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Bangor, Maine

 
Bangor, Maine

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Bangor, Maine



 
 
Bangor is a city in and the county seat
County seat

A county seat or parish seat is a term for an administrative center for a county or civil parish, primarily used in the United States. In the Northeast United States, the statutory term often is shire town, but colloquially county seat is the term in use there....
 of Penobscot County, Maine
Maine

The State of Maine is a U.S. state in the New England region of the northeastern United States of America, bordering the Atlantic Ocean to the southeast, New Hampshire to the southwest, the Canadian provinces of Quebec to the northwest and New Brunswick to the northeast....
, United States
United States

The United States of America is a Federal government constitutional republic comprising U.S. state and a federal district. The country is situated mostly in central North America, where its Contiguous United States and Washington, D.C., the Capital districts and territories, lie between the Pacific Ocean and Atlantic Oceans, Borders of the U...
, and the major commercial and cultural center for eastern and northern Maine. It is also the principal city of the Bangor, Maine Metropolitan Statistical Area which encompasses Bangor and all of Penobscot County
Penobscot County, Maine

Penobscot County is a county located in the U.S. state of Maine. For U.S. Census statistical purposes, it is part of the Bangor, Maine New England County Metropolitan Area ....
.

As of 2008, Bangor is the third-largest city in Maine, as it has been for more than a century. The population of the city was 31,473 at the 2000 census.






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Bangor is a city in and the county seat
County seat

A county seat or parish seat is a term for an administrative center for a county or civil parish, primarily used in the United States. In the Northeast United States, the statutory term often is shire town, but colloquially county seat is the term in use there....
 of Penobscot County, Maine
Maine

The State of Maine is a U.S. state in the New England region of the northeastern United States of America, bordering the Atlantic Ocean to the southeast, New Hampshire to the southwest, the Canadian provinces of Quebec to the northwest and New Brunswick to the northeast....
, United States
United States

The United States of America is a Federal government constitutional republic comprising U.S. state and a federal district. The country is situated mostly in central North America, where its Contiguous United States and Washington, D.C., the Capital districts and territories, lie between the Pacific Ocean and Atlantic Oceans, Borders of the U...
, and the major commercial and cultural center for eastern and northern Maine. It is also the principal city of the Bangor, Maine Metropolitan Statistical Area which encompasses Bangor and all of Penobscot County
Penobscot County, Maine

Penobscot County is a county located in the U.S. state of Maine. For U.S. Census statistical purposes, it is part of the Bangor, Maine New England County Metropolitan Area ....
.

As of 2008, Bangor is the third-largest city in Maine, as it has been for more than a century. The population of the city was 31,473 at the 2000 census. The population of the Bangor Metropolitan Statistical Area is over 148,000. The population of the five-county area (Penobscot, Piscataquis, Hancock
Hancock County, Maine

Hancock County is a county located in the U.S. state of Maine. As of 2000, the population was 51,791. Its county seat is Ellsworth, Maine. It was incorporated in 1789 and contains 1,522 sq miles....
, Aroostook
Aroostook County, Maine

Aroostook County is a county located in the U.S. state of Maine. In 2000, its population was 73,938. It is the largest county in the state. Its county seat is Houlton, Maine....
, and Washington
Washington County, Maine

Washington County is a county located in the U.S. state of Maine. In 2000, its population was 33,941. Its county seat is Machias, Maine.Sometimes referred to as "Sunrise Country" because it is the easternmost county in the United States, and it is often where the rising sun first reaches U.S....
) for which Bangor is the largest market town, distribution center, transportation hub, and media center, is over 325,000 people.

Bangor is approximately 30 miles from Penobscot Bay
Penobscot Bay

Penobscot Bay originates from the mouth of Maine's Penobscot River. There are many islands in this bay, and on them, some of the country's most well-known summer colony....
 up the Penobscot River
Penobscot River

The Penobscot River is 350 mi long, making it the second longest river in the U.S. state of Maine and the longest river entirely in Maine. Its drainage basin contains ....
 at its confluence with the Kenduskeag Stream
Kenduskeag Stream

Kenduskeag Stream is a stream, approximately 25 miles long, in the U.S. state of Maine. It is a tributary of the Penobscot River. The stream rises at the outlet of Garland Pond in the town of Garland, Maine, and flows southeast through Corinth, Maine, Kenduskeag, Maine, and Glenburn, Maine, before entering the city of Bangor, Maine....
. It is connected by bridge to the neighboring city of Brewer
Brewer, Maine

Brewer is a city in Penobscot County, Maine, Maine, United States. It is part of the Bangor, Maine Metropolitan Statistical Area. The city is named after its first settler, Colonel John Brewer....
. Other suburban towns include Orono
Orono

Orono is the name of three communities:Canada*Orono, Ontario, a town in the Municipality of ClaringtonUnited States*Orono, Maine, a town in Penobscot County, home to the University of Maine...
 (home of the University of Maine
University of Maine

The University of Maine, established in 1865, is the largest campus, in terms of full-time equivalent enrollments, of the seven campuses in the University of Maine System....
 campus), Hampden, Hermon
Hermon, Maine

Hermon is a town in Penobscot County, Maine, Maine, United States. The population was 4,437 at the 2000 United States Census....
, Old Town
Old Town, Maine

Old Town is a city in Penobscot County, Maine, Maine, United States. The population was 8,130 at the 2000 United States Census. The city's developed area is chiefly located on a relatively large island, though its boundaries extend beyond that....
, Glenburn
Glenburn, Maine

Glenburn is a town in Penobscot County, Maine, Maine, United States. The population was 3,964 at the 2000 United States Census. It was called "Dutton" until it was incorporated as the town of Glenburn in 1837....
, and Veazie
Veazie, Maine

Veazie is a town in Penobscot County, Maine, Maine, United States. The population was 1,744 at the 2000 United States Census. The town is named after General Samuel Veazie, an early lumber baron and railroad operator....
.

History


Earliest period

The Penobscot
Penobscot

The Penobscot are a sovereign people indigenous to what is now Maritime Canada and the northeastern United States, particularly Maine. They were and are significant participants in the historical and present Wabanaki Confederacy, along with the Passamaquoddy, Maliseet and Mi'kmaq nations....
 people long inhabited the area around present-day Bangor, and still occupy tribal land on the nearby Penobscot Indian Island Reservation
Penobscot Indian Island Reservation

Penobscot Indian Island Reservation is an Indian reservation for the Penobscot tribe in Penobscot County, Maine, Maine, United States near Old Town, Maine....
. The first European to visit the site was probably the Portuguese
Portugal

Portugal , officially the Portuguese Republic , is a country on the Iberian Peninsula. Located in southwestern Europe, Portugal is the westernmost country of mainland Europe and is bordered by the Atlantic Ocean to the west and south and by Spain to the north and east....
 Esteban Gómez
Esteban Gómez

Esteban G?mez, also known as Estevan G?mez and Est?v?o Gomes , was a Spain cartography and exploration, of Portugal origin....
 in 1524, followed by Samuel de Champlain
Samuel de Champlain

Samuel de Champlain, , , "The Father of New France", was a French navigator, geographer, cartographer, draughtsman, soldier, explorer, ethnologist, diplomat, chronicler, and the founder of Quebec City on July 3, 1608, of which he was the administrator for the rest of his life....
 in 1605. Champlain was looking for the mythical city of Norumbega
Norumbega

Norumbega was a legendary settlement in northeastern North America, inextricably connected with attempts to demonstrate Viking incursions in New England....
, thought to be where Bangor now lies. French priests settled among the Penobscots, and the valley remained contested between France
France

France , officially the French Republic , is a country whose Metropolitan France is located in Western Europe and that also comprises various Overseas departments and territories of France....
 and Britain
Kingdom of Great Britain

The Kingdom of Great Britain, also known as the United Kingdom of Great Britain, was a country in North-West Europe, in existence from 1707 to 1801....
 into the 1750s, making it one of the last regions to become part of New England
New England

New England is a region of the United States located in the northeastern corner of the country, bounded by the Atlantic Ocean, Canada and New York State, and consisting of the modern U.S....
.

