Saturday, January 22, 2022

1835 Letter from Elizabeth Waldron in Eastport, Maine, to Rev. & Mrs. Wakefield Gale in Boston, Massachusetts - Controversy

Reprinted, with permission, from the Heirlooms Reunited blog

October 7, 1835 letter from Elizabeth Waldron in Eastport, Maine, to Rev. Wakefield Gale (1797-1881) and Wife Mary Louisa (Bigelow) Gale (1806-1861) in Boston, Massachusetts.

The Gales were staying with Mary's sister Ann Eliza (Bigelow) Safford (1802-1874) and brother-in-law Deacon Daniel Safford (1792-1856) at 7 Montgomery Street in Boston.

The letter hints of the displeasure of some in town with Rev. Gale, with Elizabeth stressing her loyalty to him. According to a bio on his FindaGrave Memorial, Rev. Gale was dismissed from his pastorate in November of 1835, a month after Elizabeth started her letter.  Elizabeth mentions Rev. Gale's future return to Eastport, but perhaps he intended to return only to settle his affairs there.

A transcription appears at the end of this post.

See other letters regarding Rev. Gale:

There were two women named Elizabeth Waldron in Eastport, Maine, during this time, according to FindaGrave memorials, both born in 1786 and born dead in the same year as well, 1874.

They are: 

People mentioned in the letter - some multiple times

If you have a theory as to the identity of Elizabeth Waldron or any of the other people mentioned, please leave a comment for the benefit of other researchers.



Transcription - loose, some misspellings left intact, some punctuation added for comprehension - suggest corrections and/or additions in the comments sections

Eastport Oct 7 1835
My Dear Mr and Mrs. Gale
I have been waiting to try to learn, what god intended to do with this people, and as I was informed last evening by Mrs. Weston that you should give up your house in six weeks, from this I think we may say as she of old did, the glory is departed from Eastport, and learn that god intends to take a away our greatest blessing and bestow them on those who will better praise his worth, but I blame you not, for I believe unering wisdom is your guide and that you have sought it with deliberation. I have often thought that you was too bright a light to be Extinguished on this remote Island and Mrs. Weston has the same mind. but we were selfish and gain yet. I shall not attempt to discribe my feelings. Go on on thou man of god in the way He directs you,and I have a hope at the end of our race I shall meet you in that Kingdom of glory where sin can have no control and where you will receive your reward for all your labours of love to us. I can so no more.
After you left us, I thought our case much like the children of Israel when they saw Pharaoh and his host pursuing them after they had left Egypt, but I thought you would remain a Moses and intended for us and I believe you did, and in answer to prayer we still remain a church. that affair is not settled yet. I have done all that I can do without telling a falsehood that I shall not do I hope while I have my reason. I think if Mr. L had no more earthly riches then myself it would have come to a conclusion long before this. You will understand my meening, but is it not better to put our trust in Him who has all the money and the cattle upon a thousand hills at his disposal, then to place any confidence in man that has nothing but ungovernable temper to guide him. It has been said that we cannot support a Minister if Mr. L. withdraws his assistance, but I say we did have the gospel preached to us in its purity before he united with us and better is a little with the fear of the Lord then great treasures and trouble therewith. but you will say no more of this and I will forbare and strive to do right and keep under subjection all wrong feelings.
We were without preaching 4 sabbaths after your departure. In that time we meet once at our Meeting house and ___ Shays read to us, and then came Mr. Holcome and I am at a loss what to say of him. He is pleasant man, and in his preaching you would think he was coming right to the point and he will slide of so unpenceivable that one cannot trace the way he went. he tells us what we must be, before we can be admitted into heaven but what the sinner must do to acquire those attainments he does not clearly set forth. I have been thinking every sermon the whole would come but as yet it has not. but don't say that I do not like him, but as yet he has not enlarged nor united our society and would all our people speak the truth they would say they are disappointed in him. He has made me a visit and I should take him to be any thing but a minister if I did not know.  Mr. Chute preached one Sabbath and Mrs. Weston thinks he is the man for this place if you don't come back again. She says he came from a good soul and your recommendation we think much of, but I ___ [dare ?] not express my opinion for they say I like to much depravity so I say I like them both. 

