Vassalboro cemetery committee talks about fiscal year

by Mary Grow

At a short Feb. 24 meeting, Vassalboro Cemetery Committee members talked about plans for the rest of the current fiscal year and the new one beginning July 1, and about the lack of information about the past.

Chairman Savannah Clark said in December 2024, the select board authorized waiving the town procurement policy so the committee can again hire expert stone restorer Joseph Ferrannini to work in town cemeteries in the summer.

Town Manager Aaron Miller is preparing RFPs (Requests for Proposals) for two other projects, Clark said. One is hiring someone to remove dangerous trees in Farwell-Brown and Nelson cemeteries this spring; the other is hiring an arborist to assess trees in multiple town cemeteries, as a basis for an ongoing management plan.

Vassalboro select board members are reviewing the proposed 2025-26 town budget. Clark said they seem to be supportive of the committee’s request, which totaled $48,050 (the same as the current year’s budget) as of the Feb. 20 select board meeting.

The select board’s recommended budget will be reviewed by the budget committee, whose members make their own recommendations. Voters at the annual town meeting Monday evening, June 2, will make final decisions on expenditures.

Committee member David Jenney said he wished more information was available on the history of Vassalboro’s more than two dozen cemeteries. He would like to know, for example, when each was laid out and by whom and what plan the organizer(s) had in mind.

Jenney said he has some information on Cross Hill Cemetery, and old town reports are sometimes helpful. Vassalboro Historical Society records were mentioned as another resource.

Cemetery Committee members scheduled their next meeting for Monday evening, March 17.

China planners review town’s subdivision ordinance

by Mary Grow

Four China Planning Board members spent a short Feb. 25 meeting reviewing preliminary updates and clarifications to the town’s subdivision ordinance.

Board chairman Toni Wall had suggested mostly minor changes throughout the document, and other board members recommended others. Milton Dudley proposed adding a time-line to help would-be subdivision developers navigate the document.

Codes Officer Nicholas French wants to add regulations for cluster developments, which are prohibited in the current ordinance. A cluster development, he explained, requires the same total land area for the number of houses built as a conventional subdivision; but the houses are closer together and more of the area is left undeveloped.

The result, in French’s opinion, is housing that requires less road-building and road maintenance, minimizes sprawl and preserves larger natural areas.

Wall shared copies of two Maine towns’ cluster development rules for the other board members to review. Dudley said the veterans’ housing at Togus is an example of a cluster development.

Types of changes Wall recommended included updating references to outside sources, like state regulatory documents whose titles had changed since the China ordinance was last substantively revised in 1993; and deleting phrases that give the planning board discretionary authority.

The first example of the latter she highlighted was a sentence allowing the board, “where it deems it necessary,” to require a minor subdivision to meet some or all of the more comprehensive application requirements for a major subdivision.

Cluster development regulations will be the main topic of the next discussion. Board members canceled their March 11 meeting, because at least one board member will not be available and to give themselves more time to consider the issue. Their next meeting is now scheduled for 6:30 p.m. Tuesday, March 25, in the town office meeting room.

China’s Thurston Park committee continues planning future activities

by Mary Grow

China’s Thurston Park Committee members continued planning future activities, undeterred by bad weather having canceled their February China Ice Days plans.

At the committee’s Feb. 20 meeting, chairman Jeanette Smith said the owl prowl scheduled as part of the Feb. 14-16 weekend events was not held. She added that she has not yet heard owls, perhaps because the cold weather has delayed mating.

Committee members discussed plans to maintain and improve trails in the park and events to schedule in warmer weather. They seek to expand handicapped opportunities, including accessible and interesting trails and parking. At their January meeting, they proposed adding a handicapped-accessible toilet.

Also under consideration is making some trail sections usable by mountain bikers.

Smith raised a new issue: now that the town-owned lot south of the town office building is to house the relocated ice rink and the new community garden, is there still room for the planned dog park? (Recreation Committee chairman Martha Wentworth proposed the dog park that China select board members first discussed at their July 1, 2024, meeting.)

Smith intends to ask Wentworth about building the dog park in Thurston Park. Many local people already walk their dogs there, committee members said.

Another new project, with which China Historical Society member Tim Hatch is helping, is finding names of people who lived in the park decades ago. Hatch said he is checking 19th-century maps of the town for names of former residents whose homes are marked only by cellar holes.

More trail signs are needed. Smith said she visited a company from whom she hoped to order some and found it had closed. Discussion of alternatives included mention of an Oakland company.

