Trescott
History Timeline |
•
|
Circa 1785: Trescott first settled. |
•
|
1791: Originally called Plantation No. 9 E. D.
(Eastern District of Machias) as part of one million
acres in Maine purchased by Philadelphia magnate and
land investor William Bingham from the Commonweath
of Massachusetts. |
•
|
February 7, 1827: Incorporated as the town of
Trescott; named for Major Lemuel Trescott, prominent
resident of Lubec during the Revolutionary War. |
•
|
War of 1812: Naval skirmishes fought along
Trescott coast and harbors. |
•
|
1800s and early 1900s: Economy based on farming,
fishing, lumber, shipbuilding, and sheep raising.
Harbors were at Bailey's Mistake, Haycock Harbor,
Moose Cove and the Bay at the South Branch of the
Cobscook River (now called Whiting Bay). |
•
|
20th century: Economy based mostly on timber,
fishing, blueberry fields and poultry. |
•
|
Late 1930s: New Deal plan to flood much of
Trescott as part of Quoddy Tidal Power project;
eventually dropped. |
•
|
March 8, 1945: De-organized due to declining
population. |
•
|
Mid 1980s: Tidal Power flood plan revived and
rejected. |
•
|
1988–1992: Successful fight to stop National
Park Service from designating privately owned south
Trescott coast as a National Natural Landmark and
taking over Trescott and most of Washington County
for new National Park. |
•
|
1995: Bonnie Healy began researching history of
Trescott and its early settlement. Founded Trescott
Historical Society May 2000; first meeting October
2000. |