The widow Buckman told me she thought Deacon Safford encouraged you to leave here. I told her she was misinformed and I presume she was. The Baptist have their Minister and are so pleased with him that they are not willing for him to come into our meeting house, for they have withdrawn from us altogether. They hold the monthly concert in their own house and we in ours. No great harm done yet. I believe Dea. Wheeler is at the head of the sepperation. Our vestry is ocupied every night in the week of singing and 3 meetings. Mr. Holcome or Mr. Halfcome gives us a sermon on Thursday eve'g. The meetings are very well attended. I have heard every sermon he has preached. Capt.Childs sought to see me out evenings. He knows my Motive. It was thought I should not go because you was away but they get disappointed in all their conjectures. You know who I mean. I shall not loose any friends. I have not attended any of the Maternal meetings, since you left and don't know when I shall. They have done a little to have me come in in an underhanded way, that is, Mrs. Childs told Mrs. L. that she ought to come and see me and invite me to attend. And I wanted to see Mrs. L on other business and I sent for her to come in which she did, and just as she was going I mentioned about her husband and told her I wish her to converse with him and let me know what he said. She said she would. I heard nothing more from her until meeting day. About 4 o'clock Mrs. Whitcom came in and asked why I was not to meeting. Said I, you know the reason. She says why. Mrs. L. says you can come but she had been so busy that she had forgot to say anything to her husband. From that Mrs. L. said she had been to see me and she did not know why I did not come. You understand the Matter. Now I was cast out publickly and I must be brought in more Publicky, that he or she must give me an inventation, the prayer meeting at this house has been well attended and only one refusal. There sisters down ____ attend and the young sisters have joined with us, and you have been remembered in every prayer that has been offered in this room since you left it and the ___ has been that you might be restored to us again in god's own time. The ___ is quite heavy. Deacon Prince has just left here; he sends his love to you and says he hopes God will bless you wherever you are and that he shall write you as soon as his eye gets better. It is now very sore, his heart was to full for ___ but says he feels resigned to his heavenly Father's will. I went over to your garden once and got some squash and turnips and but I could not go again it was too much for me to pluck up what My Minister had planted and in his absence to.  She that was Emma Hayden sends her love to you. She is quite low but appears very much resigned and composed. Mr. Green has moved to Calais. Mr. Shaw has moved in where they lived. Mrs. Levett has another daughter about 2 weeks old and is very comfortable. Mrs. Weston sends her love you and says she wants to write you an ___ soon. Mary Ann wrote you, 4 weeks ago but presumes you have not received. Emeline is working Mrs. G's watch mat but will not send it until Mr. Gale comes.Will Mr. Gale be so kind as to stop the Youths Companion when this year is out for we cannot take it longer. I believe it is paid for until then. Give our love to Miss Ann Eliza and tell her we should be glad to hear some of her interesting conversation. I must now think of drawing to a close, my best love to Mr. and Mrs. Safford and tell them that I do feel thankful that my Dear friends are under the protection of such worthy people - I shall expect to see Mr. G in about six weeks. I hope you will ever bear this church on your minds at the throne of grace and intercede for us that we may not be left without a teacher and one that shall declare the whole truth if we were delt with according to our deserts we should be shut up in heathenish darkness. I believe god will over  rule all things for his own glory and our best and I hope that all his dealings with us will prove for our everlasting good. I have written you both together for what interests one will the other. You must rectify all mistakes and imperfections in reading and pardon the writer who is your affectionate sister in the Lord.
Elizabeth Waldron

Two Little Notebooks, c1926, Given Out by Insurance Agency of Wilbor Ambrose Shea (1864-1926) in Eastport, Maine


Reprinted, with permission, from the Heirlooms Reunited blog

Two little notebooks given out by Wilbor Ambrose Shea (1864-1926) and his Insurance Agency of Eastport, Maine.  One of the notebooks shows a date of November 26, 1926.

Neither notebook shows the name of the owner; they may have been the same person or two different people; perhaps even Wilbor Ambrose Shea himself.  Neither notebook has many entries.

The notebook below shows one page of what appears to be a list of items and services purchased; the other page shows what appears to be a list of stage or film titles.  Shea, who died in 1926 while returning from Florida, was the owner of Downeast Theatres in Eastport, Calais and Lubec, all in Maine. 





 The other notebook:





If you have a theory as to the identity of the owner(s) of the notebooks, or if you have information to share on the Shea family of Eastport, Maine, please leave a comment for the benefit of other researchers.