The British-American settlement which became Bangor was started in 1769 by Jacob Buswell, and was originally known as Condeskeag (or Kenduskeag) Plantation. By 1772 there were 12 families, along with a sawmill
Sawmill

A sawmill is a facility where logging are cut into lumbers....
, store, and school. The settlement’s first child, Mary Howard, was born that year. The first lawsuit was brought in 1790, when Jacob Buswell sued David Wall for calling him “an old damned grey-headed bugar of Hell” and Rev. Seth Noble “a damned rascall”.

Starting in 1775, Condeskeag became the site of treaty negotiations by which the Penobscot
Penobscot

The Penobscot are a sovereign people indigenous to what is now Maritime Canada and the northeastern United States, particularly Maine. They were and are significant participants in the historical and present Wabanaki Confederacy, along with the Passamaquoddy, Maliseet and Mi'kmaq nations....
 were made to give up almost all their ancestral lands, a process complete by about 1820, when Maine
Maine

The State of Maine is a U.S. state in the New England region of the northeastern United States of America, bordering the Atlantic Ocean to the southeast, New Hampshire to the southwest, the Canadian provinces of Quebec to the northwest and New Brunswick to the northeast....
 became a state. The tribe was eventually left with only their main village on an island up-river from Bangor, called “Indian Old Town” by the settlers. Eventually a white settlement taking the name Old Town
Old Town, Maine

Old Town is a city in Penobscot County, Maine, Maine, United States. The population was 8,130 at the 2000 United States Census. The city's developed area is chiefly located on a relatively large island, though its boundaries extend beyond that....
 was planted on the river bank opposite the Penobscot
Penobscot

The Penobscot are a sovereign people indigenous to what is now Maritime Canada and the northeastern United States, particularly Maine. They were and are significant participants in the historical and present Wabanaki Confederacy, along with the Passamaquoddy, Maliseet and Mi'kmaq nations....
 village, which began to be called “Indian Island”, and remains the site of the Penobscot Nation
Penobscot

The Penobscot are a sovereign people indigenous to what is now Maritime Canada and the northeastern United States, particularly Maine. They were and are significant participants in the historical and present Wabanaki Confederacy, along with the Passamaquoddy, Maliseet and Mi'kmaq nations....
.

During the American Revolution
American Revolution

The American Revolution refers to the political upheaval during the last half of the 18th century in which the Thirteen Colonies of North America overthrew the governance of the British Empire and then rejected the British monarchy to become the sovereign United States of America....
 in 1779, the rebel Penobscot Expedition
Penobscot Expedition

The Penobscot Expedition was the largest American naval expedition of the American Revolutionary War and the United States' worst naval defeat until Attack on Pearl Harbor....
 fled up the Penobscot River after being routed in the Battle of Castine, Maine
Castine, Maine

Castine is a New England town in Hancock County, Maine, Maine, United States. The population was 1,343 at the 2000 United States Census. Castine is the home of Maine Maritime Academy, a four-year institution that graduates officers and engineers for the United States Merchant Marine and marine related industries....
, and the last of its ships (at least nine) were burned or captured by the British fleet at Bangor. Paul Revere
Paul Revere

Paul Revere was an American silversmith and a Patriot in the American Revolution.He was glorified after his death for his role as a messenger in the battles of Lexington and Concord, and Revere's name and his "midnight ride" are well-known in the United States as a patriotic symbol....
 was among the survivors who fled into the woods. A cannon from one of the rebel warships is mounted in a downtown park, and artifacts from the sunken ships continue to be discovered in the river-bed, which is listed on the National Register of Historic Places
National Register of Historic Places

The National Register of Historic Places is the United States government official list of districts, sites, buildings, structures, and objects deemed worthy of preservation....
.

Having grown in size to 567 people, Condeskeag determined to incorporate as a town in 1791, As legend has it, the settlers sent the Rev. Seth Noble to Boston
Boston, Massachusetts

Boston is the State capital and largest city of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, and is one of the oldest cities in the United States. The largest city in New England, Boston is considered the economic and cultural center of the region, and is sometimes regarded as the unofficial "Capital of New England." Boston city proper had a 2007 est...
 with a petition to name the town "Sunbury" (at the time, Maine was part of Massachusetts
Massachusetts

The Commonwealth of Massachusetts is a U.S. state located in the New England region of the Northeastern United States United States. It borders Rhode Island and Connecticut to the south, New York to the west, and Vermont and New Hampshire to the north....
). Noble's favorite song was a hymn tune
Hymn tune

A hymn tune is a musical composition to which a hymn text is sung. Some tunes consist of only the melody, sung in unison or parallel octaves, with or without accompaniment....
 by William Tans'ur
William Tans'ur

William Tans'ur was an England hymn-writer, psalmody and teacher of music. His output includes approximately a hundred hymn tunes and psalm settings and a Te Deum....
 entitled Bangor (after the Antiphonary of Bangor
Antiphonary of Bangor

The Antiphonary of Bangor is an ancient Latin manuscript, supposed to have been originally written at Bangor Abbey in modern day Northern Ireland....
), and, in a moment of either drunkenness or misunderstanding, he caused the town to be given that name instead.

The town was sacked
Looting

Looting , to rob, sacking, plundering, despoiling, or pillaging is the indiscriminate taking of goods by force as part of a military or political victory, or during a catastrophe or riot, such as during war, natural disaster, or rioting....
 by the British
United Kingdom

The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, commonly known as the United Kingdom , the UK or Britain,is a sovereign state located off the northwestern coast of continental Europe....
 during the War of 1812
War of 1812

The War of 1812, between the United States of America and the British Empire , was fought from 1812 to 1815.There were several immediate stated causes for the U.S....
. following the rout of local militia in the Battle of Hampden
Battle of Hampden

The Battle of Hampden, though a minor action of the War of 1812, was the last serious clash of arms in the American state of Maine. It represented the end of two centuries of violent contest over Maine by surrounding political units ....
. After the selectmen surrendered the town, the British raided shops and homes for 30 hours, and threatened to burn ships in the harbor and unfinished ones on stocks. The selectmen, fearing the fires from the ships on stocks would spread to the town, struck a deal by which they put up a bond, and promised to deliver the unfinished vessels to the British by the end of November. The British floated the seaworthy ships into the middle of the Penobscot, set some ablaze, and took others loaded with horses and cattle back to their post in Castine
Castine, Maine

Castine is a New England town in Hancock County, Maine, Maine, United States. The population was 1,343 at the 2000 United States Census. Castine is the home of Maine Maritime Academy, a four-year institution that graduates officers and engineers for the United States Merchant Marine and marine related industries....
, which they occupied until April 26, 1815, when they left for Canada. The British stayed only 30 hours, according to one account, because in the midst of celebrating their victory the soldiers became so drunk on local rum that the officers felt vulnerable to counter-attack.

