EVENTS: ShineOnCass animal baby shower & PJ party

Cassidy Charette

Children dressed in their pajamas will welcome baby lambs, goats, calves and other newborn animals also wearing pajamas, on Sunday, May 4, at the ShineOnCass Animal Baby Shower & PJ Party at Hart-to-Hart Farm & Education Center, in Albion. The annual free event for children features educational stations that include learning how to milk a cow, fetching eggs from the chicken coop, spinning lamb’s wool, and participating in goat yoga. Children will be able to hold, and have photos taken with the newborn baby animals.

Hart-to-Hart Farm & Education Center is a family-owned and operated organic dairy farm that offers spring and summer day camp educational programs for children. The ShineOnCass Animal Baby Shower is held each year in honor of Cassidy Charette, an Oakland teen who died in a hayride accident in 2014, who was a longtime summer camper at Hart-to-Hart Farm.

Families attending the free event are asked to bring food and pet items to donate to Humane Society Waterville Area in memory of Cassidy, who was also a shelter volunteer.

There will be two sessions offered: 10 to 11:30 a.m., and 12:30 to 2 p.m., with limited capacity of 80 children per session. Pre-registration is required at shineoncass.org or hart2hartfarm.org. For more information, email shineoncass@gmail.com

Up and Down the Kennebec Valley: Courts

by Mary Grow

One of the chapters in Henry Kingsbury’s 1892 Kennebec County history is about the courts. The next chapter is titled The Kennebec Bar and names members of the Kennebec Bar who practiced as lawyers and/or held judgeships or other legal positions.

The following articles in this subseries will talk about the legal structure from the 1600s, when Maine was a province of Massachusetts and both were under British rule, through the 1800s; and about some of the prominent men – there was an absence of women in the profession in those days – who made the law work.

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Judge William Penn Whitehouse

The chapter on courts in Kingsbury’s history was written by Vassalboro native William Penn Whitehouse, at the time serving on Maine’s Supreme Judicial Court (more about Whitehouse later in the subseries). He began by defining the role of the judiciary.

“The judiciary,” he wrote, “is the conservative force that maintains a just and stable relation between other branches of the government. It is the indispensable balance-wheel of every enduring political system.”

Whitehouse did not talk about the Massachusetts judicial system being derived from the British, perhaps because he assumed everybody knew that. He began by pointing out the mingling of Maine’s system with Massachusetts’ after Massachusetts bought southern Maine in 1677 from the grandson of Sir Ferdinando Gorges, who had ruled it from 1622 to his death in 1647.

Whitehouse found records of a 1636 court in Saco, said to have been the first legally created legal tribunal in Maine. After 1639, Gorges’ executive council acted as a court, Whitehouse said.

Gorges’ part of Maine also had “an inferior court in each section of the province”; and “commissioners corresponding to the modern trial justices were appointed in each town for the trial of small cases, with jurisdiction limited to forty shillings.”

Gorges’ jurisdiction did not include the sparsely-populated Kennebec Valley, Whitehouse wrote. This area belonged to the Plymouth Colony from 1640 until the Duke of York took it over in the early 1660s. In 1686, after the Duke became King James II (who reigned from Feb. 6, 1685, until he was overthrown effective Feb. 12, 1689), he transferred “the port and county of Pemaquid” (and presumably its upriver inland territory) to Massachusetts, Whitehouse said.

In 1691, Massachusetts got a new royal charter that united the various parts of Maine. The Massachusetts legislature promptly enacted its own Charter of 1691, setting out British-based legal principles and establishing four levels of courts that Whitehouse said remained virtually unchanged for 50 years.

The superior court for Maine cases was held in Massachusetts until 1699, Whitehouse wrote. From 1699 to 1760, one annual term was held in Maine – he did not say where.

In 1760, Maine was divided into Cumberland and Lincoln counties, with Lincoln including what became Kennebec in February 1799. In 1761, the Kennebec proprietors, successors to the Plymouth Colony, built what is now the historic Pownalborough Courthouse on the east bank of the Kennebec River, in present-day Dresden.

