Qass. Book- PEHAQUID ITS GENESIS, DISCOVERY, NAHE AND COLONIAL RELATIONS TO NEW ENGLAND BY RUFUS KING SEWALL Read before the Lincoln County Historical Society nay 22, 1896 PRINTED BY THE SOCIETY 1896 ;., v'4 m ^ ^ PEMAOUID. Its Gexesis, Discovery, Name and Colonial Relations to New England. BV RUFUS KING SEWALL. Read before the Lincoln County Historical Society, Max 22, iSg6. I English records have preser\-ed the acts of the EngHsh race in the discovery, survey, seizin and possession of New England, somewhat scattered in detail, but easily collated, to be arranged in their natural relations, in verification of the truth of history. Many of these initial acts have never been fully analyzed and combined in their natural order and relations, to the development of New England history in Maine, but rather have been eclipsed in the glamor of more ambitious local surroundings, foreign to Maine. I now propose to lift the shadows, relieve the glamor, disclose and trace the life threads of New England to rootlets at Pemaquid. We have this summary of colonial facts by Major, in his intro- duction to the Hackluit papers, original sources of the beginnings of English homes in New England, viz : "that to the *northward in the height [latitude] 44°, lyeth the country of Pemaquid — the Kingdom wherein our western colony was sometime planted." This summary connects Pemaquid with Sagadahoc in the colo- nial possessions of the English there. The latitude given determines the locus in quo to have been in New England, and at and about Pema- quid and its dependencies. The English discovery may be regarded as somewhat accidental, in a marine novelty of a Captain Gosnold, as to his course across the Atlantic, shaped due west from Falmouth, west of England, as the winds would allow him to run. In seven weeks, fo" the 14th of May, 1602, among floating seaweed and land wrack at sea, lured by the smile of *Major's introduction, Hackluit papers, Tra. in Va. p. 27. tArcher. Gosnold's voyage. t^' .*; 2 Lincoln County Historical Society. land ahead, near sunrise, he made land bearing north : "an out point ol' rising ground ; trees on it high and straight from the rock ; land some- what low ; certain hummocks, or hills lying inland, with a shore full of white sand, but very stony or rocky. Little round green hills above the cliffs appearing east-northeast, from the sea-point of observation." Such was the topography of the new land-fall, and of the shore view of land about *Sagadahoc, a shore full of white sand, the first English view of Maine. Gosnold cast anchor near this remarkable land- fall, when a Span- ish slcrop manned with eight Indian seamen — natives of the region, soon came on board. Some were dressed in European cloth and costume ; and one wearing a hat and shoes, fchalked a map of the new discovered country, for the ship's company, and called it "Ma- voo-shan." This was an early view of a part of New England, within the 43° N. L. ; and of a cape, now called "Small Point," in 43° 42' N ; and of the shores of the Sagadahoc, eastward thereof, with its broad, white sandy beaches, and rock fretted mouth of the Kennebec watershed. It was the English //7/;/