EVENTS: China planning board meeting canceled

by Mary Grow

The China Planning Board meeting and public hearing scheduled for Tuesday evening, Dec. 10, were canceled due to weather conditions.

The two main agenda items were a public hearing and application review for a proposed retail store at 363 Route 3, in South China, and review of the town’s application for an earth-moving permit for work on Town Landing Road, in South China Village.

Board members held a public hearing on the Town Landing Road at their Nov. 26 meeting (see the Dec. 5 issue of The Town Line, p. 2).

The next planning board meeting is scheduled for Tuesday evening, Jan. 14, 2025.

Vassalboro community garden project moves on to next step

Karen Hatch, Vassalboro’s Community Program Director, is excited to announce the completion of AARP Community Gardens Project, Part of the 2024 AARP Community Challenge Grant Program.

This first year four raised beds were built with the help of several volunteers, mostly older adults. Four more will be built in the Spring 2025. These beds are handicapped accessible and are tall enough that one doesn’t have to bend over to tend the garden. The garden beds are located at the Vassalboro Town Office.

Steve Jones, owner of Fieldstone Gardens, in Vassalboro, provided help in determining where to place the garden boxes and also arranged purchasing the soil for the boxes and having the boxes filled. He also donated plants for the boxes.

Two garden benches are placed by the garden area for folks to be able to sit and rest or just enjoy being outside!

The goal of this community garden is to improve the health of the town residents by offering fresh garden produce, combat social isolation of older adults by having them come and socialize with other folks who are gardening here, relieve food insecurities and enhance community connectedness.

Additional garden space will be made for all ages to be able to use to help forge connections and bonds across generations, incomes, races and cultures. In the spring of 2025, more information will be made available as to how to sign up for a garden spot. Priority for the taller raised beds will be given to older adults.

East Village project team talks about traffic control

by Mary Grow

The East Village Project Team, the group working to better manage traffic through East Vassalboro Village, met Dec. 9 to talk about the three-month traffic-calming experiment that ended Nov. 1, how to evaluate it and what else might be done.

The village extends along Route 32 from the China Lake outlet dam, with a boat landing that is heavily used despite limited parking, northward through a mostly-residential district. At its center is the four-way intersection with Bog Road, which runs west past the public library, and South Stanley Hill Road, which runs east around a sharp curve and past the Friends Meeting House.

The team is a response to residents’ complaints about fast traffic that raises safety issues for pedestrians and makes getting out of a driveway a challenge. Speed limits vary from 35 miles an hour on Bog Road to 20 miles an hour around the South Stanley Hill Road curve.

For three months, tall stanchions were set up on all the roads. Most were in sets of three, with a white one on each white line along the side of the road and a yellow one on the center line.

Brian Lajoie, from Vassalboro’s public works department, said a yellow stanchion was hit by a vehicle almost every day, generating many complaints from the drivers who hit them. He used up all spare yellow stanchions during the trial period.

White stanchions were hit less often. Only two needed to be replaced.

Team chairman Holly Weidner said she had talked with many people about their reactions to the stanchions. Almost all said they slowed down the first time they saw them, but not after they got used to them.

Team members have two ways to get data they hope will help them find out whether the stanchions noticeably slowed traffic. One is from small speed warning signs the state Department of Transportation (MDOT) has placed on speed limit signs on Route 32.

These signs notify motorists of their speed and record the speed. Team members have not yet requested data from MDOT. They discussed whether this year’s extensive road construction on Route 32, mostly farther north, had affected traffic patterns enough to make data not typical.

The second evaluation is to come from a survey of town residents and others who drive through East Vassalboro. Weidner shared a draft that asks questions of drivers – did you slow down? – and of residents – did you notice traffic was slower? Others offered suggestions; Weidner plans to prepare a final version.