1919 Program of the Acme Theatre in Eastport, Maine


Reprinted, with permission, from the Heirlooms Reunited blog

November 1919 program of the Acme Theatre of Eastport, Maine, one of sevral in the area operated by Wilbor Ambrose Shea (1864-1926).

The war was over; the Spanish flu was on the wane, and it was time for our ancestors to enjoy some entertainment.

The program cover has an inset photo of actress May Allison; the back cover features a photo of Wallace Reid, then considered "the screen's most perfect lover"

The programs features the following stars and productions:



Undated tickets to Acme Theatre




Thursday, January 20, 2022

1848 Letter from Lumber Merchant Charles Peavey in Eastport, Maine, to Hon. Samuel E. Smith in Wiscasset, Maine; Purchase of Timberland


Reprinted, with permission, from the Heirlooms Reunited blog

March 22, 1848 letter from Charles Peavey (1787-1854) in Eastport, Maine, to Samuel Emerson Smith (1788-1860) in Wiscasset, Maine.

A Transcription appears at the end of this post.

Charles Peavey was a lumber baron and a general in the Maine Militia.  In his younger years, during the four year stretch from 1814-1818 that the British occupied Eastport, Peavey, a New Hampshire native, took his family to Portsmouth, New Hampshire. Once Eastport was returned to the US, the Peavey family returned. 

Charles' son Albert Daniel Peavey (1824-1859) died when his children were young. The eldest of them, Frank Hutchison Peavey (1850-1901), found his fortune in Minnesota and funded the construction of a library in Eastport, Maine, named in memory of his father Albert, in the 1890s.

Samuel E. Smith was an attorney, a Representative, a Judge and Maine Governor.  Interestingly, Charles Peavey was a member of Governor Smith's executive council in 1831 and 1832.
 
In 1848 Peavey is looking to pursue one of two courses: 1) sell the timberlands he has or 2) purchase more timberland to make his enterprise worthwhile.  In view of the second option, he hopes that Smith has land to sell, with favorable terms of payment.

He refers to No. 10 "in this County", which presumably meant a plantation or township in Washington County, Maine.  Edmunds Township was once called Plantation # 10 Eastern Division, Bingham Penobscot Purchase. 

If you have information to share on the Peavey and/or Smith families, please leave a comment for the benefit of other researchers.

Transcription

Hon. S. E. Smith

Wiscasset Me

Eastport March 22d, 1848

Sir

Lat fall you wrote me concerning your land in East half of No. 10 in this County. I would not allow any terms to go on under a permit the last ___ [winter ?]. I shall go on next week to hunt for trespassers as logging has been done in that vicinity the last winter. As your lands and mine are in common in that township, my part is 4500 acres. What will you give or take per acre. If I should purchase I should want a long time for payment but would secure you in your payments to your satisfaction. It will save divisions by other men - any time you can have on mine with the same surity that is reasonable - have you other lands in this vicinity. If so in what Township - what amount in each parcel do you wish to dispose of them. If so, at what price and payments. My object is in asking these questions is I wish either to be free from lands or have a plenty to work on. I have neither. Will you please answer me soon.

I am Yours Respectfully

Charles Peavey

Bear in mind, while looking at the map below, that letters in 1848 would likely have been carried by sea and land.

Invitation to 1895 Wedding of Harriet Earl Colwell and Edmund W. Gilchrist in Eastport, Maine

Invitation to the 1895 wedding of Harriet Earl Colwell and Edmund Gilchrist at the home of Harriet's parents at 4 Byram Street in Eastport, Maine.

Edmund W. Gilchrist (abt 1869-1954), son of David and Mary Gilchrist; Edmund was a painter

Harriet and Edmund had a son Edmund S. Gilchrist, a music teacher, who died at the age of 22. He was born 22 July 1896 in Eastport, Maine, and died there on 30 September 1918 of "Broncho Pneumonia", perhaps as a result of the Spanish Flu epidemic.

They had at least one other child, who was stillborn.

If you have information to share, please leave a comment for the benefit of other researchers.

1834 Letter from Eastport, Maine, to District Attorney John Anderson in Portland, Maine; Listing Goods Repossessed from Mr. Bradley


Reprinted, with permission, from the Heirlooms Reunited blog

March 2, 1834 from J. W. R? at Eastport, Maine, to the Hon. John Anderson (1792-1853) in Portland, Maine, listing the items taken from a Mr. Bradley to settle costs.


