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Keywords: Lumber
Historical Items Showing 3 of 888 View All
Item 69116
Title: Stacked long lumber, Starbird Lumber Co., Strong, ca. 1957
Contributed by: Strong Historical Society
Date: circa 1957
Location: Strong
Media: Black & white photograph
Item 10776
Title: Gilbertville steam lumber mill, 1906
Contributed by: Maine Historical Society
Date: 1906
Location: Gilbertville
Media: Photographic print
Item 29365
Title: Milled lumber piles, Biddeford or Saco, ca. 1915
Contributed by: McArthur Public Library
Date: circa 1915
Location: Saco; Biddeford
Media: Glass plate negative
Tax Records Showing 3 of 9 View All
Item 70672
Item 46377
Address: 368-376 Danforth Street, Portland
Owner in 1924: Sebago Lumber Company
Use: Stables & Garage
Item 46378
Exhibits Showing 3 of 6 View All
Exhibit
Cooks and Cookees: Lumber Camp Legends
Stories and tall tales abound concerning cooks and cookees -- important persons in any lumber camp, large or small.
Exhibit
Bangor became the largest lumber port in the world in the early 19th century, aided by several dams that diverted water and made lumber drives down the Penobscot River possible.
Exhibit
Yarmouth's "Third Falls" provided the perfect location for papermaking -- and, soon, for producing soda pulp for making paper. At the end of the 19th century and beginning of the 20th, Yarmouth was an international leader in soda pulp production.
Sites Showing 3 of 5 View All
Site
The history of a long-time mill town as depicted by seventh and eighth grade students at Mattanawcook Junior High School, with help from Lincoln Historical Society and Lincoln Memorial Library. The site includes exhibits on the paper industry, founding fathers, wartime Lincoln, Main Street, influential institutions, and communication and transportation.
Site
Strong, a Mussul Unsquit village
The history of a small western Maine community north of Farmington as told by a team consisting of Strong Historical Society, Strong Elementary School, and Strong Public Library. Exhibit topics include Strong's prominence in the wood products industry (it was once the "Toothpick Capital of the World"), the "Bridge that Changed the Map," schools and educational history, clubs and organizations, "Fly Rod" Crosby, the first Maine guide, and a rich student section related to the Civil War and post-Civil War era in the town.
Site
An extensive history of a small central Maine town as compiled by team members from Guilford Historical Society and Piscataquis Community Middle School, with input from Guilford Memorial Library, Guilford Economic Development Board, and the Guilford’s town office. Manufacturing, festive events, historic buildings, notable veterans, and education, are covered in depth.