Lumber capital

In the 19th century, Bangor prospered as a lumber port, and began to call itself "the lumber capital of the world". Most of the local sawmills (as many as 300-400) were actually upriver in neighboring towns like Orono
Orono, Maine

Orono is a New England town in Penobscot County, Maine, Maine, United States. It was first settled in 1774 and named in honor of Chief Joseph Orono of the Penobscot....
, Old Town
Old Town, Maine

Old Town is a city in Penobscot County, Maine, Maine, United States. The population was 8,130 at the 2000 United States Census. The city's developed area is chiefly located on a relatively large island, though its boundaries extend beyond that....
, Bradley
Bradley, Maine

Bradley is a town in Penobscot County, Maine, Maine, United States. It is located at . It is part of the Bangor, Maine, Maine Metropolitan Statistical Area....
, and Milford, Bangor controlling the capital, port facilities, supplies and entertainment. Bangor capitalists also owned most of the forests. The main markets for Bangor lumber were the East Coast cities - Boston and New York
New York

The State of New York is a U.S. state in the Mid-Atlantic States and Northeastern United States regions of the United States and is the nation's List of U.S....
 were largely built from Maine lumber - but much was also shipped directly to the Caribbean
Caribbean

The Caribbean is a region consisting of the Caribbean Sea, its islands , and the surrounding coasts. The region is located southeast of the Gulf of Mexico and Northern America, east of Central America, and to the north of South America....
. The city was particularly active in shipping building lumber to California
California

California is a U.S. state on the West Coast of the United States of the United States, along the Pacific Ocean. It is bordered by Oregon to the north, Nevada to the east, Arizona to the southeast, and to the south the Mexico state of Baja California....
 in the Gold Rush
Gold rush

A gold rush is a period of feverish migration of workers into the area of a dramatic discovery of commercial quantities of gold.Eight gold rushes took place throughout the 19th century in Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, Chile, New Zealand, South Africa, and the United States....
 period, via Cape Horn
Cape Horn

Cape Horn island is the southernmost Headlands and bays of the Tierra del Fuego archipelago of southern Chile.Cape Horn is widely considered to be the most southerly point of South America, and marks the northern boundary of the Drake Passage; for many years it was a major milestone on the clipper route, by which sailing ships carried tr...
, before sawmills could be established in northern California, Oregon
Oregon

Oregon is a U.S. state in the Pacific Northwest region of the United States. The area was inhabited by many indigenous tribes before the arrival of traders, explorers and settlers....
, and Washington
Washington

Washington is a U.S. state in the Pacific Northwest region of the United States. Washington was carved out of the western part of Washington Territory which had been ceded by Britain in 1846 by the Oregon Treaty as settlement of the Oregon Boundary Dispute....
. Bangorians subsequently helped transplant the Maine culture of lumbering to the Pacific Northwest
Pacific Northwest

The Pacific Northwest is a region in the northwest of North America . There are several partially overlapping definitions but the term Pacific Northwest should not be confused with the Northwest Territory or the Northwest Territories of Canada....
, and participated directly in the Gold Rush themselves. Bangor, Washington; Bangor, California
Bangor, California

Bangor is an unincorporated area inside Butte County, California, about from the Yuba County, California line. The U.S. Geological Survey feature ID is 218644 and the elevation is given as above mean sea level ....
; and Little Bangor, Nevada are legacies of this contact.

Sailors and loggers gave the city a widespread reputation for roughness — their stomping grounds were known as the "Devil's Half Acre".. (The same name was also applied, at roughly the same time, to The Devil's Half-Acre, Pennsylvania
The Devil's Half-Acre, Pennsylvania

The Devil's Half-Acre is a parcel of land in the township of Solebury in Bucks County, PA. It is a popular tourist location with people travelling along the Delaware River visiting the older towns and villages....
). The arrival of Irish
Irish people

The Irish people are a Western European ethnic group who originate in Ireland, in north western Europe. Ireland has been populated for around 9,000 years , with the Irish people's earliest ancestors recorded as the Nemedians, Fomorians, Fir Bolgs, Tuatha D? Danann and the Milesians ?the last group supposedly representing the "pure" Gaelic a...
 immigrants from nearby Canada
Canada

Canada is a country occupying most of northern North America, extending from the Atlantic Ocean in the east to the Pacific Ocean in the west and northward into the Arctic Ocean....
 beginning in the 1830s, and their competition with local yankees for jobs, sparked a deadly sectarian riot in 1833 which lasted days and had to be put down by militia. Realizing the need for a police force, the town incorporated as The City of Bangor in 1834. Irish-Catholic and later Jewish immigrants eventually became established members of the community, along with many migrants from Atlantic Canada. Of 205 black citizens who lived in Bangor in 1910, over a third were originally from Canada.

Bangor was a center of political agitation during the bloodless Aroostook War
Aroostook War

The Aroostook War was an undeclared confrontation in 1838-39 between the United States and Great Britain over the international boundary between British North America and Maine....
, a boundary dispute with Britain in 1838-39. Still wary of the British navy, which had brought violence to the Penobscot twice, local politicians caused the Federal government to build a huge granite fort, Fort Knox downriver from Bangor at Prospect, Maine
Prospect, Maine

Prospect is a New England town in Waldo County, Maine, Maine, United States. The population was 642 at the United States Census, 2000.The most prominent landmark in Prospect is Fort Knox , a very large nineteenth century granite fort built to protect the Penobscot River and the lumber port of Bangor, Maine....
 from 1844 to 1864. It remains one of the region's most prominent landmarks, although it never fired a shot in anger.

Many of the lumber barons built elaborate Greek Revival and Victorian
Victorian architecture

The term Victorian architecture can refer to one of a number of architectural styles predominantly employed during the Victorian era. As with the latter, the period of building that it covers may slightly overlap the actual reign, 20 June 1837 ? 22 January 1901, of Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom after whom it is named....
 houses that still stand on Broadway, West Broadway, and elsewhere around the city. Bangor is also noteworthy for its large number of substantial old churches, as well as its imposing canopy of shade trees. The city was so beautiful it was called "The Queen City of the East." The shorter Queen City appellation is still used by some local clubs, organizations, events and businesses.

In addition to shipping lumber, 19th century Bangor was the leading producer of moccasins, shipping over 100,000 pairs a year by the 1880s.

Slavery issue and the Civil War

Bangor was a center of anti-slavery politics in the years before the American Civil War
American Civil War

The American Civil War , also known as the War Between the States and several Naming the American Civil War, was a civil war in the United States....
, partly due to the influence of the Bangor Theological Seminary
Bangor Theological Seminary

Bangor Theological Seminary is an ecumenical seminary, founded in 1814, in the Congregational tradition of the United Church of Christ. It is located in Bangor, Maine and Portland, Maine....
. The city had a chapter of the American Anti-Slavery Society
American Anti-Slavery Society

The American Anti-Slavery Society was an Abolitionism society founded by William Lloyd Garrison and Arthur Tappan. Frederick Douglass was a key leader of the society and often spoke at its meetings....
 with 105 members in 1837, and a parallel Female Anti-Slavery Society with 100 more. In 1841, the gubernatorial candidate of the anti-slavery Liberty Party received more votes in Bangor than in any city in Maine, though he lost by a wide margin to a less radical Bangorean, Edward Kent
Edward Kent

Edward Kent was the List of Governors of Maine of the U.S. state of Maine during the Aroostook War. Born in 1802 in Concord, New Hampshire, he later moved to Bangor, Maine and spent the rest of his life there....
. U.S. Congressman Israel Washburn Jr. from neighboring Orono
Orono, Maine

Orono is a New England town in Penobscot County, Maine, Maine, United States. It was first settled in 1774 and named in honor of Chief Joseph Orono of the Penobscot....
 was instrumental in organizing 30 members of the U.S. House of Representatives to discuss forming the Republican Party
History of the United States Republican Party

The Republican Party is the second oldest currently existing political party in the United States....
, and was the first politician of that rank to use the term "Republican", in a speech at Bangor in June 2, 1854.

