Before
Maine became a State, Minot was a
flourishing township. The Town of Minot
of vast acreage, which in the early
years was a part of the Commonwealth of
Massachusetts and was known as the
Poland Empire was incorporated as a Town
in 1802 and at one time was known as
Bakersville. The Town is said to have
been named by the agent Dr. James Rice
in the honor of Judge Minot, a member of
the General Court who rendered effective
service in the passage of the bill
incorporating the Town. The name
selected by the Town’s people was
Raymouth. Nathaniel C. Adams, Esq. of
New Gloucester was empowered to issue
the Warrant calling the first town
meeting, which was held, in the
schoolhouse near Levi Shaw’s on April 5,
1802. Nicholas Noyes, Wm. Briggs and
John Chandler were chosen the Board of
Selectmen and Chandler Freeman the first
Town Clerk and Treasurer. The city of
Auburn, the towns of Poland and Mechanic
Falls in later years were carved out of
this empire.
The
first settler that came to the Town of
Minot was Moses Emery from Newbury,
Mass., arriving with his wife and infant
daughter at Poland Empire in the spring
of 1769. During the summer he built a
log cabin on the northerly side of the
road, a few rods east of the bridge at
Hackett’s Mills into which he moved his
family in the autumn of the same year.
Two or three years later he removed to
the falls below since known as Emery’s
Mills, Payne’s Mills, Dunn’s Mills and
now Minot Corner. He lived near the
present site of the old Pulsifer’s Store
(no longer a store), having for his
neighbor an Indian of the
Anasagunticook, or Androscoggin Tribe
whom he lived with on friendly terms.
Among
the names to follow Moses Emery to the
new Town of Minot were: Samuel Shaw, his
brother Levi, Henry Sawtelle, Israel
Bray Sr. and son John Herrick, Edward
Jumper. In 1778 came John Leach. In 1784
came Joseph Leach, Samuel Verrill and
sons William Verrill and Davis Verrill
from Gloucester, Mass. The following
year, Dr. Jesse Rice came in. More new
names were added year by year: John
Hodge, Job Tucker, Solomon Walcott,
Edmund Bailey, James Tool, Stephen
Yeaton are but a few of the new settlers
in the late 1780’s.
The
famous peace society started by Capt.
William Ladd held its meetings over the
blacksmith shop, operated in recent
years by the late Harrison Yeaton. It
was then called Peace Hall. Here at
Minot Corner was the powerhouse for the
Hackett’s Mills Leather Board Mill and
here was the corn shop run by John
Cuskelv. Many villagers here had tragic
Indian history connected with their
growth. But Minot Corner tales center
around. The river of how the Little
Androscoggin took off this mill or that
bridee or somebody’s logs. The first
bridge was built in 1774. Minot Corner
claims the distinction of being the
oldest settlement on the Little
Androscoggin River and was early an
industrial center. There were two
tanneries, two or three blacksmith
shoos. Two harness shops, a shoe shop,
barrel manufactory and mills for all
purposes centered around the bridge. In
those years when Lewiston and Auburn
were small for the circus it came to
Minot Corner.
Capt.
William Ladd was a liberally educated
man. He was a graduate of Harvard
College in the class of 1791. Not
succeeding in the mercantile business,
he entered the carrying trade with
Russia, commanding his own fleet. Having
amassed a satisfactory fortune, he left
the sea and settled in Minot at the age
of thirty-six, becoming a model farmer
of his time. He was for many years the
untiring advocate of the settlement of
International disputes by arbitration.
The organization of the American Peace
Society was mainly the results of his
labors. He spent much of his time in
advocating its principles both by the
use of pen and public addresses. Being a
man of means he contributed largely to
its funds during his lifetime and made
the society residuary legatee of his
estate by will after his death. Though
much of his time was spent working for
the betterment of the society, he always
found time to help with whatever tended
to improve the moral and material
interests of his adopted town. He was
truly a good man and the results of his
labors will long remain as monuments of
his goodness and liberality. The William
Ladd Memorial Center is located at Minot
Center.
