Auburn
 
c.1910
 

The area was originally part of the Pejepscot Purchase, land bought in 1714 by a consortium from Boston and Portsmouth following the Treaty of Portsmouth, which brought peace between the Abenaki Indians and English settlements. In 1736, however, the Massachusetts General Court granted a large section of the land to veterans of the 1690 Battle of Quebec. Conflicting claims led to prolonged litigation; consequently, settlement was delayed until after the French and Indian Wars.

Auburn was first settled in 1786 as part of Bakerstown, renamed Poland when it was incorporated by the Massachusetts General Court in 1795. It was then part of Minot, set off from Poland and incorporated in 1802. Auburn would itself be set off and incorporated on February 24, 1842. The name was apparently inspired by "Auburn", a village (real or fictitious) featured in the 1770 poem "The Deserted Village" by Oliver Goldsmith. Originally part of Cumberland County, the town became county seat of Androscoggin County at its creation in 1854. By annexing land from towns around it, including part of Poland in 1852, Minot in 1873, and all of Danville (first called Pejepscot) in 1867, Auburn grew geographically into one of Maine's largest municipalities. Incorporated a city in 1868, Auburn in 1917 would be the first city in the state to adopt a council-manager form of government.

Farms supplied grain and produce, but with construction of the bridge to Lewiston in 1823, and especially after arrival of the Atlantic and St. Lawrence Railroad from Portland in January 1848, the community developed into a mill town. Mills were built to operate by water power from falls on the Androscoggin River and Little Androscoggin River. In 1835, the factory system of shoe manufacture originated at Auburn. Other firms manufactured cotton and woolen textiles, carriages, iron goods, bricks and furniture. The population in 1860 was only about 4,000 but by 1890 it was about 12,000, when its shoe factories attracted many French Canadian immigrants, many of whom arrived by train from Quebec. Steady population growth continued to about 1960 when the population was about 24,500.
In Auburn, shoe manufacturing became the dominant industry by the late 19th century. The City Seal, depicting a spindle with different types of shoes at each outside point, was designed when Auburn was positioning itself as the shoe manufacturing center of Maine in the mid-19th century. In 1917 one factory in Auburn was producing 75 percent of the world's supply of white canvas shoes; however, after World War II the shoe industry began to decline, and between 1957 and 1961 the largest manufacturers closed their factories

 

     
  1. City of Auburn, Maine 
  2. Auburn Public Library
  3. Lewiston Public Library
  4. Naming of Auburn, Maine
  5. Auburn Vital Records, Cemetery Records & Census Records of Auburn Settlers
  6. Danville Cemetery Records
  7. Giddinge Diary of 1795
  8. Pejepscot (Danville) 1790 Census Returns

  9. Mr. Ballard: Surveyor of Auburn
  10. A Visit By A Former West Auburn Family (Craft Family)
  11. The Diary of Amos Davis
  12. Andrew Robinson Giddinge's Diaries in 1833
  13. James Goff of Auburn
  14. Elias Gove "Prince Immanuel, and Prince of Peace"
  15. Collection of Edward Little's Letters
  16. THE ATTACK ON COL. JOSIAH LITTLE
  17. The Morrill Family of Auburn
  18. The Diaries of William Plummer
  19. William Plummer's Revolutionary Service
  20. Benjamin A. Rideout
  21. General Ralph B. Skinner Auburn's Historian
  22. Charles M. Starbird, Local Historian
  23. A Memory of Robert L. Taylor (1939-1996)
  24. The Diaries of True Woodbury
  25. An Early History of East Auburn
  26. Brief History of Auburn Village to 1864
  27. Brief History of West Auburn
  28. Brief History of North Auburn
  29. Origins of Bakerstown

Auburn, ME Genealogical Databases

 

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