19th Century

19th-century-york-maine-mural-panel-gordon-carlisle

Town of York, Maine Mural – 1800s

In 1821, just one year after Maine achieved statehood, York resident Asa Freeman observed: “The business of York heretofore has been pretty good for one lawyer, but I think there’s but small prospect of its increasing; the place has been rather on the decline for some years.” His assessment reflected the town’s diminished economic outlook. A succession of wars—from the American Revolution through the Napoleonic conflicts— had severely weakened York’s once-thriving maritime economy, prompting many residents to seek opportunities elsewhere, particularly in the growing northern towns.

York suffered an additional setback when, a little more than a decade later, it lost its long-held status as the shire town and judicial center of York County. For decades thereafter, the former courthouse stood largely neglected, used for a variety of temporary purposes—a visible reminder of a lost era.

The town’s fortunes began to turn during and after the Civil War. In the postwar decades, York underwent a remarkable transformation into a premier seacoast resort. The construction of the first grand hotels attracted visitors seeking summer leisure. This growth accelerated with the arrival of the railroad spur in 1887 and, ten years later, the electric trolley line. These transportation links established York Beach as a popular seasonal destination.

Each year from May through September, boarding houses and hotels filled with visitors—a pattern of summer life that continues in York to this day.

Nineteenth Century York History

Timeline compiled by Town of York Historian James Kences

1800–1809

1800 – York County’s population was 34,284; York’s population was 2,776. Twenty-five Moulton families, twenty Donnell families, and thirteen Bragdon families lived in town.

1800 – Rev. Rosewell Messenger delivered an oration on the death of George Washington.

1800 – Customs revenue in the Piscataqua region reached its peak at $143,000.

1801 – Only Joseph Tucker remained from the previous board of selectmen; Jeremiah Clark, Daniel Raynes, Elihu Bragdon, and Capt. Alexander McIntire were newly elected.

1801 – Twenty-three highway districts were formally defined.

1802 – Elihu Bragdon was re-elected; Maj. Samuel Derby, Joseph Bragdon, Theodore Webber, and Moses Lyman joined the board of selectmen, serving through 1806.

1802–1806 – Alfred repeatedly petitioned the legislature to hold half the county court sessions there; Alfred’s first courthouse and an early jail were built.

1803 – Political controversy arose over Collector of Customs Joseph Tucker; a January town meeting debated his removal, though a majority supported him.

October 13, 1803 – Edward Emerson Jr. died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound after suffering heavy financial losses; about a decade later, his brother Bulkley Emerson also died by suicide.

c. 1803 – County commissioners laid out a new road bypassing Ferry Lane, part of the old Post Road, despite strong local opposition.

1805 – Alexander Rice petitioned to build a toll bridge over the York River (Rice’s Bridge).

1806 – The number of selectmen was reduced to three (Moses Lyman, Elihu Bragdon, and Theodore Webber), who were re-elected the following year.

June 16, 1806 – Charles Came recorded a “very remarkable” total eclipse of the sun, so dark that stars became visible.

The Embargo and Local Impact, 1807–1809

December 22, 1807 – President Jefferson’s Embargo took effect, banning American ships from foreign ports. Coasting and fishing vessels continued under close regulation.

January 1809 – An Enforcement Act tightened controls; the embargo ended in March 1809 when Jefferson left office and Madison became president.

1808 – New Hampshire’s Joseph Whipple reported that York Collector Jeremiah Clark had lost control of enforcement, and embargo-breaking trade used York as a base.

March 8, 1808 – Town meeting appointed a committee to draft a local law preventing horses from running at large in winter, with fines for violators.

August 8, 1808 – Joseph Weare noted the launching of Theodore Weare’s vessel.

September 13, 1808 – Weare recorded Capt. William Avery’s return with 330 quintals of fish.

1809 – The three men first elected as selectmen (Elihu Bragdon, Edward Simpson, Joseph Weare Jr.) all declined to serve; a second election chose Moses Lyman, Theodore Webber, and Jeremiah Paul.