Committee members again discussed the problem of improving the southern access to the park over neighbors’ opposition (see the Jan. 23 issue of The Town Line, pp. 2 and 3). The Haskell family uses for a driveway the south end of Yorktown Road (which the town discontinued years ago, maintaining a right of way).

Committee member Scott Monroe recommended continuing to try to talk with the Haskells, with approval from Town Manager Rebecca Hapgood. Smith thought she might be able to get a legal opinion supporting the town’s right to use the road, at a cost the committee’s fund from past timber sales could cover.

The next Thurston Park Committee meeting is scheduled for 6:30 p.m. Thursday, March 20, in the portable building in the town office complex. Committee members agreed their April meeting should be a workshop, to include repairing picnic tables and benches.

Local central Maine Town Meetings schedule for 2025

Town meetings 2025

ALBION

Municipal Election
TBD
Besse Building
Town meeting
TBD

CHINA

Town meeting (election format)
TBD

FAIRFIELD

TBD
Fairfield Community Center

PALERMO

Town meeting

Saturday, March 8, at 9 a.m.,
Palermo School, Route 3

Town voting for town officials

Friday, March 7, 3 – 7 p.m.
The town office.

VASSALBORO

Town meeting
TBD
Town Elections
TBD

WINDSOR

Municipal Election
TBD
Town meeting
TBD

*   *   *

To be included in this list, visit our Contact Us page or send an email to The Town Line at townline@townline.org.

EVENTS: Benefit supper to help defray costs as family deals with cancer for second time

A few months ago a young woman, Heather Bragg, and her family, Steve Bragg Jr., her husband, and two children Ken and Emma were unfortunately given the news, for the second time in five years, that Heather would be battling cancer.

The first time, four-and-a-half years ago was a well fought and won battle with this disease. Again. she has been diagnosed, except with lung cancer this time.

She is brave and her family is also. They have always been kind and giving to others and have wonderful positive outlooks. Now, they are receiving the kindness of the community of Palermo and beyond. The people of Palermo have graciously stepped up for this family with wonderful support and kind spirited giving.

Local community members will be hosting a benefit spaghetti supper, raffle and auction for Heather Bragg and her family. This will be held on Saturday, March 22, from 4 – 6 p.m., at the Palermo Consolidated School, on Rte. 3, in Palermo. Following dinner there will be a baked goods auction. Dinner is $10 per person or donation, $5 for children under 10. There will also be an auction with more items coming.

Tickets are $5, or 5 for $20.
This article has been updated from how it originally appeared in print.

Vassalboro Methodist Church new lift activated

Theresa White, left, took the maiden voyage on the new elevator/lift at the Vassalboro Methodist Church, on February 26, while Harvey Boatman, project coordinator, showed White how to operate it. (contributed photo)

by Dale Potter-Clark

During the largely attended funeral of Cathy (White) Fisher on March 18, 2023, some people in leadership positions at the Vassalboro United Methodist Church (VUMC) were struck by how unsatisfactorily their building was set-up for people with physical challenges. For one, the space for wheelchairs in their sanctuary was inadequate; and for another, the only ways to get to their fellowship hall and bathrooms from the sanctuary were to either navigate a full flight of stairs, or return to their cars and drive to the lower parking lot where they could enter directly into the fellowship hall.

Church leadership held a meeting soon after the funeral when the idea of installing an elevator/lift between the two floors was introduced. “Almost everyone voted NO,” related VUMC matriarch, Theresa White. “They just did not see how our small congregation could afford to pay for such a thing.” But they were proven wrong when, by February 26, 2025, the lift had been installed, it had passed the Maine State inspection and was completely paid for with $80,000 in grants and contributions from the community.

Folks who stood in line at the church that February morning insisted that Theresa White take the maiden voyage with Harvey Boatman, project coordinator as the operator. More riders followed with big smiles and accolades to Boatman for his determination and hard work towards seeing the project through to completion. “Now it is on to the next phase of our efforts to increase community access to VUMC programs and services,” said Boatman. “This is only one part of that process, albeit a big part.”