Bradley is described as "rather an object of pity but he is an incorrigible".  Among the goods confiscated were two yoke of oxen in Calais, Maine.

Transcription - if you can identify the writer, J. W. R? or corrections to the transcription, please leave a comment

Eastport, March 2, 1834
Dear Sir,
I have only time before the mail closes to acknowledge the receipt of your favor from Wiscasett and to forward you the following items of cost, of seizure in the cases before the Court at Wiscasset last week, viz
5 bundles Sheet iron - cost $3.50
3 bbls Oil - $2.00
1 ___ broad cloth or  - $5.50
2 yoke oxen, ___ at Calais - $15.00
3 rolls carpeting - $8.25
1 pce broad ____ - $6.00
1 pce carpeting, broad cloth - $5.00
1 _____ of spikes - $2.00

Have the goodness to ask Mr. ___ [Mussey ?] what amount of cash is in his hands for me - after deducting recpts - blanks or

Bradley is rather an object of pity but he is an incorrigible  ___ & it is a pity Mr. ___  could not agree, as the case was so perfectly clear.

Mrs. R's best respects to you & lady, as well as my own. 
_____ yours
J. W. [R?]
 
Address side:
Costs seizure
March 2d 1834
pd
Hon. John Anderson
District Attorney
Portland 

The map below shows land routes, but in 1834, no doubt, letters would have traveled by sea.

1885 Ticket to a Function of the Alumni of Boynton High School at Eastport, Maine


Reprinted, with permission, from the Heirlooms Reunited blog.

Ticket to an 1885 function of the Boynton High School Alumni, to be held at Memorial Hall, Eastport, Maine, on Tuesday Evening, July 14th, from 8 until 12'o'clock.

Note: The link to Boynton High School notes that the building is being used as Eastport City Hall; however, City Hall has since relocated.

Memorial Hall, built in 1868, was destroyed by fire in 1913.

The ticket measures approximately 4-3/8" by 3-1/2; nothing on the reverse.  

Wednesday, January 19, 2022

1892 Graduation Program for Boynton High School in Eastport, Maine


Reprinted, with permission, from the Heirlooms Reunited blog.

Graduation Program for the Class of 1892 at Boynton High School in Eastport, Maine.

Stiff card stock about 7" by 4-1/4", folded once into final dimension of 3-1/2" by 4-1/4".

Graduates of the Class of 1892 - Motto "Vestigia nulla retrorsum"


Programme
  • Duett, "The German Patrol" - Alice M. Corning (1875-1903); lost at sea; Kate W. Swett - Katherine Wright Swett (1875-1942); married Arthur B. Dalrymple (1887-1958); Kate died in the Cocoanut Grove Fire of 1942
  • Salutatory - Irene H. Wadsworth *
  • Latin Declamation, "Catiline's Address to is Soldiers" - William E. Jonah *
  • Essay, "One Wedge Drives Another" - M. Estelle Ramsdell *
  • Instrumental Music, Selected, Spain's Orchestra
  • Class History - Clara B. Andrews *
  • Essay, "Abraham Lincoln" - John E. Brooks *
  • Essay, "Reading" - Bessie F. Corning *
  • Music, "Now for the Highlands" - Schubert Quartette
  • Essay, "Success in Life" - Margaret P. Kemp †
  • Prophecy - Mary P. Cushing *
  • Essay, "Labor Conquers All Things" - Lizzie D. Camplin †
  • Valedictory, "Vistigia nulla restrorsum" - Edith A. Irving *
  • Singing of Ode by the Class
  • Presentation of Diplomas
  • Benediction
  • Friendly Greetings to Class
 
* Classical Course                    † English Course


Class Ode - by Mary Estelle Ramsdell (1874-1964)

If you have information to share on any of the graduates of the Class of 1892 at Boynton High School in Eastport, Maine, please leave a comment for the benefit of other researchers.

1916 Postcard Addressed to Charles H. Lurchin (1886-1965), then of Eastport, Maine


Reprinted, with permission, from the Heirlooms Reunited blog.

Postcard postmarked Worcester, Massachusetts, March 30, 1916, sent to Charles Lurchin, 36 High Street, Eastport, Maine.

The postcard shows a locomotive emerging from the State Line Tunnel of the Boston & Albany Railroad.