Whitehouse said Lincoln County’s first superior court meeting was not until 1786. The first term at Hallowell began July 8, 1794, before Augusta separated from its southern neighbor in February 1797.

Court was held “in a church prepared for the occasion,” Whitehouse wrote: the 1790 courthouse in Market Square, near the Kennebec, was too small. The three judges “were attended by three sheriffs wearing cocked hats and carrying swords, each with his long white staff of office.” The officials attracted a large audience as they marched to the church to the beat of a drum, followed by members of the bar.

In 1799, Augusta became Kennebec County’s shire town and hosted an annual term of the Massachusetts Superior Court, apparently until Maine became a state in 1820. Depending on the nature of the trial, sometimes all three judges presided, sometimes only one.

Before 1792, Whitehouse wrote, they “appeared on the bench in robes and wigs, the robes being of black silk in the summer and of scarlet cloth in the winter.”

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Both William D. Williamson, in his 1832 Maine history, and Louis Hatch, in his 1919 Maine history, listed the courts being headquartered in Boston as one cause of the movement for separation from Massachusetts. Both cited a January 1786 list of “evils and grievances” from the second convention called to discuss separation (the first, in October 1785, attracted representatives from so few towns that delegates called a better-publicized second gathering).

The fourth problem on the convention’s list was that the Supreme Judicial Court could not administer justice in Maine as promptly as required. With the clerk’s office and court records in Boston, “legal process and lawsuits must be attended with additional costs, perplexities and delays of justice,” Williamson wrote.

He added a footnote: “This evil continued till the year 1798.”

Although no action resulted from the 1786 convention, it was a step in the movement that resulted in Maine statehood in March 1820. More immediately, Williamson and Hatch said, it led Massachusetts authorities to revamp some of the laws to which Maine people objected; to build two new major roads; and to begin holding court sessions in the province.

In 1786, Hatch wrote, the Massachusetts Supreme Court held its first term in Pownalborough, plus an additional term of the lower court of Common Pleas and Sessions (see below). Beginning in March 1787, “the lower courts” also held one term annually in Hallowell (and one in Waldoborough); and the Massachusetts secretary of state was ordered to publish Massachusetts laws in the Falmouth Gazette, Maine’s first newspaper (founded in 1784).

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By 1819, Maine residents were so strongly (though never unanimously) in favor of independence that the Massachusetts legislature passed a bill authorizing a Maine vote on separation. The vote was duly held on the fourth Monday in July, 1819 (July 26). On the fourth Monday in August (Aug. 23), Massachusetts Governor John Brooks announced separation had been approved, 17,091 votes in favor to 7,132 against.

Once Maine became a state, the next step was to organize its government. A constitutional convention met Oct. 11, 1819, in Portland.

Judge Daniel Cony

Hatch said, “By unanimous consent, Judge Daniel Cony, of Augusta, was requested to take the chair” for preliminary steps, though he was quickly replaced by William King, of Bath, as chair of the body.

(King later became Maine’s first governor. More on Judge Cony later in this subseries.)

Williamson wrote that a 33-man subcommittee drafted a constitution based on Massachusetts’. The convention approved it, called for town meetings to approve or reject it on the first Monday in December (Dec. 6); and adjourned Oct. 29, Williamson said. A majority of towns approved.

The constitution described the state government, citizens’ rights and other typical topics.

The section on the judiciary in Maine’s current constitution says: “The judicial power of this State shall be vested in a Supreme Judicial Court, and such other courts as the Legislature shall from time to time establish.” The 1820 state constitution differed by one word, according to Whitehouse: it began “The judicial power of the state….”

Whitehouse cited a June 24, 1820, law establishing a three-justice supreme judicial court and defining its powers. In following years, the legislature required the court to meet at least once a year in most of Maine’s counties, with Kennebec County’s term scheduled in May, in Augusta.

From 1820 to 1839, Wikipedia says, Maine justices were appointed for life, with a mandatory retirement age of 70. Whitehouse said the number of justices was increased to four in 1847 and seven in 1852.