EVENTS: Palermo planning board reschedules meeting, again

The Palermo Planning Board, once again, has rescheduled its meeting to Thursday, March 27, 2025, at the Palermo Town Office, at 6 p.m. The purpose is to conduct official review of plans for the proposed Pine Hill subdivision on Hostile Valley Road, Tax Map R11, Lot 27C

Vassalboro Community School 2nd quarter honors (2024)

Vassalboro Community School (contributed photo)

EIGHTH GRADE

High honors: Zoe Gaffney, Allyson Gilman, Savannah Judkins, Cheyenne Lizzotte, Agatha Meyer, Grace Tobey and Ava Woods. Honors: Holden Altenburg, Samuel Bechard, Bryleigh Burns, Basil Dillaway, Fury Frappier, Baylee Fuchswanz, Dominic Heese, Jack LaPierre, Kaitlyn Lavallee and Mia McLean. Honorable mention: Peyton Bishop, Emily Clark, Jayden Portillo and Kassidy Proctor.

SEVENTH GRADE

High honor: Grace Clark, Mariah Estabrook, Leah Hyden, Sarina LaCroix, Elliott Rafuse, Charles Stein, and Cameron Willett. Honors: Aliyah Anthony, Zander Austin, Xainte Cloutier, Twila Cloutier, Kaylee Colfer, Samantha Craig, Riley Fletcher, Brandon Fortin, Aubrey Goforth, Aubrey Judkins, Landon Lagasse, Olivia Perry, Juliahna Rocque, Isaiah Smith, and Meadow Varney. Honorable mention: NolanAltenburg, Wyatt Devoe, Camden Foster, Dawson Frazer, Peter Giampietro, Arianna Muzerolle, Jaxson Presti, Eli St. Amand, Haven Trainor and Ethan York.

SIXTH GRADE

High honor: Ryder Austin, Hunter Brown, Kamdyn Couture, Anthony Dyer, Cooper Grant, Tanner Hughes, Aria Lathrop, Brooklyn Leach, Simon Olson, Willa Rafuse, Alexis Reed, Alana Rogerson, Addison Suga and Robert Wade. Honors: Alexander Bailey, Rylee Boucher, Grayson Brown, Reese Checkowitaz, Braiden Crommett, Molly Deaborn, Levi DeMerchant, Liam Dowe, Hunter Green, Ashlynn Hamlin, Sophia-Lynn Howard, Kendall Karlsson, Olivia Lane, Landon Lindquist, Trevyn Pooler, Landon Quint, Ashe Smith and Mason York-Baker. Honorable mention: Maverick Brewer, Eli Dulac, Chase Fay, Mikkah-Isabella Grant, Keegan Robinson, Christopher Santiago, Elliot Stratton and Gabriel Tucker.

FIFTH GRADE

High honor: Henry Gray, Finn Malloy, Evelyn Meyer and Sawyer Plossay. Honors: Ethan Altenburg, Olivia Booker, Parker Bouchard, Owen Clark, Camden Desmond, Emma Freeman, Norah French, Jaxson LaFlamme, Tucker Lizzotte, Gage Nason, Allysson Portillo, Gabriella Reynolds, Jayden Rhynd, Alivia Twitchell, Roman Wentworth, Mayla Wilson and Alicia Woods. Honorable mention: Titus Caruthers, Marley Field, Ember Irwin, Maksim LaCroix, Brayden Lang-Knights, Preston Richmond, Raegin Rodgers, Wesley Stewart, Oliver Sugden, Trenten Theobald and Haley Witham.

FOURTH GRADE

High honor: Payton Bowring, Aaliyah Doyen, Levi Hotham, Rose Matulis, Tristan Plossay, Aryn Rogerson, Sydney Suga, Aria Tardiff, Wynn Trainor and Samuel Tuttle. Honors: Cameron Bossie, Alexander Buckley, Colton Fletcher, Estelle Ford, Matthew Henrikson,, Thyri Kimball, Lillian Noll, Orion Paulette, Bianca Pooler, Dominic Poulin, Quentin Tarr, Meaghan Trask and Ryan York. Honorable mention: Jaxon Crommett, Leia Curtis, Jocelyn Parsons and Anastaysha Timberlake.

THIRD GRADE

High honor: Bruce Brothers, Conner Cayouette, Mason Hardy, Charlotte Phelps, Parker Poulin, Lux Reynolds, Heaven Smith, Natalie Vannah and Declan Wade. Honors: Cole Craney, Tarynn Crommett, Elijah Farshid, Isabelle Giguere, John Gray, Austin Henry, Kylie Killam, Matthew Maxwell, Declan McLaughlin, Charlee Nicknair, Willam Parks, Camdin Rodgers, Trey Soucy, Lennox Tardiff and Tyler White. Honorable mention: Spencer Brown, Dylan Brown, Jeremiah Clawson, Mason Gilman, Oliver Lessard, Ashlynn Levesque, Blayke Melanson, Sawyer Presti, Abigail Richards, Nevaeh Smith and Leela Vernon.