The
Town of Minot is divided into three
sections known as Minot, Center Minot,
and West Minot. Nestled in the
foothills with Streaked Mountain at its
back lies the picture postcard section
of Minot known as West Minot. Through
West Minot flows a stream known as Bog
Brook where many of the oldsters waded,
swam, and fished for trout, perch, bass
and pickerel. Capt. John Bridgham 2nd
built a gristmill at Faunce’s Mills,
previous to 1790, which was soon carried
away by high water and rebuilt at West
Minot. From this time, trade centered
here from Hebron and the surrounding
country, and the Bridghams and others
conducted trade and other enterprises
for many years. When Bog Falls, now
Mechanic Falls, was first developed West
Minot was a brisk village, but with the
development of Mechanic Falls and Auburn
business languished. Col. Joshua
Parsons located here in 1817 and carried
on carding and cloth dressing until
1843, when he built the gristmill, which
was later run, by Jeffery Parsons and
Mr. Allen in the early 1900’s.
This
waterpower also operated a carriage
factory. A short distance from the
business section was located the saw
mill originally owned by William Rowe in
1872 and was operated by his son Frank
E. Rowe and later by Merton E. Rowe who
worked with his father. Although many of
the original buildings in the Town of
Minot were made of brick this mill sawed
much of the long lumber that are part of
the homes now standing in the town.
During the time it was operated by
Merton Rowe, apple boxes were made here
which later contained the fruit of this
section and was shipped to all parts of
United States. At this date, one of the
more prominent citizens, Merton E. Rowe
is still living hale and hearty at the
age of 77.
Among
some of the other industries was a
cheese factory, a cooper mill turned out
thousands of barrels used by the
agricultural farmers to ship and store
their produce. In later years an
enterprising man by the name of Cushman
started operation of a shoe shop but
most of the area of Minot was
agricultural and the farmers were not
interested in manufacturing industry so
like many other Maine towns Minot
instead of becoming the shire town of
the County became a residential area and
thus lost its opportunity.
On
a plateau overlooking the town site of
West Minot is located a series of
buildings which contained a grain mill
and a packing plant, owned and operated
by the Portland Packing Co. of which
another West Minot prominent citizen, J.
Merrill Hatch was Superintendent. Mr.
Hatch is still active in the community
and Master of the State Grange. At this
plant the produce from the surrounding
communities was canned and packed. With
the advent of the freezing plants and
lack of production of the farmers, this
concern was forced to retire from
business. (It was purchased by an
enterprising young man by the name of
Wayne 0. Stevens, who had been
operating the Withington plant in
nearby town of Buckfield and moved his
business to West Minot.)
Located
in West Minot at the site of the old
corn factory on the plateau which
overlooks the little township of West
Minot is a renovated set of buildings,
most modern, painted in gay colors after
the bows and arrows, toboggans and skis,
dog sleds and bob sleds which are
manufactured here. The name of this
concern, Withington, is known all over
the world. The owner and president of
this growing concern is a versatile,
enterprising young man who was born
under the name of Wayne 0. Stevens. Mr.
Stevens at the age of thirteen won high
honors and championships on the ski
slopes of Lake Placid, New York, one of
the skiing capitals of the world. In his
salad days and during his college days
he won the ski championship of the New
England States and was slated for the
United States Olympic teams. Mr. Stevens
had the unusual foresight to recognize
that champions come and go and like Gene
Tunney, a former boxing champ of the
world, he decided at the peak of his
championship to retire and enter the
business world. Many of the present day
champions he defeated. Although he was
born in Auburn, some of his forebears
were residents of Minot. During the
vacation periods and when he could find
the time from his duties as a scholar
and ski champion he worked in his
father’s woodturning shop, learning his
skill with tools. After retiring from
his ski exploits he purchased the
little brush business of a man named
Withington located in the town of
Buckfleld, located about ten miles from
his present location at West Minot.
