Gazetteer of the State of Maine With Numerous Illustrations, by Geo. J. Varney
BOSTON: PUBLISHED BY B. B. RUSSELL, 57 CORNHILL. 1882. Public domain image from
NEWRY. 389
Franklin County, on the west. The township is square in its form, but somewhat larger than the standard size of six miles square. The surface lies in large swells, but generally without the steepness that precludes cultivation. The soil is of granitic origin, and yields well with good dressing. Gilman Pond Mountain, rising northward from the northern border, has a considerable height. Gilman Pond lying on the northern line has an area of about one-half a square mile. Lily Pond, on the western line, is still smaller. The principal stream is Seven Mile Brook or Carabasset River, which rises about the base of Mount Abraham at the north-west, and flows into and through tbe town in a general south westerly course. It receives as a tributary in the eastern part of the town, Gilman Stream, flowing south from Gil- man Pond, and in the south-western part, Lemon Stream. The powers are at North New Portland, on Gilman Stream; at West New Port- land, on Lemon Stream near its junction with the Carabasset; and at East New Portland, near the junction of Gilman Stream with the Carabasset. The manufactories at these different points are as follows: at North New Portland are a lumber-mill, a grist-mill, hand-sled, salt- box, rake and carriage, canning-factories, etc.; at East New Portland, a saw and grist-mill; at West New Portland, a saw-mill, two grist- mills, churn, cloth-dressing, carriage, boot, shoe and moccasin factories. The town has much attractive scenery, and the villages wear an ap- pearance of thrift. New Portland is on the stage-line from North- Anson, terminus of tbe Somerset Railroad to Dead River.
The township, with that of Freeman on its west, was granted by Massachusetts to the sufferers by the burning of Falmouth (now Port- land) by Mowatt in 1775. It was organized as a plantation in 1805, and as a town in 1808, receiving its name from the town whose mis- fortunes it partially remedied. David Hutchins, of Chelmsford, Mass., was the first settler, probably, in 1785. In 1786 Josiah Parker arrived from Groton, Mass. He had served in the fourth regiment of Mas- sachusetts militia, in the war of the Revolution, and was honorably discharged at West Point; and he subsequently bore an honorable and arduous part in the affairs of this town. He was ninety-six years of age in 1856. Another valued citizen was Andrew Elliott, who was one of the earlier settlers, a very public spirited man, who lived to the advanced age of one hundred and three years. Ebenezer Richardson, from Sedgewick, came in the same year, and John and William Churchill, from Bingham, in 1788. Later came Eben Casley, from Gorham, Samuel and Benjamin Gould, Solomon Walker, Charles Warden, from Woolwich, and John Dennis, from Groton, N. H. The town, in 1809, voted an invitation to Beniah Pratt to become the parish minister, which he accepted, but was not settled. In 1815, Samuel Hutchins, son of the first settler, was called and settled, and had a portion of the ministerial lands. Both these divines belonged to the Free-will Baptists, who were the principal sect at first. The churches are now two Free Baptist, a Methodist, a Universalist, a Union, and a Congregational Union church. The number of public schoolhouses is sixteen, and the value of tbe public school property $3,500. The population in 1870 was 1,454. In 1880 it was 1,271. The valuation in 1870 was $400,590. In 1880 it was $466,250.
Newry liesf in the western part of Oxford County, just north
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