Up and Down the Kennebec Valley: Palermo residents – Part 2

by Mary Grow

In case readers have not had enough genealogical confusion, this article continues with information about Palermo’s first three school committee members, elected in January 1805, and their families. Christopher Erskine, Stephen Marden and Samuel (or Samual) Longfellow were leaders among Palermo’s early settlers.

Millard Howard wrote that Erskine was in Palermo by 1788. In 1803, he owned 200 acres, when most landowners who had dealt with the Kennebec Proprietors (including Longfellow and Marden) had 100 acres.

Howard called Erskine “one of the most prominent citizens.” His Turner Ridge lot included some of the town’s “best farm land”; by 1801, he “was running a tavern” there. Erskine was the man charged with convening the Jan. 9, 1805, town meeting at Robert Foye’s house. He was elected town treasurer, as well as a school committee member.

This Erskine was most likely the one named on line as Christopher Erskine III, born Feb. 27, 1761, in Alna (Find a Grave), or Feb. 27, 1763, in Pownalborough (FamilySearch).

Find a Grave says his first wife, married Jan. 2, 1789, in Wiscasset, was Sarah Elizabeth Dickey (born Aug. 12, 1766, in Palermo). They had five sons and one daughter (Find a Grave) or five sons and four daughters (FamilySearch).

Find a Grave says the last child was Abiel Wood Erskine, born in 1806. FamilySearch calls Abiel, born May 9, 1806, the youngest son and says the last child was Cynthia, born on Nov. 3, 1808. She married, had at least seven children and died in February 1894.

Sarah Dickey Erskine died Nov. 10, 1818, in Palermo.

According to Find a Grave, on June 20, 1806, Christopher took as his second wife Ruth (Cox) Erskine, widow of William Erskine (1752 – 1800), of Bristol. (Neither William nor Christopher is listed as the other’s brother in any source your writer found.)

Where did Sarah go? And what about Cynthia, allegedly born to Christopher and Sarah two years after Christopher married Ruth?

Ruth Cox was born July 21, 1757, according to WikiTree. She married first husband William in 1776. Between 1777 and 1798, they had two daughters and five (Find a Grave), eight (WikiTree) or nine sons (FamilySearch).

When Christopher married Ruth on June 20, 1806, WikiTree says four of her sons were young enough to be at home. William, born in 1792 (no month given), would have been about 14; Robert, born Jan. 3, 1795, was almost 11 and a half; and twins Jonas and James, born June 27, 1798, were eight.

On Christopher’s side, FamilySearch says seven of his children by Sarah were under 15 on June 20, 1806. John was born Jan. 31, 1792; Sarah, Feb. 19, 1794; Elizabeth, Nov. 3, 1795; Henry, Aug. 28, 1798 (making him two months younger than his twin step-brothers); Alexander, Feb. 7, 1801; Rebecca, April 18, 1803; and Abiel, May 9, 1806, six weeks before his father’s remarriage.

Did Ruth’s children come with her? Or had she, widowed, given them up to someone better able to care for them?

Did Christopher’s children stay with him and their stepmother? Or did some or all go with Sarah, wherever she went?

How did the 11 children and two adults blend, if they did?

* * * * * *

Also on that 1805 Palermo school committee was Stephen Marden, probably the Stephen Marden (or Stephen Marden, Jr.), born Sept. 13, 1771, in Chester, New Hampshire, son of a Stephen Marden born in 1736.

Howard quoted at length from an account by Stephen’s younger brother, John (born Feb. 15, 1779), which was reprinted in Alan Goodwin’s earlier Palermo history. John wrote that in 1781, in New Hampshire, his father was killed by a falling tree, leaving a widow and eight children; a ninth child was born in September.

John came to Great Pond Settlement in the District of Maine in January 1793, when he was 14. He worked with Stephen until he was 22, when he bought his own farm.

Milton Dowe, in his Palermo history, added a third brother, Benjamin (the one born Sept. 29, 1781, WikiTree says). Dowe wrote that about 1800, the “iron parts of a water wheel” were sent from New Hampshire to Augusta, whence the three brothers brought them to Palermo to power a saw and a machine to build hand rakes (which they sold for 25 cents each).