The postcard recipient was presumably Charles H. Lurchin (1886-1965), a native of Lubec, Maine, son of Israel W. Lurchin and Susan Rebecca (Morang) Lurchin.   By 1910,the family had moved to Leominster, Massachusetts.

According to Charles' record in the Massachusetts Mason Cards collection, he was a paper cutter, living at Leominster, Massachusetts.  Although he died in Leominster, his funeral and burial were in Eastport, Maine.


 If you have information on the Lurchin and Morang families of Lubec, Maine, Eastport, Maine, or Worcester, Massachusetts, please leave a comment for the benefit of other researchers.

Two Cabinet Photographs of Unidentified Women; by studios in Eastport, Maine


Reprinted, with permission, from the Heirlooms Reunited blog.

Two cabinet photographs of unidentified women; by studios in Eastport, Maine. 

The photograph above was taken at the F E. Fairfield Studio.  The stamp on the reverse is a contemporary one that a reseller apparently used for pricing.


Bear in mind that people from nearby towns in Maine and in nearby New Brunswick, particularly the islands in Passamaquoddy Bay, would travel to Eastport, Maine, for services, so these women might not have lived in Eastport itself.

The other photograph was taken at the Loring Studio and has nothing on the reverse.

If you recognize either woman from your family photographs and/or research, please leave a comment for the benefit of other researchers. 

1840 Letter from Mary Lydia Richardson (1823-1907) studying in Portland, Maine, to her father Dr. Erastus Richardson (1794-1855) in Eastport, Maine

Reprinted, with permission, from the Heirlooms Reunited blog.

January 6, 1840 letter from Mary Lydia Richardson (1823-1907), studying or seeking a school in Portland, Maine, to her father Dr. Erastus Richardson (1794-1855) in Eastport, Maine.

Another post features a letter with mention of Dr. Erastus Richardson:

A transcription of Mary's letter appears at the end of this post.  If you have information to share on any of the people mentioned in the letter, please leave a comment for the benefit of other researchers.
Mentioned in the letter: - hopefully readers can fill in the blanks

Tuesday, January 18, 2022

1835 Letter from Aaron Hayden in Eastport, Maine, to Rev. Wakefield Gale in Boston, Massachusetts

Reprinted, with permission, from the Heirlooms Reunited blog

October 26, 1835 letter from Aaron Hayden at Eastport, Maine, to Rev. Wakefield Gale (1797-1881) in Boston, Massachusetts.

See other posts

The letter featured in this post was sent to No. 7, Montgomery Place, in care of Deacon Daniel Safford (1782-1856), widower of Abigail Jane Bigelow (1804-1830), sister of Rev. Gale's wife Mary Louisa (Bigelow) Gale (1806-1861).

Mentioned in the letter:


If you have information on any of the people mentioned, please leave a comment for the benefit of other researchers.

 

1828 Letter from Rev. Wakefield Gale (1797-1881) at Eastport, Maine, to his brother Joseph Worcester Gale (1809-1889) in Boston, Massachusetts

Reprinted, with permission, from the Heirlooms Reunited blog

December 17, 1828 letter from Rev. Wakefield Gale (1797-1881), a Congregational minister in Eastport, Maine, from 1825-1835, to his brother Joseph Worcester Gale (1809-1889), then in Boston, Massachusetts.

See other posts:

The brothers were Pembroke, New Hampshire, natives, the sons of Deacon Joseph Gale (1768-1851) and Susannah (Frye) Gale (abt 1776-1859)

A transcription of the letter appears at the end of this post.

Rev. Gale was the center of a furious controversy in Eastport in the late 1820s, as noted in the booklet Correspondence Between the First Congregational Society in Eastport and Rev. Gale, but he apparently rode it out until leaving in 1835.

More of Rev. Gale's correspondence is held in the Wakefield Gale Family Papers collection at Dickinson College in Carlisle, Pennsylvania.

Mentioned in the letter:

If you have information to share on any of the people mentioned in this letter, please leave a comment for the benefit of other researchers.

