Keywords: Boat landings
- Historical Items (144)
- Tax Records (1)
- Architecture & Landscape (0)
- Online Exhibits (35)
- Site Pages (179)
- My Maine Stories (4)
- Lesson Plans (1)
Site Pages
These sites were created for each contributing partner or as part of collaborative community projects through Maine Memory. Learn about collaborative projects on MMN.
Site Page
"He is the author of Speculation Nation: Land Mania in the Revolutionary American Republic (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2023)."
Site Page
"… governance; and, international relations, land speculation and Revolution‐era land bounties."
Site Page
"… grant by the Council of New England (granting land from King Charles I under a royal charter) to a vague, poorly defined area on both sides of the…"
Site Page
"… of "Properties of Empire: Indians, Colonists, and Land Speculators on the New England Frontier" (2019). Coll. 60, vol."
Site Page
"Jane, along with her mother and brother, had sold land to English colonists eight years prior, and Jane insisted that the English honor their prior…"
Site Page
"Blaakman, Speculation Nation: Land Mania in the Revolutionary American Republic (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2023)."
Site Page
"Land—lots of it—was a means to that end. In 1714, for instance, eight Boston men established the Pejepscot Company, which claimed a large tract…"
Site Page
"… exist because of competing colonial claims to land. As historian Alan Taylor observed: In 1800 the Pejepscot Patent's settlers complained that…"
Site Page
"… the Federal government into protecting Wabanaki land interests in what is now Maine, and led to the Maine Indian Claims Settlement Act of 1980."
Site Page
"His grandfather purchased lands near Saco in 1673 and his father married into land ownership in Maine. Both were councilors in the state."
Site Page
"… was an essential complement to the surveys and land sales documented in company records. Women’s economic activities, in short, undergirded both…"
Site Page
"… and parceled out portions of their “undivided” land, acreage was assigned according to shares. Proprietors who held onto their company shares long…"
Site Page
"… of Uncertainties”: Penobscot River Islands, Land Assignments, and Indigenous Women Proprietors in Nineteenth-Century Maine.” The American Indian…"
Site Page
"… This improvisational system for claiming land as legal property sprouted a thicket of conflicts."
Site Page
"… who sought to reside, plant or trade on Wabanaki lands. These acts incorporated settlers into existing Indigenous economic and social systems."
Site Page
Beyond Borders - Mapping Maine and the Northeast Boundary - Pejepscot Proprietors Papers, 1627‐1866
"It includes land deeds, depositions, maps, correspondence, broadsides, proprietor’s meetings records, accounts, land agents, and other documents…"
Site Page
"The key conflicts seem to be between the large land-owning proprietors and the settler-occupants of these tracts of land, often without a mention of…"
Site Page
"… Proprietors claimed and sold large tracts of land, including Norridgewock, the site of a brutal attack in 1724 on the traditionally inhabited…"
Site Page
"… the south side of Faneuil Hall, the Pejepscot lands left to him by his father, as well as other dubious land titles on Roanoke Island in North…"
Site Page
"… regions, the charter stipulated that no grants of land made in the area east of the Kennebec River would be legally recognized unless separately…"
Site Page
"… was used to refer to the region—covered all the land northeast of Passamaquoddy Bay, from the Atlantic coast to the Gulf of St."
Site Page
Beyond Borders - Mapping Maine and the Northeast Boundary - Project Background
"… often hidden within histories of land barons and proprietors. Additionally, the project intended to transcribe about one half of the initial page…"
Site Page
Beyond Borders - Mapping Maine and the Northeast Boundary - Kennebec Proprietors Biographies
"… association of Boston Merchants jumped into the land speculation business by reviving an old Pilgrim grant on the Kennebec River in Maine."
Site Page
"… and wider Wabanaki Nations’ deep knowledge of the land with European confusion, ignorance, and uncertainty."