Augusta is a world-class capital city where entrepreneurs start, expand, and keep a variety of businesses. Citizens pursue life-long learning in first-rate schools, libraries, historic, and cultural facilities. Residents, workers, and tourists circulate around and enjoy the Heart of Augusta - on both sides of the Kennebec River, along Water Street, and all over the Capitol complex. Travelers appreciate Augusta's historic and natural scenery. Homebuyers and renters of all ages and incomes are drawn by safe and appealing neighborhoods, competitive tax rates, and superior services.
Just before Europeans came up the Kennebec River to the "head of the tide," Algonquian-speaking Indians, considered Wabanaki or "People of the Dawn," had been already here. As early as1607, the area was explored by English settlers from the short-lived Sagadahoc or Popham Colony at the river’s mouth.
Representatives of Plymouth Colony were the very first English to actually live here. Within 1625, on a river expedition to discover a place to trade agricultural products for Indian furs, Plymouth pilgrims find the east shore for their "House at Kennebeck." The post, possibly constructed in 1628, was managed by the original traders and, after, by Plymouth Company with varying degrees of success, until it was abandoned some time between 1669 and 1676.
There have been French as well as English influences here in the 17th and 18th centuries. In 1646, a Jesuit priest, Gabriel Dreuillettes, visited "an English settlement called Kinibeki" and established a mission in close proximity for the Kennebec natives. It was then that the term "Cushnoc,"("Coussinoc" or "Kouissnoc") first appeared in reference to the Plymouth trading post.
After years of conflict involving the French, Indians, and English and several decades during which Kennebec settlements were deserted, the Kennebec Proprietors, successors to the Plymouth Company, built Fort Western near to the Cushnoc site. Located below the falls at the head of navigation, the fort was intended as a supply depot for Fort Halifax, 17 miles upriver. The proprietors furthermore initiated efforts to settle the region. When military staffing was not longer needed, Captain James Howard, who had commanded the fort, stayed on as the first permanent settler. The fort’s main building served as a residence plus a store.
The village referred to as "the Fort" was the upriver area of the town incorporated as Hallowell in 1771. In February, 1796, the Fort residents petitioned the Massachusetts Legislature for permission to build the first Kennebec Bridge. Although "the Hook," as the lower Hallowell village was called, wanted the bridge on its shore, the Fort request was granted. The next February, in 1797, the legislature authorized separation of the Fort from Hallowell. Integrated first as Harrington, the new town modified its name to Augusta on June 9, 1797.
In 1799, Augusta became the shire town of the recently formed Kennebec County. Around 1827, the town was designated the capital of Maine, which had entered the union in 1820 as the 23rd state. The Maine Legislature met here for the first time in January, 1832. Augusta was chartered as being a city in 1849.
Together with its governmental roles, Augusta has become, through the years, a frontier trading place, an inland shipping port, a center for publishing and manufacturing, and, today, post-secondary education.
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