Being of a creative nature, he designs
the merchandise, also the tools that are
sold under the trade name of Withington.
His merchandise when exhibited at the
yearly New York trade show receives a
most favor~~ able comment. In the early
beginning he manufactured archery
equipment, adding skis, toboggans, ski
skates and bow guns. He has given
employment to numerous people in this
area. Two of the latest creations are a
single dog sled and a bob sled featuring
a combination of the old fashioned bob
sled, the bob sleds used on the bob sled
runs of European and American design,
plus his own ingenuity in adding modern
features making it one of the most
attractive and comfortable sleds on the
market today. The orders for these are
pouring in. Informative brochures and
prices will gladly be sent upon request
to this firm.
Also
located on this plateau is the former
railroad station owned by the Maine
Central Railroad on a line going from
Lewiston to Rumford. The station
consisted of a large brick building and
a wooden freight shed building. Many of
the pupils of the nearby academy located
in the town of Hebron adjacent to West
Minot arrived and departed from this
station. Also many high school students
used this means. Thousands of boxes and
barrels left here for the city markets
during the apple season. Milk was
shipped from the station to Auburn
daily. Thousands of tons of coal arrived
here and was delivered to the Western
Maine Sanitorium (now closed) and Hebron
Academy. Mail and passengers were picked
up here for the surrounding communities.
The station is now owned and operated.
by the Station Craft Shop. Woodcarvings
and three-dimensional oil paintings have
been shipped to all parts of the world.
On the walls of the brick station hangs
a letter from President Eisenhower
attesting to the workmanship produced
here. From the first lady of the land to
the movie queens of Hollywood, they wear
products made at this craft shop.
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Beautiful
minerals and gems including fresh water
pearls have come from this district. Mt.
Appetite, once a part of Minot, now
located in Auburn produce feldspar,
tourmalines, rose quartz and many other
minerals and gems. There are also mine
deposits at Center Minot. One of the
fresh water
M.E.
Hewison J. D. Boardway pearls found here
was purchased by Tiffany of New York and
later adorned the queen’s crown in
England.
West
Minot is located in the heart of the
western lake region of Maine. Streams,
ponds, and lakes furnish the sportsman
the greatest game fishing in the world.
Fighting salmon, rainbow trout, brown
trout and brook trout have given the
Isaac Waltons the thrill of catching and
the delicious eating of these game
fishes. Within a two-mile radius of the
town, last fall in hunting season over
fifty-eight deer were tagged at the
local inspection station. One of the
largest bobcats shot in the State of
Maine was shot within two miles of the
Post Office. Pheasant, grouse, and
rabbits are plentiful. One of the town’s
citizens had a family of five raccoons
who stayed with him during the summer
months, leaving in the fall for the
woods surrounding his home. Also within
a radius of ten miles one may gaze upon
one of the largest in Maine, the moose.
We also have the big black Maine bear
and the lowly red fox. ‘Tis truly a
sportsman’s paradise.
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In
the early days each school in the
district housed all the grades from the
first to the ninth. The teacher had to
be very firm as there were sometimes
pupils as large or larger than the
teacher who taught them. Sometimes she
had to wade through deep snow in the
early morning hours to start a fire in
the big wood stove to have the room warm
upon the arrival of her pupils. As one
of the older citizens stated bluntly
when told they were going to raise the
taxes, “What are we raising the taxes
for?” and he was told they wanted to add
a new gym and he inquired, “Jim who?”
The clerk patiently explained to him,
“It’s not Jim but gym. It is a place
where the pupils are exercised and have
recreational fun.” “By gum, thet does
it! When I was a boy I had to git up
four o’clock in the morning, feed the
cows, horses, hens, slop the haugs, and
my Ma put my dinner up in a lard pail
and I had to walk five miles to school
and back. Now they pick the kids up at
the door in a bus, haul ‘em to school,
feed and burp ‘em and now they gut to
exercise ‘em and they gut no hoss sense
when they git out.”
