the border of England and Wales.”

Various sources agree that Kentucky politician Henry Clay brought the first three Herefords to the United States in 1817, where they spread rapidly. Herefords are primarily beef cattle.

Jersey

Jerseys are dairy cows valued for their milk, which is high in butterfat and protein. They are fairly small; their coats come in shades of brown, with fawn common.

Originally from the English Channel island of Jersey, and probably descended from imports from Normandy, Jerseys were recognized as a separate breed around 1700, Wikipedia says. Information varies on when Jerseys first came to America. One site says colonists brought them in 1657; three others date the first imports to the 1850s.

Main sources

Kingsbury, Henry D., ed., Illustrated History of Kennebec County Maine 1625-1892 (1892).
Whittemore, Rev. Edwin Carey, Centennial History of Waterville 1802-1902 (1902).

Websites, miscellaneous.

Waterville Railroad Station.

CORRECTION: In this article, the location of Waterville Railroad Station is incorrect. It should have said, the Waterville railroad station was located on what is now an empty lot, on the west side of College Ave., to make room for Colby St. circle where it intersects with Chaplin St., near Burger King. The railroad tracks that cross Chaplin St. are an indication of where the train terminal was located. The locomotive pictured in this 1920s photo, is located where the train tracks cross Chaplin St.

Ashley Carrier graduates from Shenanhoah University

Ashley Carrier, of Madison, was among the 1,143 students who graduated from Shenandoah University, in Winchester, Virginia, during the 2022-23 academic year. Carrier earned a bachelor of science degree in public health.

Palermo resident proposes intervener status in LS Power issue

by Jonathan Strieff

The Palermo Town Council met Thursday, September 21, to finalize the necessary preparations for the special town meeting scheduled for the following day to vote on a proposed transmission line moratorium ordinance. The special meeting was called in response to public concern regarding the LS Power transmission line currently planned to connect the King Pine Wind, in Aroostook County, with regional power substation in Windsor. The board also met with a member of the study committee formed to gather more information about the project from the Public Utilities Commission and from spokespeople for LS Power.

The meeting began with council chairman Ilene McKenny, and council members Bob Kurek and Pam Swift, conferring with the town clerk about the required logistics to have in place ahead of Friday’s meeting. Based on interest expressed on the town’s Facebook page, the council anticipated the meeting could draw up to 80-100 residents and so prepared to host the meeting outside of the town office building.

After verifying the town’s voter list and voting cards were ready to be used, council members reviewed the proper procedural steps for the vote to take place; recitation of the pledge of allegiance, election of a meeting moderator by the council using a secret written ballot, reading of the proposed ordinance, followed by the formal vote. The council paid such careful attention to procedural details to avoid risking the vote being invalidated in a hypothetical legal challenge from LS Power. More than 60 residents turned out for the special town meeting and voted unanimously against the potential power line.

Next, resident Brooke DeLorme provided the council with updates from her ongoing work for the towns study committee on the transmission line project. Since the previous council meeting, DeLorme spoke at length with Harry Lanphear at the PUC and Jason Nivons from LS Power. After voicing frustration with limited documents made available to the public, DeLorme proposed that representatives from Palermo, Windsor, Unity, Albion, and Thorndike act together in applying for “intervener status” in the legal case granting LS Power the right to proceed with the project.

Intervener status would offer affected land owners, “a seat at the negotiating table” where the final decisions about the transmission line route will be made. Intervener status also grants access to over 100 private documents between the PUC and LS Power, include the power purchase agreement and transmission agreement, neither of which have yet been finalized. The council also voted to send notification postcards to more than 60 residents with property along the proposed route who were never contacted by LS Power.

A rally is scheduled for Saturday, October 14, at 11 a.m., at Capitol Park, in Augusta, across the street from the State House.

LEGAL NOTICES for Thursday, September 28, 2023

STATE OF MAINE
PROBATE COURT
COURT ST.,
SKOWHEGAN, ME
SOMERSET, ss
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
18-A MRSA sec. 3-801

The following Personal Representatives have been appointed in the estates noted. The first publication date of this notice September 28, 2023. If you are a creditor of an estate listed below, you must present your claim within four months of the first publication date of this Notice to Creditors by filing a written statement of your claim on a proper form with the Register of Probate of this Court or by delivering or mailing to the Personal Representative listed below at the address published by his name, a written statement of the claim indicating the basis therefore, the name and address of the claimant and the amount claimed or in such other manner as the law may provide. See 18-C M.R.S.A. §3-80.

