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Maine
Below you are links to informational
sites related to the Maine Gun laws and regulations. (
Legal lawyer stuff as follows:
Center-fire- Greenfield Industries are not responsible nor
endorses any information found on listed links. blah, blah,
blah. You get the picture. Take everything you read with a
grain of salt.) We have even included some
comical links such as the
Brady Campaign , because everybody enjoys a little
fictional reading from time to time.
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While there is evidence
that Maine's earliest inhabitants were descendants of Ice Age
hunters, the Micmacs and Abanakis (or Wabanakis) were credited
with the earliest settlement of Maine. The Micmacs of eastern
Maine and New Brunswick were largely a warlike people, while
the more numerous Abnakis were a peaceful nation, given to
farming and fishing as a way of life. Although dozens of
tribes once inhabited the land, only two remain today.
Passamaquoddies (1,500) live on two reservations, the largest
of which is located Pleasant Point near Eastport. The
Penobscots (1,200) live on Indian Island in the Penobscot
River at Old Town.
The first white settlement was established by the Plymouth
Company at Popham in 1607, the same year of the settlement at
Jamestown, Virginia. Because the Popham colony didn't survive
the harsh Maine winters, Jamestown enjoys the distinction of
being regarded as America's first permanent settlement.
The question of Maine's ownership was a matter of continuing
dispute between England and France throughout the first half
of the 18th century. The period was also marked by a series of
Indian raids on white settlements which had the active support
of the French interested in seeing the English settlers driven
from the land.
In the late-1700s, a number of battles flared up in Maine
during the Revolutionary War. Maine opposed the oppressive
colonial tax policies of the British Government. The
Revolution cost Maine dearly. About 1,000 men lost their lives
in the war, the district's sea trade was all but destroyed,
the principal city had been leveled by bombardment, and
Maine's overall share of the war debt amounted to more than
would later be imposed upon it by the Civil War.
Congress established Maine as the 23rd state under the
Missouri Compromise of 1820. This arrangement allowed Maine to
join the Union as a free state, with Missouri entering a year
later as a slave state, thereby preserving the numerical
balance between free and slave states in the nation.
Once Maine became a separate state there followed a period of
tremendous economic growth in which a number of important
mining manufacturing industries emerged. Lumbering,
traditional fishing and shipbuilding pursuits entered a boom
period and ice harvesting, granite and lime quarrying also
developed as important industries.
Water-powered factories began to spring up beside the numerous
sawmills already located along Maine's important rivers.
Textiles, paper and leather products all became primary
sources of manufacturing employment.
Fishing and farming were also important, but were subject to
greater economic fluctuations. The overall economic picture -
although periodically disturbed by such developments as the
Civil War and the Industrial Revolution - continued on a
relatively prosperous course throughout the remainder of the
19th century.
Maine's textile and leather industries enjoyed a dramatic
upward surge following the Civil War, while farming activity
correspondingly decreased. Responding to Thomas Edison's
discoveries in the 1890s, Maine began utilizing its vast river
resources for the development of hydroelectric power. Plants
for the production of electricity were built principally on
the Androscoggin, Kennebec, Penobscot and Saco Rivers.
Maine's industrial growth continued, although at a much slower
pace, into the 20th century. Expansion of the pulp and paper
industry offset the loss of textile mills to the South. Large
potato-growing, dairy and poultry farms replaced the
decreasing number of small family farms.
Throughout the second half of the 20th century' Maine has
struggled to find a proper balance between resource-based
industrial development and environmental protection. The state
has come to rely heavily on tourism, small manufacturing
enterprises defense-related activities and installations for
much of its economic base.
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