| A history of
Waldo County properly begins with an account of the Muscongus,
or Waldo Patent. This grant, issued by the Plymouth Council in
1630, to John Beauchamp of London, and Thomas Leverett of
Boston, Eng., extended on the seaboard between the Muscongus and
Penobscot rivers, and comprised nearly 1,000 square miles,
taking in the whole of the present county of Knox, except the
Fox Islands, and of Waldo County, with the exception of
territory now covered by five towns. No price was paid for this
tract; it was thought that the settlement of the section would
enhance the value of others.
Success in the fisheries at Monhegan,
and in other localities along the coast of Maine, hastened an
occupation of the Muscongus grant; and in the spring of 1630,
Edward Ashley and William Pierce, agents of the patentees, came
with laborers and mechanics, and established a trading-house on
the George's River, in what is now Thomaston.. This settlement
was broken up by King Philip's war, which terminated in 1678.
After this the whole territory lay desolate for nearly 40 years.
On the death of Beauchamp, Leverett
became by law possessed of the whole grant; and for several
years he assumed its management. Through him the patent
descended to his son, Governor John Leverett of Massachusetts,
and in 1714, to President John Leverett of Harvard College, the
grandson of the latter, and the great-grandson of the original
grantee. In 1719 peace was apparently restored, and Leverett
entered upon measures for re-settling and re-organizing the
patent. He parceled the land into ten shares in common, and
conveyed them to certain persons thenceforth called the "Ten
Proprietors." These proprietors admitted 20 other partners
termed the "Twenty Associates," among whom were Cornelius and
John Waldo of Boston. The Twenty Associates afterwards
transferred to the Waldos, 100,000 acres. Under their auspices,
1719-20, two plantations, which subsequently became the thriving
towns of Thornaston and Warren, were commenced. This may be
regarded as the first permanent settlement of the patent.
In 1726, one David Dunbar, who had
obtained an appointment styling him "Surveyor-General of the
King's Woods," became very aggressive. Samuel Waldo was sent to
England to procure a revocation of Dunbar's authority, and in
the end succeeded. For this and other valuable services the 30
partners conveyed to him one-half of the whole patent. In 1744
he distinguished himself at the capture of Louisburg, and gained
the title of General or Brigadier Waldo. After the accession of
General Waldo to so large an interest in the patent, added to
what he had inherited of his father's share, about 200,000 acres
still belonged to the old proprietors. In 1734 General Waldo
contracted with the Twenty Associates to purchase one-half of
their shares, leaving them 100,000 acres. This arrangement was
not completed until 1768. General Waldo offered favorable
inducements for European immigration, and in 1749, German
colonists established the town of Waldoborough. Owing to his
influence Fort Pownall, Stockton, was built at a time when no
white inhabitant retained a dwelling-place upon the shores of
Penobscot River or Belfast Bay. While upon a tour of observation
to this portion of his estate, he died suddenly near Bangor, May
23, 1759, at the age of 63 years. A county, two thriving towns,
and the lofty elevation of Mount Waldo perpetuate his name. The
land descended to the General's four children, Samuel, Francis,
Lucy and Hannah. The last named became the wife of Thomas
Flucker, secretary of the Province. Flucker afterward purchased
the shares belonging to Samuel. Lucy died without children, and
her interest fell to the brothers and sisters. Flucker and
Francis Waldo were Tories. They removed to England, and their
property became forfeited to the State.
In 1774, Henry Knox, afterwards a
general in the Revolution, married Miss Lucy Flucker, the second
daughter of Thomas and Hannah (Waldo) Flucker, and the
grand-daughter of General Waldo. When the Revolution had ended,
General Knox purchased four-fifths of the whole. patent; the
remainder was the property of his wife. The territory was
surveyed, the lines adjusted, and in 1792, General Knox took
formal possession of his estate, which then contained only 9
incorporated towns. He did much to induce immigration. Sometime
before his death-which occurred in 1806-he became involved in
pecuniary embarrassments. In 1798 he mortgaged that part of his
domain now comprised in Waldo County to General Lincoln and
Colonel Jackson, who had been his sureties. This mortgage was,
in 1802, assigned to Messrs. Israel Thorndike, David Sears and
William Prescott of Boston; and they foreclosed it. They
established a land agency in Belfast in 1809. Many of the land
titles in Waldo County are derived through these proprietors. It
is not known what price was paid for the mortgage by Thorndike,
Sears and Prescott. The valuation of their unsold land in the
county was in 1815, $148,000. The lands owned by the original
mortgagees are now alienated excepting Brigadier's or Sear's
Island in Searsport,-which is the property of David and Henry F.