One
lady, Maria Hackett Perkins, said in a
story written for the 1952
sesquicentennial the following: “I went
to school at the Verrill District and my
first teacher was Etta B. Hutchins of
Minot Corner. In those days we went to
school two terms a year, December to
March and June to September. We went to
school on Christmas day and how we
disliked that. Imagine getting up on
Christmas morning and finding our
stockings filled with gifts and then
tramping off to school, no chance of
playing with the gifts that Santa left
the night before. This was the longest
day of our lives. I was ten years old
when I saw my first decorated Christmas
tree. We just hung our stockings by the
fireplace. Our school was graded. It was
classed First Primer to First Reader. My
first teacher was Lucy Woodman, then
Calvin Stanley, a brother to the twins,
F. E. and F. 0. Stanley, inventors of
the Stanley Steamer automobile in
Lewiston, Maine. Another teacher I
remember was Ella Dean, a home town
girl. In 1881 I became a teacher in the
Minot Corner Primary School. I love to
recall the names of the people who used
to live along the Woodman Hill road.
When I started out early in the morning
for school, the first house I came to be
the Inn that served the Stage that ran
from Buckfield to Portland. Mr. Tim
Downing owned the Inn and served many a
weary passenger that traveled on the
stage. The Inn today is the residence of
Gustav Nelson. Mr. Downing, a clever
farmer, owned the house where Mr. Fred
Priest lives. The next house was that of
Abner Toothaker. This place burned some
twenty years ago. The Yeaton farm was
next on the left and this farm is still
owned by the Yeaton family. I passed a
graveyard on the right and then came to
the Hodge farm. Passing a beautiful
grove of pine trees I came to the
Charles Martin homestead. Mr. Charles
Harris and family now occupy this house.
Down the hill a short distance on the
right was the Hackett farm next to
Indian Brook and after crossing the
bridge and about a mile through the
woods I came to the Steven Davis home
high on the ledge with a fine view of
the White Mountains. Today this is the
home of the late Clarence Harris family.
Heading down the hill towards Minot
Corner I passed the Tim True Downing
house, now owned by George Rowe, then
the Elmire Downing home and the Cutler
place now owned by Ernest Witham. The
Cobb homestead was owned by Henry True,
and Dr. Horr, the community doctor
lived across the street with his wife
who was also a doctor. After Dr. Horr
left, Dr. Cobb settled in the house and
took up the duties of community doctor.
This house was later owned by the late
A. K. Damon.”
We
now have a consolidated school built in
1954, which house grades one through
eight. They have a nice cafeteria,
auditorium and classrooms. As the older
citizen said, “They have a school bus
which hauls them to school and them
home.”
West Minot Church
A few months after
Minot was incorporated as a Town, on
October 8, 1802 to be exact, it is
stated in the early records of this
church that “sundry persons in the Town
of Hebron in the County of Cumberland,
Commonwealth of Massachusetts, who
desired to be formed into a Church
State,” met at the home of Mr. ASAP
Bearcat. Ecclesiastical Council met with
them and organized the Church. It was
then called the “The First
Congregational Church of Christ in
Hebron in the District of Maine.” At
first the meetings were held at private
homes or at the schoolhouse until in
1811 when a meetinghouse was erected on
or near the site of the present
building. It is recorded that it was a
large two-story building with a gallery
on three sides and an old-fashioned high
pulpit, which was reached by a flight of
stairs. Each pew was provided with a
door to “shut its occupants safely in”.
The
first recorded meeting held in this
Church was on June 22, 1812 when the
Church “voted unanimously to give Mr.
Henry Sewall, of Winthrop a call to
settle with us in the work of the gospel
ministry”. So after due ceremonials, Mr.
Henry Sewall became the first resident
Pastor. After about fifty years this
first church was torn down and our
present church was built and dedicated
on November 15, 1854. Mr. Charles Moody
was clerk at this time. More than fifty
years later on September 18, 1908 the
dedication of the Church bell was held.