By 1892, Whitehouse wrote, the court consisted of a chief justice and seven associate justices, appointed by the governor for seven-year terms. (Currently, the court consists of a chief justice and six associate justices.)

The Wikipedia writer commented that unlike most other states’ top courts, the Maine court was and is not headquartered in the state capital. The reason is partly that the 1829 Kennebec County courthouse lacked a large enough courtroom. Nonetheless, the writer said, the court met there from 1830 to 1970, when it moved permanently to the Cumberland County courthouse, in Portland.

Whitehouse listed four 19th-century Maine Supreme Court justices who came from Augusta:

— Nathan Weston, appointed an associate justice July 1, 1820, and chief justice from Oct. 22, 1834 to Oct. 21, 1841;
— Richard Drury Rice, associate justice from May 11, 1852 to his resignation Dec. 1, 1863;
— Artemas Libbey or Libby, appointed from April 24, 1875, to April 24, 1882; reappointed Jan. 11, 1883, and Jan. 10, 1890; served until his death March 15, 1894; and
— William Penn Whitehouse, appointed associate justice April 15, 1890; reappointed April 24, 1897, April 5, 1904 and April 13, 1911; appointed chief justice July 26, 1911; resigned April 8, 1913.

Another important state court official, Whitehouse wrote, was the Reporter of Decisions, the person responsible for compiling the annual decisions of the court when it is sitting as the Maine Law Court (appellate court). Reporters from Kennebec County to 1892 were Asa Redington, from Augusta (1850-1854) and Solymon Heath, from Waterville (1854-1856).

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Below the provincial and later state supreme court was the court of common pleas. Whitehouse wrote that such a court was “organized for each county under the province charter of 1692.”

(Wikipedia says the court of common pleas was an early British form of lower court for hearing cases that did not involve the king. These courts are mostly obsolete, though four U.S. states still have trial courts so titled, with varying functions.)

In 18th and early 19th century Maine, Whitehouse said, these courts consisted of four justices at first, three from 1804 to 1811. The justices “were to be substantial persons,” but not necessarily lawyers; Whitehouse found no evidence that “any member of this court in Maine was an educated lawyer” before 1800.

In 1811, a new “circuit court of common pleas” replaced the standing courts. In 1822, after Maine and Massachusetts separated, a statewide standing court was created. In 1839 another change created a three-judge district court for Kennebec, Lincoln and Somerset counties, with three terms a year in each county.

Whitehouse spelled out this court’s jurisdiction and duties.

“It had original and exclusive jurisdiction of all civil actions where the debt or damage demanded did not exceed two hundred dollars, and concurrent jurisdiction above that sum. It had also jurisdiction of all crimes and misdemeanors previously cognizable by the court of common pleas,” he wrote.

Losers could appeal to the state supreme court, and, Whitehouse wrote, they did, so habitually that almost everybody got two trials. This “inefficient” system was abolished in 1852 and the lower court’s “duties and powers, including appeals from justices of the peace,” were given to the supreme court (and its membership increased from four to seven justices).

Naturally, the result was an overloaded supreme court and long delays in getting suits settled. In 1878, Whitehouse wrote, a Kennebec County Superior Court was created. It first met only in Augusta, but in 1889 a provision requiring two terms a year in Waterville was added.

The first Kennebec County Superior Court Judge was William Penn Whitehouse, appointed for seven years in February, 1878. He was reappointed until he resigned April 15, 1890, to accept a position on the Maine Supreme Court.

Next week: more on Kennebec Valley courts, courthouses, judges and the like.

Main sources

Hatch, Louis Clinton, ed., Maine: A History 1919 (facsimile, 1974).
Kingsbury, Henry D., ed., Illustrated History of Kennebec County Maine 1625-1892 (1892).
Williamson, William D., The History of the State of Maine from its First Discovery, A.D. 1602, to the Separation, A.D. 1820, Inclusive (1832).

Websites, miscellaneous.