Sears of Boston, great-grandsons of the first mortgagee. It was
not until the year 1759 that a permanent settlement was planted
in Waldo County.
The British crown had secured and
fortified St. John's River, and the enemy bad no other outlet to
the sea than through the Penobscot River. Governor Pownall of
Massachusetts having called the attention of the legislature to
the importance of establishing a fortification at Penobscot, an
expedition, headed by the Governor, proceeded to the region, and
began the construction of a fort at Wasaumkeng Point, now Fort
Point, within the present limits of Stockton. It was while
accompanying a detachment which had ascended the river a few
miles above where Brewer now stands, and had taken formal
possession of the county for the Province of Massachusetts Bay,
that General Samuel Waldo dropped down in a fit of apoplexy, and
soon after expired. The deceased general was buried at the
"Point," with military honors and religious services, on the
evening of May 25, 1759. A sermon, the first in Waldo County,
was preached by Rev. Mr. Philips.
The fort, completed July 28, 1759, was
called Fort Pownall. Until the Revolutionary war a garrison was
constantly maintained. General Jedediah Preble, with a force of
84 men, was first placed in command. Both in civil and military
life he so distinguished himself as to inscribe his name upon
the page of history. He was the father of Commodore Preble, a
still more distinguished man. He died at Portland in 1807, at
the age of 77. In 1763, General Preble resigned command of the
fort, and was succeeded by Col. Thomas Goldthwait. a native of
Chelsea, Massachusetts. He was paymaster in the expedition
against Crown Point in 1755. While resident at Fort Pownall he
was commissioned as the first justice of the peace in this
section. He solemnized the first marriages on the river. In 1770
he was superseded by John Preble, son of the first commander of
the fort. But Governor Hutchinson, a zealous royalist, coming
into power the following year, he re-instated Goldthwait into
his former office. Being a Tory, Goldthwait permitted Captain
Mowatt, of the British sloop "Canseau" to dismantle the fort and
take away its defenses in 1775. This brought down upon him the
wrath of the settlers. The next year all his commissions were
revoked, and Goldthwait joined the British forces. He was
drowned during the Revolutionary war by the shipwreck of the
vessel in which he had taken passage for Nova Scotia. In July,
1775, the block-house and all the wooden works were burned to
the ground for fear that they would be occupied by the enemy to
the prejudice of the neighboring inhabitants. The trading-house
was kept up until 1777.
The remains of the breastwork of Fort Pownall are still to be
seen about 25 rods from the water's edge, in front of the
present great summer hotel called the Wasaumkeag House. Fort
Point is the outer promontory of what is now the town of
Stockton, but was the town of Prospect formerly. It rises quite
abruptly on the south and east, some 60 or 70 feet from the sea,
but on the westerly side a passage opens of easy ascent from the
water's edge to the heights above. Looking down the eastern
channel of Penobscot Bay, a long and fine sea-view is had; while
all the towns and villages from Bucksport round nearly to Owl's
Head, are distinctly seen. On the old parade ground a growth of
trees-some 18 inches in diameter-now stands.
One of the first centennial celebrations ever held in this
country was held at Port Point on the 28th of July, 1859. The
number of persons present was estimated to be at least 8,000.
When it was found that the garrison at Fort Pownall afforded
protection and security, the tide of emigration began to set in
the direction of Waldo County. Between 1760 and 1772, all the
towns washed by Penobscot waters between Camden and Bangor on
the one side, and Castine and Brewer on the other, were
penetrated by hardy yeomanry, designing here to make a home for
themselves and their descendants. All the towns within the shore
limits of the county, except Searsport, Stockton and Winterport,
received acts of incorporation between 1773 and 1812. Little did
the men who erected Fort Pownall, or the men, who, under its
protection, first settled the shores of the Penobscot, apprehend
what marvelous changes the succeeding century would witness.
Waldo County formed part of York
County's territory until 1760, when Lincoln County was
established, which included it until 1789, when Hancock County
was erected; this next held it until 1827, when, on February
7th, it was incorporated as the County of Waldo, and was named
for Gen. Samuel Waldo. The erection of Knox County in 1860 took
off from Waldo County the towns of Appleton, Camden, Hope, North
Haven and Vinaihaven. In its present form, Waldo County embraces
25 towns and one city, the latter being Belfast, the county
capital. The population in 1870 was 34,640. In 1880 it was
32,468. The valuation in 1870 was $10,090,581. In 1880 it was
$9,577,834.
Source: Varney, George J., Gazetteer of the
State of Maine. Boston: B. B. Russell, 1886.
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