In addition to fast traffic, parking, especially at the boat landing, is a concern that was briefly addressed by team members. Lajoie said during China Lake bass tournaments, fishers now park at the public works garage on Bog Road and are shuttled to the landing, a system that seems to be working well.

Crosswalks were mentioned as another way to slow traffic. Crosswalks require sidewalks; in 2016, Vassalboro voters refused to contribute $58,600 toward a proposed East Vassalboro sidewalk project. Weidner was open to renewed discussion at a future meeting.

The next East Village Project Team meeting will be scheduled after information from MDOT signs has been received and considered.

Vassalboro planners discuss three applications; store permit still “good”

by Mary Grow

Vassalboro Planning board members discussed three applications on their Dec. 3 agenda: a permit extension for the East Vassalboro village store; a proposed Seaward Mills Road subdivision; and a Brann Road business.

In February 2023, board members approved a permit for Tim and Heather Dutton to reopen the former East Vassalboro Country Store. Since then, the permit has been extended once; now, Heather Dutton said, they need another extension, because of delays in finding contractors who have time to work with them.

Planning board member Paul Mitnik referred to an ordinance provision that says if a substantial start has been made, the permit remains valid without more extensions. A substantial start, he said, is defined as spending at least 30 percent of the total project cost.

Dutton is sure they have done that, buying equipment. Therefore, board members said, the permit is good. They wished the Duttons luck; Mitnik commented that many people are eager for the store to reopen.

Surveyor Adam Ellis, with landowner Jeremy Allen, presented an initial sketch plan for a seven-lot subdivision next to an existing subdivision (from 2001, Ellis said) on Seaward Mills Road, across from Kennebec Land Trust’s property.

The total area is about 15.5 acres, partly field and partly wooded, with no wetlands, Ellis said. Lot sizes will vary from 1.5 to 3 acres. A short interior road is planned.

Board members found that under Vassalboro’s revised subdivision ordinance, which they were using for the first time, submission of the sketch plan should have included notice to abutting landowners. Ellis had not known that requirement was his responsibility. The board therefore could not act Dec. 3.

Members debated whether the ordinance’s three-step application process – sketch plan, preliminary application and final application – requires three separate meetings. They decided if they approve a sketch plan at their January 2025 meeting, they can immediately begin review of the preliminary application, if Ellis has submitted it in time.

Codes officer Eric Currie gave Ellis a copy of the updated subdivision ordinance. Mitnik, calling it “cumbersome,” pointed out the four-page list of required information for the final application.

The third topic Dec. 3 was an application from R. L. Mercantile and Trading Post, at 334 Brann Road, to operate a retail store. Currie said he told the owner(s) to come to the planning board meeting to discuss the application; no representative was there.

A Brann Road resident attended to present neighborhood concerns, mostly about increased traffic on a narrow, residential road with a 35-mile-an-hour speed limit. Board members had other concerns and questions.

The application was tabled to the board’s Jan. 7, 2025, meeting.

Give Us Your Best Shot! for Thursday, December 12, 2024

To submit a photo for this section, please visit our contact page or email us at townline@townline.org!

CARDINAL IN A TREE: Joan Austin, of China, snapped this photo of a male cardinal in a tree behind her home.

OCTOBER COLORS: Emily Poulin, of China, captured the turning foliage last October.

REFLECTIONS: Gary Mazoki, of Palermo, photographed the northern lights last August.

Area combat veterans to benefit from sisters’ handi-work

Thirty-five combat veterans and their families will enjoy the efforts from talented sisters Angeline LeHay, of Albion, and Nancy Lessard, of Jackman, shown here with Travis Mills. Each week, nearly every week of the year, combat veterans and their families enjoy a break at the retreat in Mount Vernon set up by the Travis Mills Foundation. (contributed photo)

Thirty-five combat veterans and their families will enjoy the efforts from talented sisters Angeline LeHay, of Albion, and Nancy Lessard, of Jackman.

