|
THE GROWTH OF A CITY
A BRIEF HISTORY OF
LEWISTON
by Douglas I. Hodgkin
In 1768
the Pejepscot Proprietors, a Boston-based land company, granted to Jonathan
Bagley and Moses Little of Newbury, Massachusetts, land on the east side of the
Androscoggin River at Twenty-Mile Falls. They were to settle fifty families
there and to build a road to connect with the road from Topsham. The place was
named "Lewistown," apparently in honor of the late Job Lewis, a Boston
merchant and former Proprietor.
The
first white settlers in Lewiston, Maine, were Paul Hildreth and his family in
1770. His log cabin was a short distance below the falls near the location of
the Continental Mill. Although the cabin burned and his family had to spend the
winter in New Gloucester, they returned in the spring. Hildreth operated the
first ferry about half a mile below the falls. Several families followed. By the
first census in 1790, Lewiston's population was 532 persons. The residents
sought incorporation as a town and received their charter February 18, 1795.
Active
members of the board of selectmen in the early years included Winslow Ames, Joel
Thompson, and Dan Read. The latter also served twenty years as town clerk and
forty years as the first postmaster. In the 1840s and 1850s, particularly
influential members were William R. Frye, Ebenezer Ham, Mark Lowell, and Stephen
Read. Throughout Lewiston's status as a town, several members of the Garcelon
family also served as civic leaders.
Water
power was harnessed relatively early, as a dam was built of timber by 1808-1809
and a canal was made. In 1809 Michael Little built a large wooden building with
saw, grist, and fulling mills next to the falls. This was burned in 1814 by an
arsonist, but new mills soon took its place. The town grew slowly, reaching 1549
inhabitants by 1830. Because most were farmers, the population was widely
dispersed. The first bridge was built in 1823, but most of Lewiston Falls
Village was on what is now the Auburn side of the river. While there were mills
by the falls, what is now downtown Lewiston still was the Harris Farm, a few
dwellings, and a school house.
In 1836
local entrepreneurs, primarily the Little family, organized a company to build
dams, canals and mills, but they lacked the capital to achieve their goals. The
company became known as the Lewiston Water Power Company in 1848 and was taken
over by the Franklin Company in 1857. As late as the 1840's what is now Lisbon
Street was undeveloped, but the community soon changed. Boston investors,
including Benjamin E. Bates, financed the construction of the canal system and
several textile mills. Many Irish immigrants were employed in the construction,
under the supervision of Capt. Albert H. Kelsey. These mills prospered during
the Civil War, as the owners correctly foresaw that the war would be long; they
had stockpiled sufficient cotton to maintain production.
Many
people moved into town from the surrounding countryside. Mill owners constructed
tenements to provide supervised housing for Yankee farm girls who provided much
of the early work force and then to accommodate the rapid influx of population.
These blocks were located along Canal, Park, and Oxford Streets right across
from the mills.
The 1850
census showed a 99 percent jump in one decade to 3,584 people and then a 107
percent increase to 7,424 in 1860. A premier hotel, the DeWitt, was built about
1854. The growing city attracted in 1855 the establishment of Maine State
Seminary, which later became Bates College, chartered in 1864.
After Lewiston became a city, Jacob Barker Ham took office as the first
mayor in 1863. He was followed by William P. Frye who went on to serve in
Congress, including the position as President pro tem of the Senate. In that
position, Senator Frye was twice next in line for the presidency due to
vacancies in the office of Vice President. Alonzo Garcelon, who served as mayor
in 1871, became governor of Maine in 1879. His son Alonzo Marston Garcelon was
mayor in 1883 and served twenty years on the education board. Daniel J.
McGillicuddy served three terms as mayor and a term in Congress.
Central Block on the corner of Lisbon and Main Streets became the anchor
for development of the downtown area and housed city offices. Lisbon Street
became the main commercial center. A new impressive city building was
constructed in 1873 across from a park donated by the Franklin Company; after an
1890 fire, the current city hall replaced it.
