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Keywords: Old Hallowell on the Kennebec

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These sites were created for each contributing partner or as part of collaborative community projects through Maine Memory. Learn about collaborative projects on MMN.


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Historic Hallowell - Hallowell History Bibliography

"Nason, Emma Huntington. Old Hallowell on the Kennebec. Augusta, ME: Burleigh & Flynt, 1909. Norton, Edward Preble."

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Historic Hallowell - Industry on the Bombahook Citations

"Old Hallowell on the Kennebec. Augusta, Maine: Sam Teddy Publishers, 2009 N.p.: n.p., n.d. www.google.com. 23 Apr."

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Historic Hallowell - Hallowell's First Dwelling

"Emma Huntington Nason, Old Hallowell on the Kennebec. Augusta, ME: Burleigh & Flynt, 1909. Next steps in the stroll through Hallowell ~ A Great…"

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Historic Hallowell - Dummer House

"Old Hallowell on the Kennebec, Nason, 1909. Nathaniel Dummer held several prominent roles in the civic life of Hallowell."

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Historic Hallowell - Hallowell House

"… members of the Worster Family took over the Old Hallowell House, renaming it the "Worster House". Next steps in the stroll through Hallowell."

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Historic Hallowell - The Opening & Closing of Hallowell's Shoe Companies

"In 1903, the Cotton Mill was sold to Kennebec Realty Company. The Cotton Mill moved out of the building in 1903 when it was sold to the Kennebec…"

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Historic Hallowell - City Marshals

"He was assigned the duties of deputy sheriff of Kennebec County in 1901 and City Marshal of Hallowell."

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Historic Hallowell - Cotton Mill & Johnson Shoe Citations

"Nason, Emma H. Old Hallowell on the Kennebec. Hallowell: n.p., 1909 Potter, Betty. “Hallowell Shoe closes.” Kennebec Journal 13 Feb. 1975: N. pag."

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Historic Hallowell - Hallowell Schools

"High School, Hallowell, ca. 1900Hubbard Free Library Young factory workers (like people who worked at the local Hallowell cotton mills and shoe…"

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Historic Hallowell - Shipbuilding

"… were great vessels of enormous size, such as the Hallowell. The Hallowell was built in 1810 by Ebenezer Mayo, and this ship had a length of 107.4…"

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Historic Hallowell - Important Buildings and Institutions

"… author and composer wrote in Old Hallowell on the Kennebec: A stranger visiting Hallowell, to-day, cannot fail to be impressed by the picturesque…"

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Historic Hallowell - A Chosen Place

"He was Baron Wormser, Poet Laureate of the state of Maine, and he recorded his impressions in a piece written for the December 2004 issue of Down…"

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Historic Hallowell - Protect and Serve - Hallowell Fire and Police

"In 1835 the Hallowell Fire Department was organized and over the years it introduced new pieces of fire fighting apparatus--the Hydraulion (Lion)…"

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Historic Hallowell - Police and Fire Citations

"Annual report. 1907. Nason, Emma H. Old Hallowell on the Kennebec. n.d. 14 Apr. 2011 <http:// books.google.com/books?id=26IpurpH5H8C&pg=PA141...>."

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Historic Hallowell - The Fireman's Musters in Hallowell

"The Fireman's Musters in Hallowell Hallowell Fireman's Ribbons For MustersHubbard Free Library Musters were a popular firemen's event that…"

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Historic Hallowell - A Bay State Exodus

"Each decade after the Revolution saw the population of the area increase by 10,000 or more. Two of the early arrivals were Ephraim and Martha…"

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Historic Hallowell - A Post-Revolutionary Generation

"The Proprietors were a group of wealthy Boston merchants whose members included James Bowdoin, John Hancock, Dr."

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Historic Hallowell - Johnny Stringer ~ A Character of Industry

"… described by author Emma Huntington Nason in Old Hallowell on the Kennebec, as one of the town’s “interesting characters.” Who does not remember…"

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Historic Hallowell - The "World of Mirth" Carnival in Hallowell

"After Linderman died in 1944, his partner, Frank Bergen, took over. Known as the finest in America, this carnival would come into the city on fifty…"

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Historic Hallowell - The Tiger and the Lion

"The Tiger #4 is one of the many hand tubs that Hallowell owned. It’s the only one still in Hallowell's possession as the rest have been destroyed by…"

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Historic Hallowell - Industrial Recources

"The Nog was a small piece or a block of wood, and the Oker was used to mark red chalk on wood. The Racing Knife marked or shaped a cut of an object."

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Historic Hallowell - Post Office and Fire Station

"during the aftermath of the ice storm. The pictures to the left were used during the fire chief interview."

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Historic Hallowell - Ice Storm Day 1

"Rain froze on the limbs, coating them in a deep glaze of deadly ice and causing them to fall on utility lines and roads."

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Historic Hallowell - Ice Storm Interviews - Page 2 of 2

"Q: Please use one word to describe the Hallowell Ice Storm of 1998. A: Scary. Written by Clio Barr"