EVENTS: 100 Women Who Give event will award $10,000 to local charity

Francine Garland Stark, Executive Director of the Maine Coalition to End Domestic Violence, accepts the $10,000 award from Waterville Area Women’s Club member Stacy Whitcomb-Smith at last year’s 100 Women Who Give. This year’s event will be held April 10, at 6 p.m., at Snow Pond Center for the Arts, in Sidney. To purchase a ticket to attend or support, visit watervilleareawomensclub.org. (contributed photo)

Waterville Area Women’s Club will host its second annual “100 Women Who Give” event Thursday, April 10, at 6 p.m., at Snow Pond Center for the Arts, in Sidney, where attendees will cast live voting to select one local nonprofit to receive a $10,000 unrestricted gift.

The event invites women interested in supporting their community by contributing together as a group to increase impact. One hundred women will purchase a ticket for $100 each to raise $10,000. The evening includes food, presentations by selected nonprofits, music, in-person voting, followed by the awarding of the $10,000 gift to the selected organization, and an event celebration.

Waterville Area Women’s Club President Alisa Johnson said the club’s members started the event as an opportunity for women who wish to collectively have a greater impact on nonprofits that support women and children.

“As an individual, it’s often difficult to make a large financial impact alone, but as a group, we have the ability to make an immediate, direct, and positive impact in our communities, in ways we never thought possible,” Johnson said.

Last year’s “100 Women Who Give” event awarded $10,000 to Maine Coalition to End Domestic Violence. Thanks to the generosity of more than 100 women in attendance, additional donations were awarded to the Waterville Community Dental Center and the Maine Children’s Home.

The three nonprofit organizations on the voting ballot this year include Camp to Belong, the Maine Women’s Lobby Education Fund, and the South End Teen Center.

To purchase a ticket to attend and/or vote on April 10, or to make a gift in support of 100 Women Who Give, visit the Waterville Area Women’s Club Facebook page or watervilleareawomensclub.org.

Waterville Area Women’s Club and its volunteer members support numerous local charities and service agencies in the greater Waterville area, with a focus on those that benefit women and children. The Club welcomes new female members. For more information, contact Alisa Johnson at 207-629-8317.

MDF’s Maine Downtown Center welcomes Waterville to nationally recognized revitalization program

The Maine Downtown Center (MDC), a program of Maine Development Foundation (MDF), has announced that Van Buren and Waterville are joining its Maine Downtown Center Affiliate Program. Both communities completed an extensive application process that included an online application, a written commitment to the program, a site visit, and a review conducted by professional downtown revitalization experts that serve on the MDC Advisory Council.

Both Waterville and Van Buren have volunteer committees that will work hard over the next year to build relationships with businesses, residents, property owners, and the municipality. They will begin to look at downtown assets, priorities for revitalization and begin to use the Main Street Four Point Approach, a proven downtown revitalization method for over 40 years.

Michael Hall, Community Development Specialist for the city of Waterville says, “Downtown Waterville has been on an incredible rise over the past seven years, and becoming a Downtown Affiliate is the next big leap forward! This partnership equips us with the tools, resources, and momentum to supercharge our revitalization, strengthen local businesses, and cement Waterville’s place as the most vibrant downtown in Central Maine.”

With the addition of Waterville, The Maine Downtown Center now supports 30 member communities throughout Maine: 11 Nationally Accredited Main Street Communities, 13 Maine Downtown Affiliate Com­munities, and six Municipal Communities. Some are in the initial stages of downtown revitalization while many are working toward achieving nationally accredited “Main Street” designation. MDC offers access to training by state and national downtown development experts, best practices in the field, and a network of peers from around the state.

“It is a great feeling to have worked closely with Discover Waterville over the last year and have them reach this goal of being excited and committed to having a focused downtown revitalization program. We are looking forward to working with both Waterville and Van Buren on their downtown revitalization journeys as Maine’s two new Affiliates,” said Anne Ball, Senior Program Director of the Maine Downtown Center.

