|

|
|
|
|
|
Resources |
|
|
|
'So Secure a Harbor': English Settlements in Maine
| Article
# : |
14608 |
|
|
Section : |
CULTURE
|
| Issue
Date : |
5 / 1988 |
4,855 Words |
| Author
: |
Eric Olsen Eric P. Olsen is associate executive editor at the World & I. |
In the summer of 1605, five neolithic tribesmen from the coastal forests of Maine in North America disembarked from the Archangel at Plymouth, England. After being forcibly removed from their homeland and people by English explorers, the native Americans apparently were relieved to find they weren't mistreated. On the contrary, Englishmen cultivated their friendship, anxious for any insights into the mysteries of the unknown continent or the promise it might hold for the English.
The appearance of the American aborigines created a sensation in England, and the dignified, handsome Indians were not reluctant to engage their hosts with pleasing accounts of their native soil. As an excited British society listened, plans for a convincing English presence on the American continent took form, and prominent investors looked to Maine as a potential settlement site. The five Abnakis not only took the earliest steps toward bridging the enormous cultural gap between European and native American societies, but also sparked the expectations and hopes that would culminate in the successful transplantation of British life and institutions onto the American continent.
Few regions in the United States today recall the nation's earliest history as clearly as does the coast of Maine. For Americans raised on the near-mythical narratives of the Jamestown and Plymouth colonies, it may be surprising to learn that the exploration and settlement of Maine was undertaken fully as early as, and with important consequences for, the fragile settlements to the south.
The harsh winters and topography of the Maine coast no doubt have helped preserve the region from
... (1995 of 30254 Characters)
Read Full Article
|
|