The Travis Mills Foundation provides an environment for post-9/11 recalibrated veterans and their families to enjoy peace and tranquility amidst some of the most incredible scenery that Maine has to offer. They have provided this respite for approximately 2,000 families from across the nation with no cost to the veteran or their family.

Meanwhile, Nancy and her sister Angeline have been busy throughout the year crocheting beautiful afghans that fit most twin-sized beds. This year, the 35 afghans they made will be given by the Travis Mills Foundation to the families and veterans who visit the retreat.

On December 2, they were given a tour of the foundation by Volunteer Coordinator John Romac and were thanked for their efforts by Travis himself. Born and raised in Vassar, Michigan, United States Army Staff Sergeant (Ret.) Travis Mills, of the 82nd Airborne, is a recalibrated veteran, motivational speaker, actor, author and an advocate for veterans and amputees. In addition to being the founder of the Travis Mills Foundation, Travis also serves as the president of the board of directors.

Romac said the afghans would make a wonderful gift to the veterans and families who take part in programs at the Mount Vernon retreat.

Inaugural Thanksgiving dinner at SCCC well attended

South China Community Church (SCCC) served about 55 people at its first free Community Thanksgiving Dinner on November 28. Photo by Jayne Winters

by Jayne Winters

South China Community Church (SCCC) served about 55 people at its first free Community Thanksgiving Dinner on November 28. While SCCC is known for its monthly Blessed Breakfasts and various dinner and soup fundraisers throughout the year, this was the first time its members provided a holiday meal.

The idea was discussed at the September Church Council meeting after a new Sunday service attendee asked if SCCC offered Thanksgiving dinner for people who are alone on the holiday, away from family or simply don’t have the energy or means to make dinner for their small families. Council members voted unanimously to do it and with Debbie Stowe taking the lead, church members enthusiastically got busy!

Dining room set-up and food preparations began Wednesday morning; kitchen workers returned early Thursday to finish cooking, carving, setting tables, slicing pies, etc. Following Pastor Paul Harwath’s opening prayer, folks thoroughly enjoyed their meal. The menu included turkey, ham, stuffing, gravy, mashed potato, squash, pearl onions and other veggies, as well as cranberry sauces, homemade rolls, ambrosia, cucumber salad, corn bread, homemade pies and beverages. In addition to the wonderful cooks, there were food and beverage servers, clean-up crews, and, of course, dishwashers!

Many thanks to everyone who helped make this dinner such a success. Donations of food and gift certificates came from Hannaford, Tobey’s, Sam’s Club, Shaw’s, Walmart, and countless church and community members. A free will offering that totaled $236 will be used to help purchase gifts for three families SCCC is sponsoring this Christmas – thank you so much for your generosity!

SCCC’s first Thanks­giving dinner went very well and the church plans to do it again next year. Leftovers were taken to the Bread of Life Ministries, in Augusta, for distribution to two local food pantries. We have much to be thankful for, indeed.

Issue for December 5, 2024

Issue for December 5, 2024

Celebrating 36 years of local news

PHOTOS: Parade of Lights: Another spectacular event

The Parade of Lights, in downtown Waterville, kicked off the holiday season on November 30 (Photos by Galen Neal, Central Maine Photography)…

Town News

Planners hear residents’ concerns to South China boat landing upgrades

CHINA – The China Planning Board’s Nov. 26 meeting included public hearings on two applications. The first, on the long-discussed document storage vault to be attached to the southeast end of the town office building, was short, and was followed by approval later in the meeting…

Select board hears proposal for street radio installations

CHINA – China select board members’ main topic at their Dec. 2 meeting was a proposal by Tom Kroh, Regional Director, Site Acquisition and Deployment, for Ubicquia, Inc., based in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. His company would like to contract with the town to attach street radios to town streetlights, to improve residents’ telephone and internet service…

COMMUNITY COMMENTARY: Golden Agers seniors group continues to grow, room for more