After fire destroyed several stores on Lisbon Street, leading citizens
decided to construct "the best opera house east of Boston." The Music
Hall was built in 1877 at 69 Lisbon Street. The offerings here, at the Empire
Theater, and in many other halls generally featured traveling stock companies,
minstrels, drama and melodrama.
Lewiston and Auburn constructed a railroad spur from Lewiston to the
Montreal-Portland railroad line. The Canadian National Railway thereby gave
competition to the Maine Central Railroad and freight rates dropped. The Grand
Trunk Station ("The Depot") on Lincoln Street became the arrival point
in the 1870's and after for the migration of thousands of French Canadians to
Lewiston. They settled in the area between Lisbon Street and the river, many in
blocks built by the mills or in an area called "Little Canada." The
rapid in-migration helped to raise the population to 19,083 by 1880. In forty
years, the city had grown tenfold.
St. Joseph's Church was constructed on Main Street. The Dominican Block
on Lincoln Street was a religious, political and cultural center. It housed the
first parochial school, established in 1882-1883. The teachers were Sisters of
Charity (Grey Nuns) until the Ladies of Sion arrived in 1892. St. Peter's Church
was the French parish, replaced by Sts. Peter and Paul, built 1905-1938.
City services expanded rapidly during the last half of the nineteenth
century to accommodate the growing population. Several schools were built
including the Frye Grammar School. The city established a normal school to train
its own teachers in what is now known as the Dingley Building. Lewiston High
School opened in 1850 and moved into a brick building on Main Street in 1859. It
later occupied the Jordan School, then a building on Central Avenue, and now a
comprehensive high school in Franklin Pasture. St. Dominic's High School was
founded in 1941 in the clubhouse of L'Association St. Dominique.
Other city services included a fire company organized in 1849, the
Manufacturers and Mechanics Library Association, a city park granted by the
Franklin Company in 1861, a water works authorized in 1873, a franchise granted
for a horse railroad in 1881, a municipal electric lighting plant, and the
extension of the city water system to Lake Auburn in 1899.
Under the direction of the Grey Nuns, St. Mary's, the first hospital was
dedicated in 1889, which moved to the new building on Sabattus Street in 1902.
The original Central Maine General Hospital was established in 1891 with thirty
beds in two houses on Main Street.
In the early twentieth century, notable mayors included Frank A. Morey
who became Speaker of the Maine House; Robert J. Wiseman, the first
Franco-Canadian mayor; Louis Jefferson Brann, who established a municipal coal
yard and a public swimming pool and playground, and became Governor of Maine in
the 1930s; and Harold Newell Skelton, who achieved completion of the high school
on Central Avenue. For the next four decades, each
mayor had a French name, including Jean Charles
Boucher, who also had a lengthy career in the Maine legislature.
After
almost eighty years of amendments, the city charter had become unwieldy.
Finally, corrupt practices provided the impetus to adopt a new charter in 1939,
consisting of a mayor, council, a powerful Board of Finance, and several other
commissions. The city moved to a more professional system with the adoption in
1979 of a new charter that established a city administrator and abolished most
boards and commissions.
The
development of Lewiston's suburbs responded to the American desire for the
independence of home ownership. Throughout the twentieth century, population
expanded outward from the city center. Industry began to gravitate to more
suburban locations. American Electro Metals at 1560 Lisbon Road in the 1930's
became North American Philips in the 1940's, the predecessor of Philips Elmet
Corp., which has expanded substantially. The Lewiston Development Corporation,
consisting of local business leaders, raised funds to construct a building to
attract the Geiger Brothers printing concern that produces "The Farmer's
Almanac." Other businesses have located in industrial parks, and shopping
centers have opened.
Competition
from the South and abroad led to the closure of most of the textile mills. The
city is developing new uses for these structures. The population in Lewiston has
stabilized at around 40,000 in each census from 1940 to the present. Further
growth in the region has continued in the neighboring towns. Lewiston continues
as a vibrant city that reflects its increasing economic, cultural and social
diversity.
By: Douglas I. Hodgkin
A native of Lewiston, Professor of Political Science at Bates College, and
author of the book: Lewiston Memories: A Bicentennial Pictorial.
This article was reprinted
by permission of the author.
|