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Posted inBicentennial, Local & State, News, Uncategorized

On this date in Maine history: Sept. 10

Sept. 10, 1917: Maine’s men, contradicting earlier action by the Legislature, vote by a nearly 2-to-1 ratio to reject a proposed state constitutional amendment granting women the right to vote. The House, with future Gov. Percival Baxter leading the charge, had voted 113-35 to approve the measure, and women’s suffrage had fared even better in […]

Posted inBicentennial, Local & State, News

On this date in Maine history: Sept. 8

Sept. 8, 1803: The Portland-based newspaper Eastern Argus publishes its first issue. The paper is the first one in Maine supporting President Thomas Jefferson’s Democratic-Republican Party, the nemesis of the Federalist Party, which dominated the press. The Federalists, who tend to oppose the District of Maine’s separation from Massachusetts, gradually are losing influence in Maine. […]

Posted inBicentennial, Local & State, News, Uncategorized

On this date in Maine history: Sept. 6

Sept. 6, 1786: A two-day convention on a proposal to separate Maine from Massachusetts, the third such gathering to be held on the subject within a year, opens in Falmouth (now Portland). Thirty-one delegates representing 22 towns attend. The convention appears to be divided, with the pro-separation group having a slight edge. Eventually it decides, […]