CHINA – The first meeting of the China Area Seniors, a/k/a “Golden Agers”, was held on May 4, 2022, with 10 folks attending. We now have 67 names on our weekly sign-up sheet. Our weekly attendance ranges from the high 20s to low 30s. We still have room for you!… by Sheldon Goodine

Area scouts take part in Veterans Day parade

CENTRAL ME – On November 11, 2024, Scouts in Cub Scout Pack #410 and Troop #410 joined Scouts from Augusta Troop #603, Windsor Pack #609, and Winslow Troop #433, in marching in the Waterville Veterans Day Parade to honor and thank all veterans but specifically those from our Central Maine/Kennebec Valley Region…

Jeffery Flye honored by UBM

CENTRAL ME – Shawn Nava, President of United Bikers of Maine, along with other members of U.B.M presented a plaque of appreciation to Commander Jeffery Flye and American Legion Post #51 for help and support of their organization…

Garden Gives Back – In Color!

PALERMO – Blazing orange tomatoes, purple cabbage, golden and purple beans and snap peas decorated the plates of some 70 families who came to the Palermo Food Pantry this growing season. These delicious and nutritious veggies are just some of the exceptional offerings from the Palermo Community Garden…

Vassalboro Legion gathering personal care products for VA Veterans Home

VASSALBORO – During the holiday season for the last three years, members of American Legion Post #126, Vassalboro, gathered personal care products, puzzle books, and snacks for veterans at Togus Veterans Home, in Augusta. With the support of various organizations and individuals this has been an amazing display of generosity and thanks to our veterans…

Vassalboro Community School first quarter honor roll

VASSALBORO – List of honor roll students at Vassalboro Community School…

Danica Serdjenian elected Phi Kappa Phi

WATERVILLE – Danica Serdjenian, of Water­ville, was recently elected to membership into The Honor Society of Phi Kappa Phi, the nation’s oldest and most selective all-discipline collegiate honor society, at University of Rhode Island…

POETRY CORNER: Holiday Nights

A holiday poem by Connie Hartley…

The Remembrance Tree

Help us decorate the tree and at the same time remember loved ones. For only $10 a ball, you can commemorate love ones who have passed!

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: “I’ll get you, my pretty, and your little dog, too.” Email us at townline@townline.org with subject “Name that film!” Deadline for submission is January 9, 2025.

Local happenings

EVENTS: Maine-ly Harmony presents Christmas concert

GARDINER – Join the Maine-ly Harmony Chorus Sunday, December 8, at 2 p.m., at the Highland Avenue United Methodist Church, 35 Highland Avenue, Gardiner, for the Songs of the Season – your favorite Christmas songs, including a silent auction, refreshments and a special appearance from Jolly Ole St. Nick! A donation of $15 is accepted at the door…

EVENTS: Yummy, Ready-to-Be-Baked turkey pies coming Dec. 7

WINSLOW – It’s one of Winslow’s most beloved holiday traditions! On Saturday, December 7, from noon to 3 p.m., Winslow Congregational Church (12 Lithgow Street) will be offering over 400 incredibly yummy, ready-to-be-baked turkey pies for sale. The cost is $15 per pie (2 for $25), with all proceeds going to empower the Christian/humanitarian work of the church, and for building improvements and repairs…

EVENTS: VHS to conduct Christmas through the Ages

VASSALBORO – What a great opportunity to celebrate Christmas through the Ages. This wonderful fundraiser has been used by a variety of Maine historical societies and now the Vassalboro Historical Society is hosting, along with three local homes and two other organizations. Learn about the different times and how they celebrated Christmas…

Obituaries

PALERMO – Georgia “Missy” Averill Watson, 92, a long-time resident of Palermo, passed away on Thursday, November 21, 2024. She was born July 31, 1932, the daughter of James Melvin “Mel” and Marion “Matt” Lucinda Bowmen Haskell. Missy was a Mayflower descendant…

CALENDAR OF EVENTS: Holiday Tea at Palermo Historical Society

PALERMO – The Palermo Historical Society will hold their annual Holiday Tea, at 45 North Palermo Rd., on Saturday, December 7, at 3 p.m. Snow date, Sunday, December 8. Music, fellowship and good cheer. Please their Facebook page: Palermo Historical Society; email Palermohistorical@gmail.com… and many other local events!