On the side of the bell is the
inscription: “This bell presented to
Union Church, West Minot, Maine by J. G.
Hildren in memoriam, Anno Domini 1908”;
and on the other side: “For the use of
the Church and the people barring
political triumphs.” The next year,
after many repairs and improvements had
been made to the Church and a furnace
had been installed a rededicatory
service was held on December 12, 1909.
On May 30, 1932 a maple tree was planted
on the lawn in front of the Church with
appropriate exercises as a memorial to
George Washington on the two-hundredth
anniversary of his birth. A
long list of pastors, nearly forty, have
served this Church from the first, Rev.
Henry Sewall, to our present, Rev. Ralph
Cole. We have one, Rev. Frederick D.
Hayes of the High St. Congregational
Church of Auburn, whom we are still
pleased to call upon for Christenings
and other special services.
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The
Minot Center Church had its beginning
with the early history of Minot as part
of Bakerstown. For eight years before
the formation of the church, religious
services were held at the home of Joseph
Freeman, who took charge of the
meetings, and who was later the first
Deacon of the new church.
In
all Bakerstown there was no church of
any denomination until 1791 when an
Ecclesiastical Council met in the house
of Jonathan Bradford in the northern
part of Minot and organized the
Bakerstown church, consisting of
thirty-nine members. There was no
preaching except from itinerant
Missionaries until Rev. Jonathan Scott
came to Bakerstown, December 11, 1793.
The letter of invitation was exactly six
months in reaching him and he was
fifty-one days coming from Yarmouth,
Nova Scotia, to Bakerstown in the
Province of Maine.
The
first meetinghouse was raised October
29, 1794. It stood about ten or fifteen
rods north of the Frank Coller house.
There were sometimes two services on
Sunday, and occasionally an evening
service the same day. Sermons of their
ordinary length were said to have been
three or four hours long.
On
May 29, 1805 was raised the first
meeting house at West Auburn, then East
Minot. Mr. Scott preached the first
sermon. July 3rd and 4th, 1805, about a
month after the raising of the East
Minot Church, the first church at what
is now Minot Center, then West Minot,
was raised. However, it should be
remembered that this was not the present
West Minot village, which borders on
Hebron.
Mr.
Scott was much opposed to the building
of the church at Minot Center, one
reason being that the town had voted not
to build two meeting houses, but the one
at Minot Center was a proprietor’s
meeting house, the town having no hand
in it. In 1807 Mr. Scott’s dwelling
house burned to the ground and with it
perished his son Sylvanus. With the two
large meeting houses there was no longer
any use for the old Bakerstown meeting
house, so it was taken down and erected
as a dwelling for the Scott family.
In
1.806, the Second Church of Minot was
formed consisting of sixteen members.
Rev. William Pidgin was the first and
only pastor.
After
the death of Rev. Jonathan Scott.
October 1819 at the age of 75, and
fifty-one years of preaching, the first
and second churches were reunited and
called the Rev. Elijah Jones to be their
pastor. May 1. 1844, two years after
Auburn was set off from Minot, the West
Auburn Church was organized, taking
eighty-six members from the parent
church and leaving one hundred
sixty-three. Up to this time, Rev. Jones
had preached alternately in the two
churches.
After
the division of the church, the
meetinghouses were larger than necessary
and had never been properly heated, also
the Minot Center Church, at least,
needed repairs, so it was voted to take
it down and rebuild on a smaller scale.
The lumber from the old house was used
when suitable and the ends of the pews
and the partition between the body pews
are parts of the old pew doors. At the
rear side of the church may be seen a
part of the old foundation as originally
placed. Mr. Jones, in recording the
building of the present Minot Center
Church says: “The building committee
consisted of Ezekiel Merrill, James
Washburn, and Samuel Merrill, to whom
the highest credit is due for
perseverance and energy. The demolition
of the old house commenced June 1, 1846
and the new house was dedicated in less
than six months, November 25, 1846.”
Mr.
Jones died April 27, 1869. Aged 78,
after a pastorate of forty-six years.