That Hannibal Hamlin
Hannibal Hamlin

Hannibal Hamlin was the List of Vice Presidents of the United States Vice President of the United States, serving under President of the United States Abraham Lincoln from 1861-1865....
 of neighboring Hampden became Lincoln's first Vice President
Vice president

A vice president is an Corporate officer in government or business who is below a president in rank. The name comes from the Latin List of Latin phrases #vice meaning 'in place of'....
, testified to the strength of local anti-slavery feeling, at least among an educated elite. The city gradually became so hot for the Republican cause that on Aug. 17, 1861 the offices of the Democratic
Democratic Party (United States)

The Democratic Party is one of two major party contemporary political parties in the United States, along with the Republican Party . It is the oldest political party in continuous operation in the United States and it is one of the oldest parties in the world....
 paper, the Bangor Daily Union, were ransacked by a mob, and the presses and other materials thrown into the street and burned. Editor Marcellus Emery was threatened with violence but escaped unharmed. He only resumed publishing after the war.

Bangor and surrounding towns were heavily engaged in the American Civil War
American Civil War

The American Civil War , also known as the War Between the States and several Naming the American Civil War, was a civil war in the United States....
. The locally-mustered 2nd Maine Volunteer Infantry Regiment
2nd Maine Volunteer Infantry Regiment

The 2nd Maine Volunteer Infantry Regiment was mustered in Bangor, Maine for two year's service on May 28, 1861 and mustered out in the same place on June 9, 1863....
 ("The Bangor Regiment"), was the first to march out of the state in 1861, and played a prominent part in the First Battle of Bull Run
First Battle of Bull Run

The First Battle of Bull Run, also known as the First Battle of Manassas , was the first major land battle of the American Civil War, fought on July 21, 1861, near Manassas, Virginia....
. The 1st Maine Heavy Artillery Regiment
1st Maine Heavy Artillery Regiment

The 1st Maine Heavy Artillery Regiment was a regiment in the Union Army during the American Civil War. It suffered more casualties in an ill-fated charge during the Siege of Petersburg than any Union regiment lost in a single day of combat throughout the war....
, mustered in Bangor and commanded by a local merchant, lost more men than any Union regiment in the war (especially in a single ill-fated charge in the Second Battle of Petersburg, 1864). The 20th Maine Infantry Regiment commanded by Maj. Gen. Joshua Chamberlain
Joshua Chamberlain

Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain was an United States college professor from the State of Maine, who volunteered during the American Civil War to join the Union Army....
 from the neighboring town of Brewer
Brewer, Maine

Brewer is a city in Penobscot County, Maine, Maine, United States. It is part of the Bangor, Maine Metropolitan Statistical Area. The city is named after its first settler, Colonel John Brewer....
 gained fame for holding Little Round Top
Little Round Top

Little Round Top is the smaller of two rocky hills south of Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. It was the site of an unsuccessful assault by Confederate States Army troops against the Union Army left flank on July 2, 1863, the second day of the Battle of Gettysburg....
 in the Battle of Gettysburg
Battle of Gettysburg

The Battle of Gettysburg , fought in and around the town of Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, as part of the Gettysburg Campaign, was the battle with the largest number of casualties in the American Civil War and is frequently cited as the war's Turning point of the American Civil War....
. Grant gave Chamberlain the honor of accepting the surrender of Lee's Army of Virginia
Army of Virginia

The Army of Virginia was organized as a major unit of the Union Army and operated briefly and unsuccessfully in 1862 in the American Civil War. It should not be confused with its principal opponent, the Confederate States Army Army of Northern Virginia, commanded by Robert E....
. A bridge connecting Bangor with Brewer is named for Chamberlain, who was one of eight Civil War soldiers from Bangor or surrounding Penobscot County towns to receive the Medal of Honor
Medal of Honor

The Medal of Honor is the highest Awards and decorations of the United States military awarded by the United States government. It is bestowed on a member of the United States armed forces who distinguishes himself "conspicuously by gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of his life above and beyond the call of duty while engaged in an action...
.

Bangor's main Civil War naval hero was Charles A. Boutelle
Charles A. Boutelle

Charles A. Boutelle was an American seaman, shipmaster, naval officer and Civil War veteran, newspaper editor and publisher, conservative republican politico and nine term representative to Congress from the 4th Congressional District of Maine....
, who accepted the surrender of the Confederate fleet after the Battle of Mobile Bay
Battle of Mobile Bay

The Battle of Mobile Bay of August 5, 1864, was an engagement of the American Civil War in which a Federal fleet commanded by Rear Admiral David G....
. A Bangor residential street is named for him. A number of Bangor ships were captured on the high seas by Confederate
Confederate States Navy

The Confederate States Navy was the Navy of the Confederate States of America armed forces established by an act of the Congress of the Confederate States on February 21, 1861....
 raiders in the Civil War, including the "Delphine", "James Littlefield", "Mary E. Thompson" and "Golden Rocket".

The University of Maine
University of Maine

The University of Maine, established in 1865, is the largest campus, in terms of full-time equivalent enrollments, of the seven campuses in the University of Maine System....
 (originally The Maine State College) was founded in the suburban town of Orono
Orono, Maine

Orono is a New England town in Penobscot County, Maine, Maine, United States. It was first settled in 1774 and named in honor of Chief Joseph Orono of the Penobscot....
 in 1868.

In the 1880s there was a local quarrel over the adoption of Eastern Standard Time because Bangor was so far east. Bangor even elected an anti-EST mayor (J.F. Snow), and the city had, for awhile, two times. Some people set their watches to EST, and some to 'local time'. The issue was finally settled by the state legislature, which made EST 'standard' across all of Maine.

Although Maine was the first "dry" state (i.e. the first to prohibit the sale of alcohol, with the passage of the "Maine law
Maine law

The Maine law, passed in 1851 in Maine, was one of the first statutory implementations of the developing temperance movement in the United States....
" in 1851), Bangor managed to remain "wet". The city had 142 saloons in 1890. A look-the-other-way attitude by local police and politicians (sustained by a system of bribery in the form of ritualized fine-payments known as "The Bangor Plan") allowed Bangor to flout the nation's most long-standing state prohibition
Prohibition in the United States

In the history of the United States, Prohibition is the period from 1920 to 1933, during which the sale, manufacture, and transportation of Alcoholic beverage for consumption were banned nationally as mandated in the Eighteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution....
 law.