Up and Down the Kennebec Valley: William Mathews of Waterville (new)

WATERVILLE HISTORY — As noted last week, this biographical sketch of Professor William Mathews, LL.D. (Doctor of Laws), is another follow-up to an earlier account, the Nov. 21 article on Waterville residents Jeremiah Chaplin and James Hobbs Hanson. Mathews was mentioned as a critic of Rev. Chaplin’s preaching… by Mary Grow

Up and Down the Kennebec Valley: Education in Winslow Schools – Continued

WINSLOW HISTORY — This week’s article was to be a discussion of early schools in Fairfield, continuing the subseries on early education, but again your writer has been distracted. The first diversion, this week, is back to Winslow elementary schools, about which summary information was provided in the Nov. 7 issue… by Mary Grow

Up and Down the Kennebec Valley: Jeremiah Chaplin & James Hanson

CENTRAL ME HISTORY — Instead of moving to the next town, this article will provide abbreviated biographies of two men mentioned in last week’s story of educational development in Waterville… by Mary Grow

Up and Down the Kennebec Valley: Education: Waterville, Winslow high schools

CENTRAL ME HISTORY — Before moving on to 19th-century Winslow and Waterville high schools, your writer will share one more item about Waterville grammar schools. With its ramifications, it was too long for last week’s article… by Mary Grow

Common Ground: Win a $10 gift certificate!

DEADLINE: Wednesday, December 11, 2024

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 | It’s become obvious that the warmer weather is behind us, and winter is patiently waiting in the wings. The other day, after doing some fall chores outside, I watched as squirrels scampered around, up and down trees, and were just plain busy…

Peter CatesREVIEW POTPOURRI

by Peter Cates | For collectors of the early shellac 78s, the 1999 biography, Sound Revolutions by Jerrold Northrop Moore is a fascinating biography of recording pioneer Fred Gaisberg (1873-1951) who, from 1894 when he landed employment at the Berliner Gramophone Company…

FOR YOUR HEALTH

HEALTH | Over 12.5 million Americans are eligible for both Medicare and Medicaid, but many don’t realize this and could be missing out on some valuable benefits…

REVIEW POTPOURRI: Fred Gaisberg

Peter Catesby Peter Cates

Fred Gaisberg

Fred Gaisberg

For collectors of the early shellac 78s, the 1999 biography, Sound Revolutions by Jerrold Northrop Moore is a fascinating biography of recording pioneer Fred Gaisberg (1873-1951) who, from 1894 when he landed employment at the Berliner Gramophone Company (later to become EMI) to his retirement in 1939, would develop a massive catalog of recordings of many of the world’s finest musicians and singers- Caruso, Chaliapin, Heifetz, Rubinstein, Paderewski, Kreisler etcs.

Prior to the 1930s, the artists were mainly recording short selections – operatic arias, piano and violin pieces and single movements from Symphonies and String Quartets.

Then Gaisberg started seeing the potential for complete Symphonies, Concertos, Sonatas if the right artists were matched to the repertoire and the financing provided through advance subscription from interested collectors.

Two notable projects were the Beethoven Society complete Sonatas and Concertos recorded by pianist Artur Schnabel and the Sibelius Society sets of all seven Symphonies of the Finnish composer.

In 1930, Bruno Walter (1876-1962) recommended that Sir Malcolm Sargent (1894-1967) engage Schnabel for a series of concerts in London. Prior to that, Schnabel was known mainly as a highly respected teacher at a Berlin Music School.

