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1852 Passamaquoddy Indian Treaty
Maine State Archives, Text

Certified typed copy of 1852 Passamaquoddy Indian Treaty.

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Indians of North America Treaties
Conflict-Stability: control of Maine, land disputes, French-English-Indians
Indians -- land rights
Native Americans
Land Disputes

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View 1725, Treaty of (by Eastern Indians)
UMaine Wabanaki Studies, Text

The "Submission and Agreement of the Delegates of the Eastern Indians" signed at Boston on December 15, 1725.

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Native Americans
Treaty
Indians of North America - Treaties

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Bioinvasion
MPBN: Quest Series, Moving Image, 00:58:03

As human activity silently globalizes our world, our modern day ecology is under onslaught from spreading alien organisms. These plants and animals are capable of moving aggressively into a habitat and monopolizing resources to the detriment of other species. Can scientists help us win the war against this bio-invasion?

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Invasive species
Ecology

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Enduring Spirit
MPBN: Home Series, Moving Image, 0:01:37

In 1675, King Phillip’s War began in Massachusetts. By the end of the 1600s, most Native Americans had fled their villages and almost all of the English settlements in Maine were abandoned. Still, the spirit to try to live here remained.

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King Philip's war, 1635-1676
Native Americans
Settlements
Refugees

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View 1725, Mascarene's Treaty
UMaine Wabanaki Studies, Text

By Major Paul Mascarene one of the Council for His Majesty's Province of Nova Scotia or Acadia and commissioned by Honorable Lawrence Armstrong Esqr Lieut. Governor and Commander in chief of the said Province for Treating with the Indians Engaged in the Late War.

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Native Americans
Treaty
Indians of North America - Treaties

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The Corn and Tobacco Mother
Maine Folklife Center, Text

Traditional Penobscot tale, "The Corn and Tobacco Mother", written by Molly Spotted Elk and included in her manuscript, Katahdin Wigwam's Tales.

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Legends
Native Americans
Penobscot Indian Nation
Penobscot Tribe
Tales

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King Phillip's War
MPBN: Home Series, Moving Image, 0:01:50

The reduced numbers of the Wabanaki people encouraged invasions by the western Mohawk Indians. As King Philip's War began in Massachusetts, and hostilities in Maine shifted quickly to war between the English and the Indians.

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King Philip's War, 1657-1676
Mohawk Indians
Native Americans
Settlements
Wabanaki Tribe

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The Penobscot Expedition and the Revolution
MPBN: Home Series, Moving Image, 0:26:45

The Penobscot disaster is usually regarded as the worst American Naval disaster with the exception of Pearl Harbor. An accidental archeological discovery in the Penobscot River sheds new light on the desperate last moments of the worst defeat of the American Revolution.

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Penobscot Expedition, 1779
History - Revolutionary War
United States -- History -- Revolution, 1775-1783

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Trails, Rails, and Roads
MPBN: Home Series, Moving Image, 00:28:01

The story of transportation in Maine is the story of the state's ongoing challenge to keep its people connected both to economic markets and to each other. Whether it's Route 113 in western Maine, US Route 1 meandering up the coast, or the once plentiful rail routes that joined every corner of the state, Maine's communities have been formed by the patterns of transportation.

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Transportation
Railroads

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Entries from the log book of the Schooner Emerald, 1859
Maine Historical Society, Text

Captain Parsons, of Biddeford, Maine, kept this journal recording the 1859 fishing season for the schooner Emerald. The Emerald sailed out of Wood Island Harbor in Biddeford, fishing for cod and other groundfish. The journal details the day-to-day activiities of the vessel, including the landing and dressing of fish, the need to repair nets and gear, and sightings of sharks and whales.

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Emerald (Ship)
Log books -- 19th century -- United States -- Maine
Log Books -- Maine
Manuscripts
Parsons
Schooners
Ships logs

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