If dates are accurate, Stephen Marden came with his new bride: WikiTree says he married Abigail Black (born Oct. 29, 1768) in Chester on Jan. 1, 1793.

One WikiTree page lists two children of the marriage, a daughter named Mary, born Sept. 19, 1795, and a son named Albra, born about 1812. Both died in Palermo, Albra on Nov. 16, 1877, and Mary (by then the widow of John Spiller, by whom she had had nine children) on Sept. 3, 1878.

Find a Grave says Stephen and Abigail’s children were Benjamin, born Oct. 26, 1798, and Albra, born April 12, 1812. This site has photos of Benjamin and Albra’s gravestones in Palermo’s Smith cemetery.

Another WikiTree page says Stephen and Abigail had 11 children, starting with a son named Stephen.

(Perhaps a generational mix-up? Find a Grave says Stephen and Abigail’s son Albra and his wife Hannah had eight sons and three daughters, born between 1838 and 1859. The fourth son, born in 1847, was named Stephen.)

Howard wrote that when the Massachusetts legislature, in February 1802, approved a plan to reconcile the Palermo settlers with the Kennebec Proprietors who sold the settlers their land, Stephen Marden was one of three Palermo commissioners chosen to determine how much the settlers owed.

Voters at the Jan. 9, 1805, town meeting elected Marden a school committee member, constable and tax collector. In his discussion of the meeting, Howard called Marden “one of the most prominent resistance leaders,” apparently meaning resistant to the Proprietors and supportive of the settlers.

Marden died on Feb. 2 or Feb. 7, 1825, and his widow, Abigail, on Sept. 26, 1834, both in Palermo. They, and John and his wife Eunice, are buried in Palermo’s Dennis Hill Cemetery (Find a Grave lists no Benjamin there).

Find a Grave says Stephen and Abigail’s son Benjamin bought John Spiller’s farm on Marden Hill. (By combining lists from two sources, an imaginative reader can make John Spiller Benjamin’s brother-in-law, husband of Mary.)

This site says the younger Benjamin was a farmer, a blacksmith and a “practical wheelwright” (builder of wooden wheels). It calls him “a man of more than usual intelligence and looked up to by his neighbors, who bore for him the highest respect.”

Find a Grave credits this Benjamin Marden with an interest in town affairs and an active role in organizing the town’s first library, “the Palermo and China Social Library.” Howard called the library organizer Benjamin Marden, 2nd, and said the library, opened “around mid-century,” was “apparently at his home on Marden Hill.”

* * * * * *

At that Jan. 9, 1805, town meeting that made Samuel Longfellow a school committee member, he was also elected meeting moderator and one of Palermo’s first three selectmen.

Longfellow was born in Hampton, New Hampshire, in 1756. He and his younger brother, Stephen, born in 1760, came to Palermo in 1788, Howard said.

Find a Grave says they were second cousins, twice removed, of poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow (Feb. 27, 1807 – March 24, 1882). Samuel served in the Revolutionary War from 1775 to 1779.

He married Mary Perkins (born July 5, 1759, in Kensington, New Hampshire) on March 28, 1779, in Kensington. Find a Grave names four children.

First was Mary “Polly,” born in 1781. In 1799 she married Samuel Fuller (1775 – 1853), by whom she had four daughters and a son between 1799 and 1820.

Second was Green, born Jan. 18, 1786, in Palermo. In 1805, Green married Sarah Jane Foy (1787 – 1848), with whom he had four sons and two daughters between 1809 and 1826 (Find a Grave) or eight sons and three daughters between 1806 and 1832 (Ancestry).

Find a Grave says Green had a second wife, Melinda Foster Fisher Palmer, born in Alna, Nov. 7, 1793. (Foster and Fisher were maiden names; her first husband had been John Palmer.) Melinda gave birth to a son and two daughters between 1826 and 1831; Find a Grave lists their last names as Palmer, not Longfellow (their names do not match the last three of Sarah’s children on the Ancestry list).

Find a Grave gives no marriage date for Green and Melinda, nor does it explain what happened to Sarah.

Howard wrote that in 1835, Green (maybe Green, Jr., born in 1811?) built Palermo’s District 2 schoolhouse, for $110. In March (1836?), district voters paid him $2 “for furnishing the room to keep school in the past winter.”

In 1847, two Longfellows, Green (probably Green, Jr.) and Dearborn (Green, Jr.’s brother, born in 1809), each had three students in the District 2 school.