2023-292- Estate of SCOTT M. LABBE, late of Madison, Maine deceased. Andrew Ketterer, Esq., PO Box 417, Norridgewock, Maine 04957 appointed Personal Representative.

2023-293- Estate of ANTHONY W. STARK, SR., late of North Anson, Maine deceased. Christina Sites, PO Box 646, Norridgewock, Maine 04957 appointed Personal Representative.

2023-295- Estate of JANELLE ANN SAVAGE, late of Anson, Maine deceased. Deborah Savage, 226 Campground Road, Anson, Maine 04958 appointed Personal Representative.

2023-297- Estate of DANA KENNETH DAVIS, late of Bingham, Maine deceased. Dana K. Davis II, 2 Milburn St., Skowhegan, Maine 04976 and Leigh Davis, 2 Milburn St., Skowhegan, Maine 04976 appointed Personal Representatives.

2023-298- Estate of NEWELL B. GRAF SR., late of Skowhegan, Maine deceased. Newell B. Graf Jr., PO Box 3133, Skowhegan, Maine 04976 appointed Personal Representative.

2023-299- Estate of SHIRLEY A. REED, late of Anson, Maine deceased. Robert S. Reed, 63 Sherwood Lane, Vassalboro, Maine 04989 appointed Personal Representative.

2023-301- Estate of SCOTT M. CHAPDELAINE, late of St. Albans, Maine deceased. Kevin and Lori Norris, 317 Webb Ridge Road, Palmyra, Maine 04965 appointed Personal Representatives.

2023-218 – Estate of JAMES LARRY DOIRON, late of Skowhegan, Me deceased. Jamie Edward Doiron, 1195 Anson Road, Starks, Me 04911 appointed Personal Representative.

2023-307- Estate of MARY BETH HALL, late of Brighton Plt., Me deceased. Mark Lee Hall, 694 Brighton Rd., Brighton Plt., Maine 04912 appointed Personal Representative.

2023-308- Estate of NANCY TYLER, late of St. Albans, Maine deceased. Irene E. Alton, 526 Warren Hill Road, Palmyra, Maine 04965 appointed Personal Representative.

2023-209- Estate of VERN L. LEMIEUX, late of St. Albans, Maine deceased. Lance Lemieux, 5 Park St., Wilton, Maine 04294 appointed Personal Representative.

2023-311- Estate of BRION FRED BEANE, late of Moscow, Maine deceased. Roxanne L. McKenzie, 46 Donigan Road, Moscow, Maine 04920 appointed Personal Representative.

2023-312- Estate of WAYNE T. HODGDON, late of Madison, Maine deceased. Lois J. Ouellette, 857 East Madison Rd., Madison, Maine 04950 appointed Personal Representative.

2023-314- Estate of BETTY CHARLES, late of Norridgewock, Maine deceased. Joleen Charles-French, 232 Airport Rd., Norridgewock, Maine 04957 appointed Personal Representative.

2023-315- Estate of PRISCILLA BOUDREAU, late of Skowhegan, Maine deceased. Trisha Boudreau, 196 Abbott Road, Albion, Maine 04910 appointed Personal Representative.

2023-317- Estate of MARY E. QUINT, late of Pittsfield, Maine deceased. Susan M. Quint, 818 Higgins Roads, Pittsfield 04967 appointed Personal Representative.

TO BE PUBLISHED September 28, 2023.

Dated September 25, 2023

/s/ Victoria Hatch,
Register of Probate
(10/5)

SPECIAL PROBATE NOTICE

To All Whom It May Concern

It is hereby ORDERED that notice of the following matter be given to Nicholas Scott Hei by causing a copy of this order to be published once a week, two weeks succesively before November 7, 2023, in The Town Line, a newspaper published in South China, Maine.

Petition for Change of Name (Minor), Estate of Azlan Tryton Hei and Malaki Storm Hei, Docket No. 2023-187 & 2023-188, is pending in the Somerset County Probate Court in which Nicholas Scott Hei is of unknown address, may have an interest.

This matter will be heard at a Probate Court to be held at Somerset County Probate Court, 41 Court St., Skowhegan, ME 04976, on November 7, 2023, at 10:45 a.m., at which time and place Nicholas Scott Hei may then and there appear and be heard if he see cause. You should contact the Court by telephone at 207-474-3322 or write to the Court at Somerset Probate Court, 41 Court St., Skowhegan, ME 04976. Failure to contact the Court of the first publication of this notice will result in a default and substantial loss of rights.

/s/ Robert M. Washburn

Judge of Probate

A true copy of the original

Attest: /s/ Victoria Hatch
Register of Probate
(9/28)