The pianist achieved success immediately and acquired a huge following as an interpreter of Beethoven’s 32 Sonatas and five Concertos.

A large number of Schnabel 78s and LP reissues here at the house reveal a pianist who played those Beethoven works like no other pianist, no matter how gifted otherwise. The sense of spirited freedom, rollicking rhythm, rapid playful tempos and an uncanny ability to gauge the emotions behind the notes could be heard in the Emperor Concerto’s first movement where Schnabel’s fingers were dancing on the keyboard.

Gaisberg wrote about his initial encounters with the pianist:

“It was given out that Schnabel would never stoop to recording as he considered it impossible for a mere machine to reproduce the dynamics of his playing faithfully. Therefore, when I interviewed him he was coy, but all the same prepared to put his theory to the test, though he would need a lot of convincing. At long last I was able to overcome all his prejudice. Tempted by a nice fat guarantee, he eventually agreed that it was possible to his ideals with machinery.”

Bruno Walter

The biography is loaded with other anecdotes. The inventor of the flat disc and owner of the Berliner Gramophone Company, Emile Berliner (1851-1929) was recorded around 1894 reciting the Lord’s Prayer and Twinkle, Twinkle Little Star in, as described by Gaisberg, “in his typically broken guttural English!”

Just before the Nazi takeovers of Czechoslovakia and Austria, Gaisberg produced two legendary recordings:

In April 1937, he was in Prague to record the Dvorak Cello Concerto with Pablo Casals (1876-1973) and George Szell (1897-1970) directing the Czech Philharmonic.

January 1938, had Gaisberg in Vienna to record a live concert featuring Bruno Walter conducting the Vienna Philharmonic in Mahler’s 9th Symphony.

A retirement banquet for Gaisberg at London’s Savoy Hotel on April 21, 1939, had an honor roll of almost 70 guests from the musical world including most of the ones listed above. He lived long enough to see the first releases of the LP in 1948 and of the 45 rpm in 1949.

Fred Gaisberg died in his sleep on September 2, 1951.

Up and Down the Kennebec Valley: William Mathews of Waterville

William Mathews

by Mary Grow

As noted last week, this biographical sketch of Professor William Mathews, LL.D. (Doctor of Laws), is another follow-up to an earlier account, the Nov. 21 article on Waterville residents Jeremiah Chaplin and James Hobbs Hanson. Mathews was mentioned as a critic of Rev. Chaplin’s preaching. He also wrote the chapter in Edwin Carey Whittemore’s 1902 Waterville history on Waterville in the 1820s through 1840s, when he was young there.

Turns out Mathews lived a life your writer thought might interest readers, especially those who marvel at how widely 19th-century central Mainers traveled.

As usual, your writer found discrepancies in others’ accounts of his life. She has made her preferred source the biography in Arthur J. Roberts’ chapter on teachers in Whittemore’s history, believing Mathews probably proofread the section about himself.

* * * * * *

An on-line biography of Mathews calls him “an author, editor and sometime college professor.” Henry Kingsbury, in his Kennebec County history, called him a newspaper man. Roberts chose “teacher and author.”

Mathews was born in Waterville, July 28, 1818 (a little over a month after Professor Chaplin came to town). His parents were Simeon and Clymena (Esty) Mathews.

Simeon was born in Gray, Maine, on June 8, 1785, and came to Winslow in 1794 with his father. He became a successful businessman; his son mentioned his boat Eagle that brought supplies up the Kennebec for his stores in “Waterville, Fairfield, Skowhegan, China, and East Vassalborough.” Simeon died in Waterville on Dec. 24, 1841.

Clymena was born in New Hampshire in 1798, FamilySearch says. She and Simeon were married Sept. 30, 1817, in Winslow; she died in Waterville in 1867. William was the oldest and longest-lived of their five sons and one daughter, according to FamilySearch.