Andrei Llanto named to fall dean’s list at Nebraska

Andrei Llanto, of Waterville, has been named to the deans’ list at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, in Lincoln, Nebraska, for the fall semester of the 2024-25 academic year.

Llanto, a junior majoring in business and law, was named to the dean’s list for the College of Business.

EVENTS: History of Sanitary District topic of WHS talk

Kennebec Sanitary Treatment District

Join local resident and Kennebec Sanitary Treatment District Superintendent, Nick Champagne, for a photo journey through the process of creating the facility and how it serves to keep the Kennebec River clean. First, we will learn the common misconceptions about what KSTD is and does, and the areas it serves (much more than just Waterville). He will walk you through the steps of the incredible earthwork which was done to prepare the site and everything that went into the building process. Then the journey will bring you to what they do today, much of what was not envisioned back when it was created.

Nick also wants to hear your memories about what this area of Water Street was like before the facility was built.

Saturday, April 5, door opens at 2 p.m., Nick’s presentation begins at 2:30 p.m. Admission is free, donations gladly accepted! Light refreshments are available.

Look for the Redington Museum sign at 62 Silver Street.

EVENTS: Holy week schedule at SCCC (2025)

As part of Holy Week, South China Community Church (SCCC) offers several special services: Palm Sunday (April 13, at 10 a.m.), Maundy Thursday (April 17, at 6 p.m.), Good Friday (April 18, at 6 p.m.), and of course, Easter (April 20, at 10 a.m.). This year, for the first time, Pastor Paul Harwath is providing a copy of the Shroud of Turin for viewing and contemplation.

The Shroud of Turin is an ancient burial cloth that bears a faded image of a crucified man, thought by many to be Jesus of Nazareth. Historians and scientists have carried out years of intense research, examinations, and detailed studies on the Shroud to determine its authenticity. The original has been at the Cathedral of St. John the Baptist, in Turin, Italy, for over four centuries, but has been restored several times following fire damage in 1532. There have been multiple exhibitions world-wide and the legitimacy of the Shroud continues to be debated.

SCCC invites and welcomes members of the local communities to join them at 7 p.m., in Memorial Hall, on Thursday, April 17, and/or April 18, to take the opportunity to reflect on this image and maybe decide for yourselves the truth behind it. Whether you believe it to be real or not, it is an amazing artifact.

VUMC receives grant to remove steeple

Employees of Burke Roofing, from West Gardiner, working at Vassalboro United Methodist Church last fall, as they repaired the roof and removed the steeple. (contributed photo)

The $40,000 price tag came as an unexpected shock to folks at the Vassalboro United Methodist Church (VUMC) last fall when, in the middle of installing a new lift/elevator they found major damage to their steeple and roof that required immediate attention. Fortunately, the $80,000 required for the lift installation had already been raised but another $40,000 felt insurmountable to them at the time. During the planning and installation of the lift they had become known within Methodist circles as “the little church that could,” and they were determined to continue on that course.

Some of the VUMC leadership team set a plan in motion – first to find a contractor who could do the job, then to get estimates and finally to identify and secure funding sources. The United Methodist Foundation of New England agreed to extend VUMC a three year loan, during which time they could try to raise enough money to pay it off by 2027, when the balance would become a mortgage. Challenge accepted.

An anonymous donor set off fundraising efforts by issuing a $5,000 matching grant. Through individual donations and three special events VUMC raised what was needed, and they received the matching grant in February. To date $13,172.68 has been raised and $10,000 applied to the loan principle. The rest has been retained to make the interest payments on the interest. More will be applied to the principle when sufficient funds have been accumulated with the goal of paying off the loan by 2027.

Donations can be made to the building fund at the Vassalboro United Methodist Church at 614 Main Street, Vassalboro 04989, write building fund in the memo line. FMI about VUMC programs and services phone (207) 873-5564; email vumc.info@­gmail.com or follow the Vassalboro United Methodist Church Facebook page.