Early twentieth century

In 1900 Bangor was still shipping wooden spools to England
England

native_name =|conventional_long_name = England|common_name = England|image_flag = Flag of England.svg|image_coat = England COA.svg|symbol_type = Royal Coat of Arms...
 and wooden fruit boxes to Italy
Italy

Italy , officially the Italian Republic , is a country located on the Italian Peninsula in Southern Europe and on the two largest islands in the Mediterranean Sea, Sicily and Sardinia....
. An average of 2,000 vessels called at Bangor each year. But its days as a lumber port were numbered, as the Maine woods began to be purchased by paper corporations
Pulp and paper industry in the United States

Industry overviewThe United States is one of the biggest consumers of paper in the world. Between 1990 and 2002, paper consumption in the United States increased from 84.9 million tons to 1 E8 kg....
, and large pulp and paper mills were erected in towns all along the Penobscot. The transition from lumber to paper was completed in the first quarter of the 20th century, though Bangor businesses continued to prosper by serving the paper industry. Local capitalists also invested in a train route to Aroostook County in northern Maine (the Bangor and Aroostook Railroad
Bangor and Aroostook Railroad

The Bangor and Aroostook Railroad is a defunct United States railroad company, that brought rail service to Aroostook County, Maine. Brightly painted BAR boxcar attracted national attention in the 1950s....
), opening that area to settlement.

In 1909, Robert E. Peary, after leading the first expedition to reach the North Pole
North Pole

The North Pole, also known as the Geographic North Pole or Terrestrial North Pole is, subject to the caveats explained below, defined as the point in the northern hemisphere where the Earth's axis of rotation meets the Earth's surface....
, returned by train to the United States from Canada, via Bangor, where he was treated to a reception and given an engraved silver cup. Peary's Arctic exploration ship, the Roosevelt, had been built just south of Bangor on Verona Island
Verona Island, Maine

Verona Island is a town located on an island of the same name in the Penobscot River in Hancock County, Maine, Maine, United States. The population was 533 at the 2000 United States Census....
.

On April 30, 1911, embers from a hayshed near the Kenduskeag Stream
Kenduskeag Stream

Kenduskeag Stream is a stream, approximately 25 miles long, in the U.S. state of Maine. It is a tributary of the Penobscot River. The stream rises at the outlet of Garland Pond in the town of Garland, Maine, and flows southeast through Corinth, Maine, Kenduskeag, Maine, and Glenburn, Maine, before entering the city of Bangor, Maine....
 ignited nearby buildings, sparking the Great Fire of 1911
Great Fire of 1911

The Great Fire of 1911 took place in .It started in the afternoon of April 30, 1911 on Broad Street. High winds had spread it to a shed on Exchange Street and the Universalist Church on Center Street by 4:10 PM, from where it spread into the residential neighborhood on Center Street Hill....
. The fire would destroy most of the downtown, forever changing the face of the city, but as in the case of the more famous Great Chicago Fire
Great Chicago Fire

The Great Chicago Fire was a conflagration that burned from Sunday October 8 to early Tuesday October 10, 1871, killing hundreds and destroying about four square miles in Chicago, Illinois....
 of 1871, Bangor rose again and prospered. Most of the present downtown is listed on the National Register of Historic Places
National Register of Historic Places

The National Register of Historic Places is the United States government official list of districts, sites, buildings, structures, and objects deemed worthy of preservation....
 as the 'Great Fire Historic District', while the portion that survived the fire is the 'West Market Square Historic District'.

In 1913, the war of the "drys" (prohibitionists) on "wet" Bangor escalated when the Penobscot County Sheriff was impeached and removed by the Maine Legislature for not enforcing anti-liquor laws. His successor was asked to resign by the Governor the following year for the same reason, but refused. A third sheriff was removed by the Governor in 1918, but promptly re-nominated by the Democratic Party.

In 1915, a German agent, Werner Horn attempted to dynamite the international railroad bridge in Vanceboro
Vanceboro, Maine

Vanceboro is a town in Washington County, Maine, Maine, United States, at the eastern terminus of Maine State Route 6. Vanceboro is across the St....
 but was captured and arraigned on federal charges in Bangor. Later that year, $100 million in British gold bullion was shipped by rail from Halifax to New York, over that same bridge and through Bangor, in order to pay war-related debts.

The city was visited by the global Spanish Flu
Spanish flu

The 1918 flu pandemic was an influenza pandemic that spread to nearly every part of the world. It was caused by an unusually severe and deadly Influenza A virus Strain of subtype H1N1....
 pandemic of 1918 and over a hundred died. This was the worst 'natural disaster' in Bangor's history.

In the fall of 1937, "public enemy" Al Brady
Al Brady

Al Brady was an Indiana-born armed robber and murderer who became one of the FBI's "Public Enemies" in the 1930s. Brady and one of two accomplices were shot dead in an ambush by FBI agents in downtown Bangor, Maine in 1937....
 and another member of his "Brady Gang" were killed in the bloodiest shootout in Maine's history. Federal agents ambushed Brady and his two accomplices on Bangor's Central Street after they had attempted to purchase guns and ammunition from Dakin's Sporting Goods downtown. Brady is buried in the public section of Mount Hope Cemetery, on the north side of Mount Hope Avenue. Until recently Brady's grave was unmarked. A group of schoolchildren erected a wooden marker over his grave in the 1990s, which was replaced by a more permanent stone in 2007

Second World War and after

During the Second World War, Bangor's Dow Airfield (later Dow Air Force Base) became a major embarkation point for U.S. Army Air Force planes flying to and returning from Europe. Photographs and obituaries of 112 servicemen from Bangor who gave their lives in the war are preserved in 'Book of Honor' at the Bangor Public Library
Bangor Public Library

The Bangor Public Library in was founded in 1830 as the Bangor Mechanic Association's private library. In 1873, several other associations' libraries combined with it to form the Bangor Mechanic Association Public Library....
. There was also a small POW Camp in Bangor for captured German soldiers, a satellite of the much larger Camp Houlton in northern Maine.

In November, 1944, two German spies who had been landed on the Maine coast by U-Boat
U-boat

U-boat is the anglicized#Loanwords version of the German language word , itself an abbreviation of Unterseeboot , and refers to military submarines operated by Germany, particularly in World War I and World War II....
 hitched a ride to Bangor, where they boarded a train to New York. They were eventually arrested and tried after an extensive Federal Bureau of Investigation
Federal Bureau of Investigation

The Federal Bureau of Investigation is the primary unit in the United States United States Department of Justice, serving as both a Law enforcement agency body and a domestic intelligence agency....
 (FBI) manhunt.

In the post-war period Dow Airfield became a Strategic Air Command
Strategic Air Command

The Strategic Air Command was both a major command in the United States Air Force and a "specified command" in the United States Department of Defense....
 Base, and was subsequently converted into the Bangor International Airport
Bangor International Airport

Bangor International Airport is a joint civil-military public airport located 3 miles west in the city of Bangor, Maine, in Penobscot County, Maine, Maine, United States....
. Beginning in the 1970s, hundreds of thousands of international airline passengers, especially those on charter flights, cleared customs in Bangor as their planes refueled on the way from Europe to the interior of the United States or Mexico. The airport also became a major portal for returning troops in both the first and second Gulf Wars.

The destruction of downtown landmarks such as the old city hall and train station in the late 1960s Urban Renewal
Urban renewal

File:Melbourne docklands urban renewal.jpgUrban renewal is a program of land re-development in areas of moderate to high density urban land use....
 Program is now considered to have been a huge planning mistake, ushering a decline of the city center that was only accelerated by the construction of the Bangor Mall in 1978 and subsequent big box stores on the city's outskirts. Downtown Bangor began to recover in the 1990s, however, with bookstores, cafe/restaurants, galleries, and museums filling once vacant storefronts. The recent re-development of the city's waterfront has also helped re-focus cultural life in the historic center.