Roberts said from the age of nine to the age of 13, William Mathews prepared for college “at the Maine Wesleyan Seminary [founded in 1824 in Kents Hill; now Kents Hill School], and China, Monmouth, Bloomfield [in what is now Skowhegan], and Waterville academies.”

When he was 13, he entered Waterville College, graduating in 1835 at the age of 17.

Henry Prince, in his chapter on the press in Whittemore’s history, wrote that Mathews’ newspaper career began in 1832, when he and Daniel Wing published eight issues of a four-page newspaper called The Watervillonian.

In 1834, Mathews and F. R. Wells edited and Wing printed the North American Galaxy, or Watervillonian Revived. Whittemore, in his summary history of Waterville’s first century, quoted the description: “A semi-monthly journal devoted to Tales, Essays, Music, Biography, Poetry, Anecdotes, etc., besides a great many things that it ain’t devoted to at all.” It ran for four issues.

For the next four years, in Roberts’ version, Mathews studied law “alternately” in Timothy Boutelle’s Waterville office and at Harvard Law School. During this period, Whittemore wrote, he was the “secretary and moving spirit” when the Waterville Lyceum (the town’s second debating society) was organized in 1837. In 1839, he got an LL.B. (Bachelor of Laws) from Harvard College, Roberts said.

During the year 1839-1840, Roberts wrote, Mathews was “in Philadelphia, Baltimore and Washington,” and taught at Amelia Court-house, Virginia. (The present Amelia Court House is about 150 miles from Washington, almost 200 miles from Baltimore and almost 300 miles from Philadelphia.)

Mathews was admitted to the Kennebec Bar in 1840 (or 1838; sources differ) and practiced in Waterville and Benton from the spring of 1841 to 1843. On May 29, 1841, he and Wing began publishing a family newspaper again named The Watervillonian. An on-line source says the paper covered “literature, morals, agriculture, news, etc.”

In 1842 the paper was renamed the Yankee Blade, with Mathews sole proprietor. Lack of support in Waterville led to a move to Gardiner in 1843 and to Boston in 1847.

Prince quoted from a letter Matthews sent him in which Mathews claimed that in 1841, the paper started with 400 subscribers, but “by filling its columns to a large extent with elegant extracts from old and modern English writers, from Chaucer to Carlyle,” he reduced the list to 250 within a year. The first year’s profit was $600.

Mathews sold the paper in 1856 and moved to Chicago (no one explained why). There, an on-line source says, he first edited “a financial weekly” while also “running a department at the Chicago Daily Tribune, contributing to other newspapers and lecturing (topics unspecified).

In 1859 he became the Chicago YMCA librarian. More than one source says he was invited to chair the Department of English and Rhetoric at the University of Chicago, though none explains why. He taught there from 1862 to 1875.

Colby University awarded him his honorary LL.D. in 1868.

In 1873 he published a collection of his Chicago Tribune essays he titled Getting on in the World. This book and its 1874 successor, The Great Conversers and Other Essays, sold so well that he retired from teaching to became a full-time writer, translator and editor. Roberts listed nine of his books.

An on-line introduction to an edition of his Hours with Men and Books claims his fame was undeserved. It begins:

“A wildly popular author, an ivy-league attorney, a university professor and a plagiarist: Mathews made his mark in American literary fame in the late 1800’s because his literary larceny was never discovered. From his training it is no surprise. He was smart and had friends in high places.”

Whittemore contributors said Mathews was back in Waterville in July 1879 for the semi-centennial graduation exercises at Waterville Academy, during which he shared a paper he wrote on the early history of the school.

Both on-line biographies say he moved to Boston in 1880 and continued writing. One adds that between 1880 and 1888 he spent almost three years traveling in Europe.

In addition to contributing a chapter to the 1902 Waterville history, Mathews – described as “of Boston” – is listed as a participant in the 1902 celebration. Whittemore praised his books and wrote, “We hail him as our literary Nestor and are glad that his presence graces this occasion.”

