Contributed by New Sweden Historical Society
- MMN #20620
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Description
A log cabin in New Sweden that is typical of the cabins built by the original settlers in the 1870s as it looked in 1938.
Swedes first settled in Maine in 1870 because the state’s governor at the time, Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain, wanted to stem the decline in population as Mainers began to move west. He engaged Portland banker and landowner William Widgery Thomas, who knew Swedes and the Swedish language having served as an envoy under President Abraham Lincoln, to return to Sweden and recruit hardy people to settle in northern Maine.
About This Item
- Title: Log Cabin, New Sweden, 1938
- Creation Date: 1938
- Subject Date: 1938
- Location: New Sweden, Aroostook County, ME
- Media: Photographic print
- Dimensions: 17 cm x 25 cm
- Collection: New Sweden Historical Album - 1938
- Object Type: Image
Cross Reference Searches
Standardized Subject Headings
- Dwellings--Maine--New Sweden
- Log buildings
- Log cabins--Maine--New Sweden
- New Sweden (Me.)--History
- Swedish Americans--Maine
For more information about this item, contact:
New Sweden Historical Society116 Station Road, New Sweden, ME 04762
207-896-5200
This Item is protected by copyright and/or related rights. No Permission is required to use the low-resolution watermarked image for educational use, or as allowed by the applicable copyright. For all other uses, permission is required.
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