In 1992 Bangor was the launch site for the Chrysler Trans-Atlantic Challenge Balloon Race, which saw teams from five nations competing to reach Europe. The Belgians won, but the American team, blown off course, became the first to pilot a balloon from North America to Africa
Africa

Africa is the world's second-largest and second most-populous continent, after Asia. At about 30.2 million km? including adjacent islands, it covers 6% of the Earth's total surface area and 20.4% of the total land area....
 (it landed near Fez, Morocco), setting new endurance and distance records in the process.

Also in 1992, a series of NASA
NASA

The National Aeronautics and Space Administration is an agency of the Federal government of the United States, responsible for the nation's public list of space agencies....
 scientific research flights carried out from Bangor, using a converted U-2 spy plane proved that the hole in the ozone layer
Ozone layer

The ozone layer is a layer in Earth's atmosphere which contains relatively high concentrations of ozone . This layer absorbs 93-99% of the sun's high frequency ultraviolet light, which is potentially damaging to life on earth....
 had critically grown over the northern hemisphere, prompting an acceleration of the global phase-out of CFC
Haloalkane

The haloalkanes are a group of chemical compounds, consisting of alkanes, such as methane or ethane, with one or more halogens linked, such as chlorine or fluorine, making them a type of organic halide....
s (the Copenhagen
Copenhagen

Copenhagen is the capital and largest city of Denmark, with an urban area with a population of 1,153,615 . Copenhagen is situated on the Islands of Zealand and Amager....
 Amendment to the Montreal Protocol
Montreal Protocol

The Montreal Protocol on Substances That Deplete the Ozone Layer is an international treaty designed to protect the ozone layer by phasing out the production of a number of substances believed to be responsible for ozone depletion....
}

Geography

Bangor is located at (44.803, -68.770). According to the United States Census Bureau
United States Census Bureau

The United States Census Bureau is the government agency that is responsible for the United States Census. It also gathers other national demographic and economic data....
, the city has a total area of 34.7 square miles (90.0 km²), of which, 34.5 square miles (89.2 km²) of it is land and 0.3 square miles (0.8 km²) of it (0.86%) is water.

Geography has been both the city's prosperity, and a limiting factor in its growth. The Penobscot River
Penobscot River

The Penobscot River is 350 mi long, making it the second longest river in the U.S. state of Maine and the longest river entirely in Maine. Its drainage basin contains ....
 watershed
Drainage basin

A drainage basin is an extent of land where water from rain or snow melt drains downhill into a body of water, such as a river, lake, reservoir, estuary, wetland, sea or ocean....
 above Bangor is both extensive and heavily forested
Maine North Woods

The Maine North Woods is the northern geographic area of the state of Maine in the United States....
, yet was too far north to attract American settlers intent on farming. These same conditions made it ideal for lumbering, along with deep winter snows which allowed logs to be easily dragged from the woods by horse-teams. Carried to the Penobscot or its tributaries, logs could be floated downstream with the spring thaw to sawmill
Sawmill

A sawmill is a facility where logging are cut into lumbers....
s on waterfall
Waterfall

A waterfall is usually a geology geologic formation resulting from water, often in the form of a stream, flowing over an erosion-resistant rock formation that forms a nickpoint, or sudden break in elevation....
s (water-power driving the sawblades) just above Bangor. The sawn lumber was then shipped from the city's docks, Bangor being at the head-of-tide (between the rapids and the ocean) to points anywhere in the world needing wood. The combination of forests and sheltered coves along the nearby Maine coast
Down East

Down East is a New England geographical term that is applied in several different ways.In the narrowest sense, Down East refers to the coast of the U.S....
 also fostered the development of a ship-building industry to service the lumber trade.

Bangor had certain disadvantages compared to other East Coast ports, including its rival Portland, Maine
Portland, Maine

Portland is the largest city in the U.S. state of Maine and the county seat of Cumberland County, Maine. The city population was 64,249 at the 2000 United States Census....
. Being on a northern river, its port froze during the winter, and could not take the largest ocean-going ships. The comparative lack of settlement in the forested hinterland also gave it a comparatively small home market.

Many of the same conditions that favored lumbering, however, were attractive to the pulp and paper industry
Pulp mill

A pulp mill is a manufacturing facility that converts wood chips or other Fiber crop into a thick fiber board which can be shipped to a paper mill for further processing....
, which took over the Penobscot watershed in the twentieth century. One large difference was transportation: the paper was shipped out, and the chemicals in, by railroad. The city began turning its back on the river as its train-yards became more important. The coming of the paper industry assured, however, that the Maine woods would remain unsettled for another century.

Bangor's other geographic advantage, not realizable until the mid-twentieth century, was that it lay along the most direct air-route between the U.S. East Coast and Europe (the Great Circle Route). The construction of an air-field
Bangor International Airport

Bangor International Airport is a joint civil-military public airport located 3 miles west in the city of Bangor, Maine, in Penobscot County, Maine, Maine, United States....
 in the 1930s, and its continual expansion under military auspices through the 1960s, allowed the city to eventually take full advantage of this geographic gift. Having the Canadian border close-by also helped. Bangor was the last American airport before Europe, or the first American airport one encountered flying from Europe. The extension of air routes connecting Europe with the U.S. West Coast and the Caribbean in the 1970s-80s put Bangor very much in the middle as a refueling stop for charter aircraft. The subsequent development of longer-range jets began to reduce this advantage in the 1990s.

A potential advantage that has always eluded the city is its location between the Canadian port city of Halifax and the rest of Canada
Canada

Canada is a country occupying most of northern North America, extending from the Atlantic Ocean in the east to the Pacific Ocean in the west and northward into the Arctic Ocean....
 (as well as New York). As early as the 1870s the city promoted a Halifax to New York
New York

The State of New York is a U.S. state in the Mid-Atlantic States and Northeastern United States regions of the United States and is the nation's List of U.S....
 railroad, via Bangor, as the quickest connection between North America and Europe (when combined with steamship service between Britain and Halifax). A European and North American Railway
European and North American Railway

The European and North American Railway is the name for three historic Canada and United States Rail transport which were built in New Brunswick and Maine....
 was actually opened through Bangor, with President Ulysses S. Grant
Ulysses S. Grant

Ulysses S. Grant, born Hiram Ulysses Grant , was an United States general and the List of Presidents of the United States President of the United States ....
 officiating at the inauguration, but commerce never lived up to the potential. More recently attempts to capture traffic between Halifax and Montreal
Montreal

Montreal, or Montr?al, is the largest city in the Provinces and territories of Canada of Quebec and the List of largest cities and second largest cities by country List of the 100 largest municipalities in Canada by population....
 by constructing an East-West Highway through Maine have also come to naught. Most overland traffic between the two parts of Canada continues to go over Maine rather than through it.

Demographics

As of the census
Census

A census is the procedure of systematically acquiring and recording information about the members of a given population. It is a regularly occurring and official count of a particular population....
 of 2000, there were 31,473 people, 13,713 households, and 7,185 families residing in the city. The population density
Population density

Population density is a measurement of population per unit area or unit volume. It is frequently applied to living organisms, and particularly to humans....
 was 913.7 people per square mile (352.7/km²). There were 14,587 housing units at an average density of 423.5/sq mi (163.5/km²). The racial makeup of the city was 94.96% White, 1.02% African American, 0.98% Native American, 1.16% Asian, 0.06% Pacific Islander, 0.39% from other races
Race (United States Census)

Race and ethnicity in the United States Census, as defined by the United States Census Bureau and the Federal Office of Management and Budget , are Self-concept data items in which residents choose the Race in the United States or races with which they most closely identify, and indicate whether or not they are of Hispanic or Latino origin ....
, and 1.43% from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino of any race were 1.05% of the population.