Since then this church has had no
settled pastor but there are plenty of
good words for those who have supplied
it. Among these nearly all were from the
Sixth Street Church. Those serving for
the longest periods were Rev. George E.
Kinney and Rev. Alban B. Hyde.
The
Minot Corner Church history is most
interesting. The first public service
was held November 30. 1774 in the home
of Chandler Freeman, conducted by his
father, Deacon Joseph Freeman. The first
church was built on the Poland side,
which was not only the first church at
Minot Corner, but was also the first
church in Poland on the site of present
buildings of Pratt’s of Keystone
Waterworks. There is an ancient
cemetery of the first settlers hut
there are no stones and but few people
know where to locate it.
The
first church on the Minot side was where
George Rowe lives and the hill was
called “Meeting House Hill”. Before this
church was built the “old meeting house”
on Poland side had long disappeared and
Minot Corner folks walked or rode to
Minot Center to hear Elijah Jones
preach. The present church at Minot
Corner was built in 1860. It was made a
part of the Mechanic Falls Charge in
1898. In 1902 the inside and outside of
the church was painted and the colored
windows were installed. A carpet was
laid and the chandelier was added. The
present pulpit furniture and choir
chairs were purchased at that time. The
organ was given to them.
The
church was again remodeled in 1913, when
Rev. Charles E. Brooks was pastor. The
present furnace was installed. The
steel ceiling was put in the auditorium
and walls were redecorated. Three years
later the vestry was painted gray.
Electric lights were installed in 1922.
In 1941 during the pastorate of B. F.
Wentworth, the chancel was remodeled at
which time the old original pulpit was
refinished to be used for an altar
table. Hobart Kilgore gave the offering
plates in memory of his father, Fred
Kilgore, and Edward Staples made the
cross.
In
1946 the auditorium was redecorated, and
the church painted outside.
Contributions by individuals made
possible the installation of the new oil
burner, an American flag, and a
Christian flag, the pulpit Bible and
marker, pulpit lamp, candle holders and
cross, and communion cloth and other
coverings.
Like
all small towns and villages there are
the so-called characters that provide
humor that makes towns of this type
interesting. One such character who rose
to national fame (?) was a woman by the
name of Annie Wilkins who in her youth
was a bare back rider with some of the
big circuses. Her mother and father
owned a piece of property atop Woodman
Hill, one of the highest elevations in
Androscoggin County. Upon the death of
her father and learning of her mother’s
illness, she returned home from the
circus, bringing with her a mare from
the circus troupe. After her mother’s
recovery she and her mother were
employed in one of the shoe factories.
At this time she drove back and forth to
work with an animal called a jackass.
Leaving work the Jack was sometimes
rebellious and Annie had a hard job in
getting him started towards home.
Ribald suggestions from her co-workers
used to upset Annie and she would reply
to them. “You look after your Ass and
I’ll look after mine.” And thus she
acquired the nickname of Jack-ass Annie
by which she’s known to the people of
Minot, many who don’t know her real
name. Her fame (?) came when she left
her home in West Minot and migrated to
California astride a large farm horse
and accompanied by a faithful dog and a
packhorse. Upon arriving in California
she received much publicity and appeared
on such programs as the Art Linkletter
and Groucho Marx TV Shows. Later she
headed back East and her last known
whereabouts was New York City where she
is supposedly writing her memoirs.
Two
men were on the porch of the local store
and were in conversation. One was a
local resident of the town. Eugene
Verrill, a brilliant man, who in his
late eighties still had his own teeth
and could read a fine print without
eyeglasses, answered the question posed
by the other man who was a tourist with
a big car. The question he asked Gene
was as follows: “There are a lot of
Quaint characters in these small towns?”
and Gene answered slow and deliberate,
“Yes, you’re right, Mister, but they’ll
all be gone come September.”
An
unusual incident happened one hot day in
July when a man was arrested for drunken
driving by a local State Trooper. The
unusual part of this episode was the
fact the Trooper found him sitting in
the middle of the road with a heavy fur
coat on in a rather maudlin state with
his horse preceding him up the road.