1810–1819

1810–1812 – Elihu Bragdon, Alexander McIntire, and Theodore Webber served as selectmen. In 1811 they also acted as assessors, overseers of the poor, and town treasurers; in 1812 those offices were separated again.

June 1, 1810 – Schooner Speedwell (40 tons), owned by John Nowell and mastered by Joseph Lowe, was licensed for the cod fishery.

February 12, 1811 – York Cotton Factory Company was incorporated; its mill stood about 100 yards below the outlet of Chase’s Pond.

April 9, 1811 – Schooner Exchange (32 tons), owned by William D. Moulton and Joseph Kingsbury, was licensed for the cod fishery.

November 11, 1811 – Town meeting voted to replace the swing bridge on the York River, lost in a freshet.

1812 – Town voted to sell the old courthouse once a new one was completed. Nathaniel Grant Marshall was born.

War of 1812 Era, 1812–1815

June 1812 – The United States declared war on Great Britain. A British naval blockade extended to New England in April 1814, leading to coastal raids.

July 18, 1812 – Schooner Clarissa (68 tons), owned by William D. Moulton, William Simpson, and Samuel Averill, was licensed for the coasting trade.

1813–1814 – York temporarily returned to having five selectmen, likely in response to wartime pressures.

February 5, 1814 – Eighty-three men formed the Volunteer Company of York Sea Fencibles to defend the coast from Wells to Kittery.

June 15–16, 1814 – British warships Bulwark and Endymion raided along the southern Maine coast; local militia mobilized, and a brief incident occurred near the Nubble.

July 25, 1814 – Orders called for Sea Fencibles to man Fort Edward at the entrance to York Harbor.

September 1, 1814 – British forces occupied Castine; Bulwark and Endymion were part of the fleet.

February 13, 1815 – News reached York that the war had ended.

1815 – The number of selectmen was again reduced to three.

1816–1820: Toward Maine Statehood

March 16, 1813 – Town meeting ordered examination of York’s cannon and requested Massachusetts support for harbor defense.

June 9, 1813 – Rev. Rosewell Messenger was the subject of a public hearing over alleged moral infractions, including excessive drinking and improper conduct.

November 18, 1815 – Rev. Moses Dow was ordained as minister of First Parish, succeeding Messenger.

August 1, 1816 – A militia uniform was prescribed: dark blue coats faced with red, and buff waistcoats and trousers.

September 2, 1816 – York voters chose a delegate for the Brunswick convention on separation of Maine from Massachusetts.

September 26, 1816 – Charles Came recorded a devastating frost that destroyed the corn crop.

1817–1820 – Alexander McIntire and Joseph Weare Jr. were repeatedly elected as selectmen; a third member rotated until Joseph Junkins Jr. joined in 1819.

July 16, 1817 – President James Monroe visited Coventry Hall and breakfasted with Judge David Sewall and local dignitaries.

May 1819 – York petitioned the Massachusetts legislature in favor of separation; similar petitions circulated statewide.

July 26, 1819 – York voted 151–136 in favor of Maine’s separation from Massachusetts.

September 20, 1819 – Town chose delegates to the Portland constitutional convention.

December 6, 1819 – York voters unanimously approved the proposed Maine Constitution (91–0).

March 15, 1820 – Maine became the 23rd state in the Union.

April 3, 1820 – York cast 229 votes for William King as Maine’s first governor.

1820–1829: County Seat Lost and Local Change

1820 – Probate and clerk of courts moved to Alfred; registry of deeds had already moved in 1816.

1820 – An agricultural survey reported York as a leading producer of barley and Indian corn, and noted its unusually large number of oxen, cattle, and barns.

January 8, 1821 – Asa Freeman wrote that York’s legal business was in decline and the town had been “on the decline for some years.”

1821–1825 – James Bragdon 3rd, Daniel Bridges Jr., and David Wilcox served as selectmen for consecutive years.

Spring 1823 – York voted overwhelmingly (340 votes) against building a new county prison in Alfred but was overruled.