Transcription:

Eastport, December 17th 1828

My Dear Brother

The object of this hasty letter is to confess my fault in not writing you before & to inform you that we had a very quick and pleasant passage to this place after parting with you in Boston Harbor; that our articles of furniture all arrived safe; that Mary& little Jona. Edwards are quite well pleased with this place; that I am quite happy in having a little family of my own; that we live almost wholly by ourselves except taking our meals with Captain Rogers Family; & that the general interests of the little church and Society to which I am preaching are prosperous. We are not yet in the New Meeting House, but hope to be in a few weeks. Seriousness seems to be increasing in the congregation – 12 have attended an inquiry meeting at my study of late. Two are to be added to the church next sabbath. Some efforts are making to promote the cause of temperance here. We are having united meetings, that is, meetings of the several religious societies, in relation to this object. All the clergyman, four in number, are to preach on the subject twice a piece. We received a letter from Brother and Sister Ransom four or five weeks ago. They had arrived safely at Marietta tho their journey was rather longer than they expected. They experienced on their way a remarkable preservation. They with four other passengers were precipitated down a precipice 20 feet, and tho the stage was shivered to pieces, they were uninjured. Susan was pleased with the country, & with her new friends there. She did not regret leaving home - Her object is indeed good and great. I hope she will be faithful as long as she lives - & die in peace with her work done, & well done. We are expecting to hear from home soon. Mrs. G has written them a good long letter. They must be, I think, quite lonesome. But the Lord, I trust, is their ____. He will be with them & comfort them. I hope you will write them as often as convenient. Mother thinks a great deal about all her children. A letter often will be very gratifying. Do you intend going home by & by? How are you prospered in your business? With whom do you work? Where do you board? How do you prosper in religious things? Whose meetings do you attend on the Sabbath? Had you not better make Dr. Edwards meeting yours? Are you careful to maintain secret prayer? O my brother, do not neglect the soul! I hope you improve your leisure hours in useful reading, rather than in gazing at the vain objects of a large and enticing City. Dr. Franklin says, “Time is money”. The habit you now form will go along with you this life it is probable. Mind how you begin in every thing. You are greatly exposed in many ways. But your chief danger at present will be neglect the ___ & remiss ways in the duties of religion. Remember that you are young and inexperienced - & obey Our Saviors direction, to watch & pray but you enter into temptation. A young man of this place has called on me today, who is in trouble, & whose history himself interested me much. He is a school teacher – has studied some with a view of being a physician. He is poor, came here last Spring to get a school, with a view to aid himself in getting his profession. He is 23 years old - He joined the church in Bloomfield, Somerset Co. in this state when only 13 years old. His father died when this son was 12 years old - his mother when he was 15. He had lived like a Christian, till he came here. When he came to this place he concealed the fact ____ [tear in page] was a professor of religion - the youth and his first ____ society were all thoughtless - he engaged in a school but did not pray in it. He did not come to our communions - and no one knew till recently that he was a member of the Church of Christ. He has been round to a sense of his condition. Regrets the course he has taken, mourns... He has been ashamed of Christ - intends to confess his sin to the church before next Sabbath - & on the sabbath return to his duty and privilege in celebrating the love of Christ. He takes an active part now in our Saturday night prayer Meetings. If you have opportunity to take a part in such meetings or in family worship, I hope you will do it. It will be an advantage.Your employment is Honorable. I hope you will be contented with it & strive to excel as a mechanic, especially as a Christian and citizen. I want you to be a reading man and to form the habit and cultivate the taste for reading. Thus you will gradually and almost insensibly improve. 


Abby Jane Bigelow, sister of Mrs. G is expecting to be married next Wednesday evening at Dr. Edwards to Dea. Safford. You probably know Dea. Safford if you attend meetings at Salem Street Church.  Mary unites with me in love to you. Let us be remembered aff. to br. John when you see him or write to him also to Pembroke friends.

Monday, January 17, 2022

c1925-1929 Christmas Card of Maine Governor Ralph Owen Brewster, featuring the 1839 W. H. Bartlett engraving of "Eastport and Passamaquoddy"

Reprinted, with permission, from the Heirlooms Reunited blog

Holiday greetings, circa 1925-1929, from Maine Governor Ralph Owen Brewster (1888-1961) and wife (Dorothy (Foss) Brewster (1889-1971), featuring the 1839 W. H. Bartlett engraving of Eastport and Passamaquoddy Bay - From Lubec.

The Brewsters lived at 37 Zions Hill in Dexter, Maine.
If you have information to share on Gov. Ralph Owen Brewster, please leave a comment for the benefit of other researchers.