Of Bangor's 13,713 households, 26.1% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 36.0% were married couples
Marriage

Marriage is a social, spirituality, or law union of individuals. This union may also be called matrimony, while the ceremony that marks its beginning is usually called a wedding and the married status created is sometimes called wedlock....
 living together, 12.8% had a female householder with no husband present, and 47.6% were non-families. 37.6% of all households were made up of individuals and 11.5% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.12 and the average family size was 2.81.

Bangorme Downtown
21.3% of Bangor's population was under the age of 18, 12.4% from 18 to 24, 30.3% from 25 to 44, 22.0% from 45 to 64, and 14.1% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 36 years. For every 100 females there were 89.5 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 85.1 males.

The median household income in the city was $29,740, and the median income for a family was $42,047. Males had a median income of $32,314 versus $23,759 for females. The per capita income
Per capita income

Per capita income means how much each individual receives, in monetary terms, of the yearly income generated in the country. This is what each citizen is to receive if the yearly national income is divided equally among everyone....
 for the city was $19,295. About 11.9% of families and 16.6% of the population were below the poverty line, including 16.9% of those under age 18 and 13.1% of those age 65 or over.

As of 2007, the population of the Bangor Metropolitan Area (which includes Penobscot and parts of Waldo and Hancock Counties) is 147,180, indicating a 1.56 growth rate since 2000, almost all of it accounted for by Bangor. Metro Bangor had a higher percentage of people with high school degrees than the national average (85% compared to 76.5%) and a slightly higher number of graduate degree holders (7.55% compared to 7.16%). It had much higher no. of physicians per capita (291 vs. 170), because of the presence of two large hospitals.

Cultural institutions

The Bangor Public Library
Bangor Public Library

The Bangor Public Library in was founded in 1830 as the Bangor Mechanic Association's private library. In 1873, several other associations' libraries combined with it to form the Bangor Mechanic Association Public Library....
, founded in 1883, traces its beginnings to 1830 and seven books in a simple footlocker. It now has a collection of over 500,000 volumes, and regularly records one of the highest circulation rates in the country.

The University of Maine Museum of Art, located in Norumbega
Norumbega

Norumbega was a legendary settlement in northeastern North America, inextricably connected with attempts to demonstrate Viking incursions in New England....
 Hall in downtown Bangor, has a permanent collection of over 6500 pieces, including works by Berenice Abbott
Berenice Abbott

Berenice Abbott , born Bernice Abbott, was an United States photographer best known for her black-and-white photography of New York City architecture and urban design of the 1930s....
, Marsden Hartley
Marsden Hartley

Marsden Hartley was an American Modernism painter and poet in the early 20th century. Hartley was born in Lewiston, Maine, USA. He began his art training at the Cleveland Institute of Art after moving to Cleveland, Ohio in 1892....
, Winslow Homer
Winslow Homer

Winslow Homer was an United States landscape painter and printmaker, best known for his marine subjects. He is considered one of the foremost painters in 19th century America and a preeminent figure in American art....
, John Marin
John Marin

John Marin born in Rutherford, New Jersey, was an early United States modernist artist. He was known for his abstract landscapes and watercolors....
, Carl Sprinchorn, and Andrew Wyeth
Andrew Wyeth

Andrew Newell Wyeth was a visual artist, primarily a Realism painter, working predominantly in a Regionalism style. He was one of the best-known U.S....
. The Maine Discovery Museum
Maine Discovery Museum

The Maine Discovery Museum, located in Bangor, Maine, is the largest children's museum located north of Boston, Massachusetts.It opened in 2001 in a converted department store following several years of planning and fundraising....
, a major children's museum founded in 2001 in the former Freese's Department Store. The Bangor Museum and Center for History in addition to its exhibit space maintains the historic Thomas A. Hill House. The Bangor Police Department boasts a police museum with some items dating to the 1700s. There is a Fire Museum at the former State Street Fire Station.

There are several performing arts venues and groups in the Bangor area. The Bangor Symphony Orchestra, founded in 1896, is the oldest continually operating symphony orchestra
Orchestra

An orchestra is an Musical ensemble, usually fairly large with string, brass, woodwind sections, and possibly a percussion section as well. The term orchestra derives from the name for the area in front of an theatre of ancient Greece reserved for the Greek chorus....
 in the United States. The Bangor Band, founded in 1859 and performing continually since then, gives free weekly concerts in the city's parks during the summer, and counts among its past conductors noted march composer Robert B. Hall
Robert B. Hall

Robert Browne Hall was a leading composer of March music and other music for brass bands. A principal United States composer of marching music, he was born in Bowdoinham, Maine and seldom left his native state of Maine during his lifetime, dying in Portland, Maine....
. The Penobscot Theatre Company
Penobscot Theatre Company

Penobscot Theatre Company, America's Northeastern-most professional Troupe, started in 1973 by George Vafiadis and Lou Collier as the Acadia Repertory....
, founded in 1973, is a professional theater company based in the historic Bangor Opera House. The Maine Center for the Arts
Maine Center for the Arts

The Maine Center for the Arts is a concert hall and museum located on the campus of the University of Maine at Orono, Maine, Maine, USA. It has been operating since 1986, hosting both local and national artists....
, located at the nearby University of Maine
University of Maine

The University of Maine, established in 1865, is the largest campus, in terms of full-time equivalent enrollments, of the seven campuses in the University of Maine System....
, hosts a wide variety of touring performing artists
Performing arts

The performing arts are those forms of art which differ from the plastic arts insofar as the former uses the artist's own body, face and presence as a medium, and the latter uses materials such as clay, metal or paint which can be molded or transformed to create some physical work of art....
 and events. River City Cinema hosts a free outdoor summer film festival in downtown Bangor.

The University of Maine
University of Maine

The University of Maine, established in 1865, is the largest campus, in terms of full-time equivalent enrollments, of the seven campuses in the University of Maine System....
, the flagship campus of the University of Maine System
University of Maine System

The University of Maine System is a network of public universities in Maine. Created in 1968 by the Maine State Legislature, the University of Maine System consists of seven universities, each with a distinct mission and regional character....
 is located 9 miles from Bangor in the town of Orono
Orono, Maine

Orono is a New England town in Penobscot County, Maine, Maine, United States. It was first settled in 1774 and named in honor of Chief Joseph Orono of the Penobscot....
, and adds significantly to the city's cultural life. There is also a vocationally-oriented University College of Bangor, associated with the University of Maine Augusta. Bangor's Husson College (Husson University in Oct. 2008), founded in 1898, enrolls approximately 2500 students a year in a variety of undergraduate and graduate programs. Beal College
Beal College

Beal College is a small college located in Bangor, Maine, USA. Founded in 1891, the College was originally named Bangor Business College but was later named after its primary founder, Mary Beal....
, also in Bangor, is a small institution oriented toward career training. The Bangor Theological Seminary
Bangor Theological Seminary

Bangor Theological Seminary is an ecumenical seminary, founded in 1814, in the Congregational tradition of the United Church of Christ. It is located in Bangor, Maine and Portland, Maine....
, founded in 1814, is the only accredited graduate school of religion in northern New England.