At
the Station in its hey-day a salesman
got off the train and stopped to pause
for a short visit with the stationmaster
and during the course of their
conversation the stationmaster pointed
to a barefoot boy chewing on a straw and
the station-master remarked to the
salesman, “See that youngster over
there? He isn’t quite bright and if you
offered him a dime and a nickel and told
him he could have a choice he’d pick out
the nickel every time.” The salesman
thought he’d try it out, so he
approached the boy, extending his palm
upon which rested a dime and a nickel.
He told the boy to take his choice and
the boy, as foretold picked out the
nickel. The salesman’s curiosity
aroused, he asked the boy why he took
the nickel instead of the dime; was it
because the nickel was larger? “Naw,”
replied the youngster, “some people
think I’m nuts and if I took the dime
instead of the nickel they wouldn’t hand
them out anymore.”
A man with a
provocative sense of humor, a long time
resident of West Minot, left a will
stating upon his demise a large sum of
money should be appropriated for the
purpose of holding an annual dance to
celebrate his departure from this earth.
The sum provided twenty years of
blissful memory to the deceased.
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West
Minot still has its apple trees and
agriculture, also those who raise large
herds of cows, supplying wholesome milk
to the Hood milk people. One of these is
a man named Thomas S. Slattery. Mr.
Slattery’s forebears were long
residents of the town of West Minot.
His father, associated with a Mr.
Whiting, ran a local post office for
many years. The same store is now owned
and operated by James Baird, a native of
Vermont. He is a progressive man, well
liked by the residents of West Minot.
The local post office is now in the
capable hands of Mrs. Doris Slattery,
wife of Mr. Slattery and they have two
married sons and a married daughter. The
sons with their offspring are a welcome
addition to this prosperous township.
West
Minot, a picture postcard village,
hasn’t changed too much physically for
the square remains with the white
steeple church, Grange Hall, two grocery
stores and a post office. Two cement
bridges replace the older ones, and the
old familiar family names are still
continuing on in the new generation.
Upon
your vacation trip to Maine be sure and
place the Town of Minot as a “must” to
see. Minot welcomes you.
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‘Tis
far better to give than receive. Give
freely. Each Sunday make it a habit to
attend and support the church of your
choice.
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West Minot Grange No. 42
West
Minot Grange No. 42 was organized
October 16, 1874 in the Sam Stearns hall
by Deputy C. H. Cobb of Poland. Calvin
Bucknam, the first Lecturer, set things
in motion and was the first to sign the
petition for a Grange, using his tall
silk hat for a table. Others signed
until there were thirty charter members.
Among
the first officers many of us remember
Joseph Bearce and his wife Emma. It is
interesting to note that their
granddaughter is Mrs. Rachel Conant, who
now lives in Hebron.
The
Juvenile Grange was organized in 1945,
instigated by
The
Grange Master at that time, Mrs. Wilma
Leighton. The
First
Matron was her sister, Mrs. Geneva
Trundy.
In
the early days of the Grange it operated a
Grange store. It is reported that the
building used for this was on the site of
the present post office. Two days a week
our first Master, Jason Hilborn, presided
over this but trade increased so rapidly
that Thomas Millett was hired as a clerk
and the store was open every week day.
Up
until 1892 the Grange paid rent to the
West Minot Trade Association for the use
of the hail. As it paid a tax in 1892 we
assume that is the year they bought the
hall. A lot of repairing was done by
the members in the next few years, only
to be lost in a fire which destroyed the
hail in 1895. With undaunted spirit the
members decided to build a new hall so
on June 4, 1896, the present hall was
dedicated.
Many
improvements have been added since the
hail was
Built,
first a piano, then a double stove for
the dining room
And
finally a furnace, running water and
electric lights.
While
there
are no Charter members living now, we have
several members who have belonged more
than fifty years and many more who have
received their twenty-five year
certificates.
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