(Nestor was a character in Homer’s Iliad, an elderly warrior who advised the younger men. The Encyclopedia Britannica calls him “sage and pious.” Wikipedia says his advice was respected, though it was not always sound and was accompanied by boasting.)

Roberts said Mathews married three times, listing his wives as in 1845, Mary Elizabeth Dingley, of Winslow; in 1850, Isabella (Isabelle, Isabel) Marshall, of China; and in 1865, Harriet Griggs, of Chicago. No source mentions any children.

On-line sources say Mary Elizabeth was born Oct. 16, 1827, in Winslow. She died in Winslow or Waterville Jan. 28, 1848, “after a lingering illness,” and is buried in Waterville’s Pine Grove cemetery.

Isabella was Isabelle Isaphene Marshall, daughter of prominent China businessman and politician Alfred Marshall and his wife, Lydia Brackett. Isabelle was born March 9, 1826; she and Mathews were married June 15, 1850, and she went to Chicago with him, where she died Oct. 9, 1863, aged 37.

Harriet was born Nov. 9, 1833, in Chicago, died Oct. 6, 1920, in Brookline, Massachusetts, and is buried in Pine Grove Cemetery, according to the website watervillegenealogy.com.

Another on-line source says Mathews was injured in a fall in 1907 and for the last two years of his life “continued his literary work by dictation.” He died Feb. 14, 1909, in Boston. One source says he, too, is buried in Pine Grove Cemetery; Find a Grave lists his parents, Simeon and Clymena, and other family members, but not William.

More on Winslow’s Brick School

Cushman Rd. school, south side. (photo by Roland D. Hallee)

One more bit of information about the Brick School, on Cushman Road, in Winslow, from a reader. She said a family named Britton owned the land on which the schoolhouse stands before the Giddings acquired it. They built the still-standing house next door in 1794.

Her great-grandmother on her father’s side was a Britton, and her father called the building the Britton schoolhouse.

Two Isaac Brittons are buried in the North Vassalboro Village Cemetery, she said. Find a Grave lists four Brittons there: Isaac (May 9, 1790 – Nov. 1, 1859); his wife, Emily Britton (Aug. 9, 1793 – Sept. 10, 1864) (her maiden name is not given); their son, Isaac Wilson Britton (March 12, 1816 – March 31, 1898), born in Attleboro, Massachusetts, and died in Winslow: and their daughter-in-law, Abigail or Abby (Garland) Britton (March 14, 1822 – Dec. 20, 1906).

Contributors to Find a Grave wrote that Isaac W. and Abby had one daughter, Abbie (1854 -1928), who was born in Winslow and married in 1881 Charles Fletcher Johnson (Feb. 14, 1859 – Feb. 15, 1930), also a Winslow native.

Johnson attended Waterville Classical Institute and graduated from Bowdoin in 1879. Before and/or after serving as Machias High School principal from 1881 to 1886, he studied law, learning enough to be admitted to the bar and to set up a law practice in Waterville in 1886, which lasted until 1911.

He was mayor of Waterville in 1893; unsuccessful Democratic gubernatorial candidate in 1892 and 1894 (Republicans held the Maine governorship from 1882 to 1912); member of the Maine House of Representatives, 1905 to 1907; and United States Senator, 1911 to 1917 (losing a bid for re-election in 1916 to Republican Frederick Hale, who served until he retired at the end of his fourth term, in 1940).

On Oct. 1, 1917, President Woodrow Wilson nominated former senator Johnson as Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the 1st District. Wikipedia says the Senate confirmed him the same day; he served from 1917 until he assumed senior status (semi-retirement) on April 30, 1929.

Abbie and Charles had a son who died at 11 years old, and a daughter, Emma L. (Johnson) Abbott (1886 – 1963). Emma and her husband, Dr. Henry Wilson Abbott (1884-1957) were the paternal grandparents of the reader who initiated this quest.

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.