Samuel and Mary’s third child was Jonathan Perkins Longfellow, born Dec. 15, 1795, in Palermo. Jonathan married Betsy Edwards (1799 – 1882); they had four sons (including another Samuel) between 1818 and 1837.

Fourth was Olive B., born in 1798. Find a Grave says she married twice. If dates are correct, her first husband, whom she married in 1841, was the Samuel Fuller who was her older sister Mary’s former husband. WikiTree says Mary died May 25, 1837.

Samuel died Jan. 3, 1853, and Olive married Capt. Edward Lawry, born in 1799. The Isleboro Historical Society’s on-line information says they married Dec. 2, 1853, in Searsmont.

Olive was Lawry’s second wife; his first was Pamelia W. Arnold (1804 – 1852), with whom he had two daughters and three sons in the 1830s and 1840s. The youngest son, Andrew, was listed in the 1870 census as a farmer in Searsmont, age 24 or 25, living with his father and stepmother.

* * * * * *

Two of Samuel and Mary’s granddaughters, Mary (Long­fellow) Fuller’s daughters, married back into the Longfellow family. The second Fuller daughter, Louisa (born July 6, 1807), married Dearborn Longfellow, son of Green Longfellow and Sarah Jane Foy, in 1834 (according to FamilySearch, which gives her name as Leorina Louise Fuller).

Her older sister, Mary Louise (born Nov. 30, 1799), on May 15, 1823, married Nathan Longfellow, son of Samuel Longfellow’s brother and sister-in-law Stephen and Abigail.

Stephen Longfellow was born in 1760 in Hampton, New Hampshire. He and Abigail (born in 1766) were married May 3, 1785, in Newcastle; they had four sons and eight daughters, starting with Mary, born Aug. 10, 1785. (Mary was the Longfellow readers met briefly last week, who married John Cain.)

John and Mary’s son Page Cain/Kane, born Jan. 21, 1834, married Martha Longfellow on March 2, 1861. Martha was another of Samuel and Mary (Perkins) Longfellow’s granddaughters, son of Jonathan, born in Palermo in 1795, and his wife Betsy (Edwards).

Stephen Longfellow died Jan. 31, 1834, and his brother, Samuel Longfellow, died Feb. 3, 1834. Stephen’s widow, Abigail, died May 13, 1843; Samuel’s widow, Mary, died April 6, 1849.

Samuel and Mary are buried under the same stone in Palermo’s Old Greeley Corner Cemetery, which also has graves of several descendants. Your writer did not find a burial location for Stephen or Abigail.

Main sources

Dowe, Milton E., History Town of Palermo Incorporated 1804 (1954).
Howard, Millard, An Introduction to the Early History of Palermo, Maine (second edition, December 2015).

Websites, miscellaneous.

PHOTOS: SAD #18 students busy with school projects

China Primary School: 2024 Maine Stem Film Challenge Winners: Second grader, Syar, from Ms. Kimmie’s class and his brother, Shya, from Mrs. Dunn’s kindergarten class recently participated in the 2024 Maine Stem Film Challenge held by the University of Southern Maine. They submitted a film on the topic of ecology – focusing on amphibians and won first place in the K-3 division!

China Middle School: Gifted and Talented Students Delve into Space Studies: Gifted and Talented students at both China and Messalonskee Middle schools participated in a space mission with the Bangor Challenger Learning Center. Both schools created a live 3D space timeline posted in their buildings. Students then learned how to use Canva to “digitize” their timeline and create a video. Some students used AI tools in and out of Canva to do voice overs. Mrs. Paquette and Ms. Fish teamed up for this technology piece.

Williams Elementary School: Challenger Learning Center of Maine: In an exciting educational initiative, Mrs. Pullen’s and Mr. Polley’s fifth graders teamed up with the Challenger Learning Center of Maine to delve into the mysteries of Mars and its moons. Through interactive simulations and expert guidance, students explored the unique characteristics of Mars’ moons. During their discussions, students connected to the science standard about Earth’s revolution and recognized that there is a critical window of landing opportunities on Mars, which is influenced by its orbit around the Sun.

Messalonskee Middle School: Seventh Grade Social Studies Colonization Simulation: Ms. Michaud’s social studies classes on Team Boothbay have been role playing life in Colonial America. Students have been journaling and acting out as though they are traders, explorers, governors, teachers, healers, blacksmiths, and Native Americans in class to gain first-hand experiences at life in the New World during the 1600-1700s. Students have enjoyed this engaging unit and exceeded expectations in their roles as colony members!