1824 – A murder trial (Charles Stevens) drew such large crowds it had to be held in the Congregational Church.

1824 – The annual town meeting date shifted from early March to the first week of April.

April–May 1824 – A smallpox outbreak at Cape Neck led to inoculations with cowpox (kine pox).

1825 – Maritime survey showed the York customs district had the smallest tonnage of Maine’s twelve districts.

1827 – Work began on a widened, straightened road from Kittery to Portland, creating the triangular plot at York Corner.

April 25, 1827 – A major freshet swept away mills and bridges at Chase’s Mills and along the river.

March 4, 1829 – The inauguration of President Andrew Jackson was celebrated in York with cannon fire and a large procession.

1830–1839: Temperance, Courts, and Churches

1832 – Theodore Wilson, Solomon Brooks, and William McIntire began several consecutive terms as selectmen.

July 21, 1832 – Town doctors were directed to consult New York and Boston physicians on treating cholera as the epidemic spread in North America.

January 7, 1833 – York protested the removal of judicial courts to Alfred.

1833–1834 – A Methodist church was built in York Village next to the bank building and dedicated in October 1834.

1833 – A large dispute arose between the town and First Parish over ownership of the courthouse site; the town insisted the land belonged to York.

1834 – A triangular tract at York’s western boundary was set off to South Berwick.

April 6, 1835 – The school committee reported serious lack of uniformity in instruction, discipline, and textbooks.

September 1835 – A church council formalized the departure of Rev. Eber Carpenter from First Parish.

April 2, 1836 – George L. Emerson temporarily lost his license to retail spirits under local liquor regulations.

1837–1843 – Frequent turnover in selectmen reflected political and economic instability.

April 3, 1837 – Town leaders urged reform of poor relief and recommended purchasing a town farm to reduce expenses.

1837 – Land behind First Parish Church was set aside for a new burying ground.

1838–1839 – First Parish Church was remodeled and rededicated in 1839.

1840–1849: Reform, Roads, and Schools

July 20, 1841 – York Ledge monument, a 30-foot cast-iron navigation aid, was completed three miles offshore.

1841 – Nathaniel Marshall married Sophia Baker Bragdon; their children Edward Simpson (1842) and George Albert (1843) were born soon after.

1844–1848 – Theodore Wilson, William McIntire, and Alexander Dennett served consecutive terms as selectmen.

April 7, 1845 – Town allowed arrest or forced labor on the poor farm for those refusing to pay poll tax.

April 6, 1846 – Town meeting adopted strong temperance resolutions, refusing licenses for liquor sales.

August 29, 1846 – Voters authorized selling the powder house and military stores, possibly reflecting public sentiment during the Mexican War.

April 3, 1848 – A powerful temperance declaration warned that inaction would bring “idleness, poverty, vice, and crime” to York.

1849–1855 – Charles Came, Joseph Bragdon Jr., and Joseph Weare Jr. served consecutive terms as selectmen.

1849 – Sewall’s Bridge was rebuilt.

December 25, 1849 – Elder Mark Fernald described a rowdy Christmas gathering involving drinking, shooting, and dancing.

1850–1859: Schools, Storms, and Politics

1850 – Nathaniel Marshall sold his store, studied law, and later held local, county, and federal offices, including Collector of Customs.

May 6, 1850 – A great freshet destroyed mills and bridges along the river.

1851 – A militia return listed 276 enrolled men.

April 16, 1851 – A record-breaking tide damaged bridges and wharves.

1852 – Local diaries recorded mumps, lung fever, and dysentery outbreaks, along with enforcement of Maine’s new statewide liquor law.

1853–1854 – The school system underwent a major textbook overhaul.

1856 – A complicated selectmen’s election required additional balloting to fill all three seats.

1857–1859 – John A. Swett, Samuel E. Payne, and Sylvester McIntire served consecutive terms as selectmen.

1859 – The District 1 primary school was described as cold, dark, and poorly furnished; overall, eight schoolhouses were rated good and seven poor.