HealthReach welcomes new clinician

Madison Chadbourne

This past February, staff of the Madison Area Health Center welcomed Madison Chadbourne, LMSW, to their professional healthcare team.

Chadbourne earned her Master’s degree in Social Work from The University of New England, in Biddeford. Previously, she earned her Bachelor of Science degree in Social Work from the University of Southern Maine. Chadbourne’s wealth of experience includes a variety of care types — including pediatric casework management, mental healthcare evaluations, and Substance Use Disorder (SUD) treatment. Her wide range of experience and knowledge will be a wonderful addition to the Madison Area Health Center team.

Chadbourne shares, “I’m thrilled to begin this new chapter in my career, where I can combine my passions for social work and healthcare to make a real difference. This opportunity allows me to grow professionally and make a meaningful impact on individuals of all ages. I look forward to contributing to the wellbeing of our community, and to collaborating with a team of dedicated professionals to create positive, lasting change.”

Chadbourne joins the existing Madison Area Health Center clinical team – Doctor Stacy Anderson; Family Nurse Practitioners, JoHanna Davis and Jeanne Stokes: Psychiatric Mental Health Nurse Practitioner, Kelly Bell Bragg; and Licensed Clinical Professional Counselor, Lauren Emery.

The contents above are those of the author, and do not necessarily represent the official views of or an endorsement by, HRSA, DHHS, or the U.S. Government.

Area scouting leaders recognized with awards

District Chairman Eric Handley, of Sidney, presented Scott Bernier with his Veteran Service Pin. Scott, of Augusta, has been consistently active in Scouting since he was a youth member for a total of 45 years. (photo by Chuck Mahaleris)

by Chuck Mahaleris

Scouting leaders from Kennebec, Lincoln, Knox, Franklin and Somerset counties gathered to honor Yvette Bernier with the highest award a local Scouting district can bestow on a volunteer – the District Award of Merit – in recognition of her service as an Assistant Scoutmaster and volunteer role of nurse for many years both at Camp Bomazeen events, local camporees, and at the annual International Camporee, held at Cobscook State Park. She has served as a leader in Winslow Troop #433 for 15 years.

Yvette and Chris are so connected to Scouting in this area that they were married in 2010 at Camp Bomazeen in Belgrade. “I am honored to present you with the District Award of Merit in recognition of all you have done for Scouting,” said Kennebec Valley Advancement and Recognition Chair Luann Chesley of Vassalboro. The event was held at the Park and Recreation building, in Winslow, on Saturday, March 22.

During the evening, other awards were presented to the Scouting leaders. Scott Bernier and Chuck Mahaleris, both of Augusta, were presented the 45-year and 50-year Veteran Scouting Service pins, respectively. District Training Chairman Walter Fails, of New Sharon, presented the Den Leader Training Award and Scouters Training Award Cub Level to Winslow’s Sabrina Garfield; the Scouters Training Award District Level to Christopher Santiago, of Vassalboro; the Scouters Training Award Troop Level, to Stacey Wells, of Brooks and Shelley Connolly, of Pittsfield; Connolly also earned the Scoutmasters Key. Connolly is Scoutmaster of Troop #428 and Cubmaster of Pack #428, both in Pittsfield. Shelley also earned the Unit Leader Award of Merit and Troop #428 was recognized with the National Outdoor Challenge Award. Service recognition certificates were presented to members of the District Committee and Commissioner staff for their efforts to improve and expand Scouting in the five counties that make up the Kennebec Valley Scouting District.

Pine Tree Council Scout Executive Gary Savignano was on hand to share the appreciation of the Scout council to the assembled volunteer leaders and thanked them for their steadfast commitment to the youth of Maine.

District Award of Merit recipient Yvette Robichaud Bernier (center) with her daughter Paige Spears and husband Christopher Bernier. Paige is a member of Scouts Canada and earned Scout Canada’s Chief Scout Award. Chief Scout is the highest rank in the Scouting section of Scouts Canada, making it equivalent to Eagle Scout in Scouting America or Gold Award in Girl Scout. (photo by Chuck Mahaleris)