1860–1869: Civil War and Civic Reorganization

March 8, 1860 – Schooner Gold Hunter was launched at Cape Neddick.

1860 – Hiram Perkins began ringing the bell for town meetings, a duty he maintained through the Civil War.

1860–1863 – Samuel W. Norton and Edmund N. Goodwin served as selectmen through multiple terms.

September 10, 1860 – State elections produced a Republican majority in York.

November 6, 1860 – Presidential election saw a Republican victory in town for the first time in 28 years.

1861–1865 – York supported the Union war effort through militia enrollment, bounties for volunteers, and multiple town meetings on war funding.

April 3, 1865 – News of Richmond’s fall reached York; days later, townspeople learned of Lincoln’s assassination.

April 17, 1865 – Town voted to raise $10,000 to reduce war debt.

March 22, 1869 – Town purchased the former county courthouse and jail, renaming the building the town house.

1870–1879: Town Hall and Emerging Resort

1871 – Town approved improvements to the road at Long Sands Beach; Nathaniel Grant Marshall built the Marshall House hotel on Stage Neck.

February 23, 1874 – The new Town Hall was dedicated; Nathaniel G. Marshall delivered the address and later worked extensively on early town records.

1874–1879 – Town meetings addressed leasing the town house hall, regulating hitching posts, and sale of the town farm; chief of police and policemen (tythingmen) were appointed.

1876–1879 – James A. Bragdon and Josiah D. Bragdon served multiple terms as selectmen.

1879 – A new village schoolhouse was built (later the fire station site). Nubble Lighthouse began operation.

1880–1889: Water, Light, and Rails

1880–1883 – George W. Currier, Rufus Moody, and David Moulton served as selectmen; maritime occupations were still common, with 45 men listed in the census.

1881–1882 – Hobson’s Market opened in York Village; Congregational Church underwent modification and rededication with an address by Joshua Chamberlain.

1882 – Telephone service was introduced in York.

1883 – York Harbor and Beach Railroad Company was incorporated; plans were made for a steam ferry across the Piscataqua.

1884–1896 – George W. S. Putnam served long tenure as selectman; new brickworks and other businesses expanded local industry.

August 8, 1887 – Boston & Maine Railroad spur into York first carried summer visitors, marking a new era of tourism.

1887 – Ellis Park at York Beach was created as a public seaside park.

1888–1889 – Town approved tax incentives for manufacturing, a sewer system for York Beach, and offered a reward for an arsonist; sewer construction began to protect public health.

1890–1899: High Season for the Seaside Resort

1891 – George F. Plaisted began publishing The York Courant. A patriotic flag-raising at the village school emphasized Civil War memory. The town farm opened on Long Sands Road.

1892 – St. Aspinquid Lodge #198 (Masons) was established; Columbus-themed ceremonies were held at Town Hall.

1893 – York County Trust Bank was founded; electric railroad incorporated; a local bicycle club and visiting circus highlighted new leisure pursuits. Town issued $20,000 in bonds.

1894 – Town Hall was rededicated; York adopted summer police regulations, employing seasonal officers.

1895 – Edward S. Marshall built an electric plant; York Shore Water Company organized to pipe water from Chase’s Pond; sidewalks and water mains were extended to York Harbor and York Beach.

1897 – Voters approved the electric railroad; the first electric cars crossed Sewall’s Bridge, and a high school at York Corner and new fire protection (hydrants and firewards) were authorized.

1898 – Lucas Home for Children opened at Long Sands Road; the Spanish-American War briefly raised coastal defense concerns; Marshall House expanded to accommodate more guests.

1899 – Brixham Grange Hall was built; York Harbor train station burned and was later rebuilt; telephone subscriptions grew; repeated fires and rapid building highlighted both risk and growth in the resort community.

1899–1900 – The Old York Historical and Improvement Society formed, and in summer 1900 the Old Gaol museum opened to the public, marking the institutional beginning of historical preservation in York.