Bangor has a sister city relationship with nearby Saint John, New Brunswick
Saint John, New Brunswick

Saint John is the largest city in the province of New Brunswick, and the oldest incorporated city in Canada. In 2006 the city proper had a population of 68,043....
.

Architecture

Bangor
Bangor has a fascinating, mostly 19th-century cityscape, and sections of the city are listed on the National Register of Historic Places
National Register of Historic Places

The National Register of Historic Places is the United States government official list of districts, sites, buildings, structures, and objects deemed worthy of preservation....
. The city has also had a municipal Historic Preservation Commission since the early 1980s.

The Thomas Hill Standpipe
Thomas Hill Standpipe

Thomas Hill Standpipe, which holds 1,750,000 gallons of water, is a riveted wrought iron tank with a wood frame jacket located on Thomas Hill in Bangor, Maine, United States....
, A huge elegant shingle style structure, is visible from most parts of the city. Also prominent are the spires of the Hammond St. Congregational and Unitarian
Unitarian Universalism

Unitarian Universalism is a liberal religion religion characterized by its support for a "free and responsible search for truth and meaning." Unitarian Universalists do not share a creed; rather, they are unified by their shared search for spiritual growth....
 churches, built from similar designs by the Boston architectural firm Towle and Foster, and that of St. John's Church (Roman Catholic) constructed around the same time. The Bangor House Hotel, now converted to apartments, is the only survivor among a series of "Palace Hotels" designed by Boston architect Isaiah Rogers
Isaiah Rogers

Isaiah Rogers , born in Marshfield, Massachusetts to Isaac Rogers, a farmer and shipwright, and Hannah Ford, was a prominent American architect of national reputation who practiced in Mobile, Alabama, Boston, Massachusetts, New York City, and Cincinnati, Ohio....
 which were the first of their kind in the United States. Bangor also boasts the country's second oldest garden cemetery
Rural cemetery

The rural cemetery or garden cemetery is a style of burial ground that uses landscaping in a park-like setting.As early as 1711 the architect Sir Christopher Wren had advocated the creation of burial grounds on the outskirts of town, "inclosed with a strong Brick Wall, and having a walk round, and two cross walks, decently planted w...
, the Mt. Hope Cemetery
Mount Hope Cemetery, Bangor

Mt. Hope Cemetery in Bangor, Maine is the second oldest rural cemetery in the United States. It was designed by architect Charles G. Bryant in 1834, the same year that Bangor was incorporated as a city, and likely modeled after Mt....
, designed by Charles G. Bryant.

Richard Upjohn
Richard Upjohn

Richard Upjohn was an England-born architect who emigrated to the United States and became most famous for his Gothic Revival churches. He was partially responsible for launching the movement to such popularity in the United States....
, British-born architect and early promoter of the Gothic Revival, received some of his first commissions in Bangor, including the Isaac Farrar House (1833), Samuel Farrar House (1836), Thomas A. Hill House (presently owned by the Bangor Historical Society), and St. John's Church (Episcopal, 1836-39). The later was designed just prior to his most famous commission, Trinity Church
Trinity Church

Trinity Church and variations may refer to:*Holy Trinity Church v. United States, a decision of the Supreme Court of the United StatesIn addition, there are many churches that use the name....
 in New York City. Upjohn was a founding member of the American Institute of Architects
American Institute of Architects

The American Institute of Architects is a professional organization for architects in the United States. Located in Washington, D.C., the AIA offers education, government advocacy, community redevelopment, and public outreach to support the architecture profession and improve its public image....
 and its first president (1857-76).

Other local landmarks include the Bangor Public Library
Bangor Public Library

The Bangor Public Library in was founded in 1830 as the Bangor Mechanic Association's private library. In 1873, several other associations' libraries combined with it to form the Bangor Mechanic Association Public Library....
 by Peabody and Stearns
Peabody and Stearns

Peabody and Stearns was a premier architect in the eastern United States in the late 19th century and early 20th century. Based in Boston, Massachusetts, the firm consisted of Robert Swain Peabody and John Goddard Stearns, Jr....
; All Soul's Congregational Church by Cram, Goodhue, and Ferguson
Ralph Adams Cram

Ralph Adams Cram, , was an United States architect of collegiate and Church buildings, often in the Gothic architecture style....
; the Wheelwright Block by Benjamin S. Deane; and The Eastern Maine Insane Hospital by John Calvin Stevens
John Calvin Stevens

John Calvin Stevens was an American architect who designed residences in two divergent styles, the Shingle Style, of which he was an originator in the 1880s, and the Colonial Revival style, which dominated United States domestic architecture for the first half of the 20th century....
. Bangor also contains many impressive Greek Revival. Victorian
Victorian architecture

The term Victorian architecture can refer to one of a number of architectural styles predominantly employed during the Victorian era. As with the latter, the period of building that it covers may slightly overlap the actual reign, 20 June 1837 ? 22 January 1901, of Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom after whom it is named....
, and Colonial Revival houses, some of which are also listed on the National Register of Historic Places
National Register of Historic Places

The National Register of Historic Places is the United States government official list of districts, sites, buildings, structures, and objects deemed worthy of preservation....
. The most photographed is the William Arnold House of 1856, Bangor's largest Italianate style mansion and home to author Stephen King
Stephen King

Stephen Edwin King is an United States author of contemporary horror fiction, fantasy fiction and science fiction.Having sold an estimated List of bestselling fiction authors of his books, King is best known for his work in horror fiction, in which he demonstrates a thorough knowledge of the genre's history....
. Its wrought-iron fence with bat and spider web motif is King's own addition.

The bow-plate of the battleship USS Maine
USS Maine (ACR-1)

United States Navy ships Maine , the first ship of the United States Navy to be named for the state of Maine, was a 6,682-ton second-class pre-dreadnought battleship originally designated as Armored Cruiser #1....
, whose destruction in Havana, Cuba presaged the start of the Spanish-American War
Spanish-American War

The Spanish?American War was an armed military conflict between Spain and the United States that took place between April and August 1898, over the issues of the liberation of Cuba....
, survives on a granite memorial by Charles Eugene Tefft in Davenport Park.

In the category "roadside architecture", Bangor has a huge, famous fiberglass-over-metal statue of mythical lumberman Paul Bunyan
Paul Bunyan

Paul Bunyan is a mythological lumberjack who appears in tall tales of American folklore. He is usually portrayed as a giant as well as a lumberjack of unusual skill....
 by Normand Martin (1959) and one of only two Howard Johnson's
Howard Johnson's

Howard Johnson's is a restaurant chain of restaurants and hotels, located primarily throughout the United States and Canada. The name is derived from the founder of the original company, Howard Deering Johnson, who started the initial chain of restaurants and motels....
 restaurants left in the country.

Public art

There are three large bronze statues in downtown Bangor by Brewer
Brewer, Maine

Brewer is a city in Penobscot County, Maine, Maine, United States. It is part of the Bangor, Maine Metropolitan Statistical Area. The city is named after its first settler, Colonel John Brewer....
 sculptor Charles Eugene Tefft, including the Luther H. Peirce Memorial, commemorating the Penobscot River
Penobscot River

The Penobscot River is 350 mi long, making it the second longest river in the U.S. state of Maine and the longest river entirely in Maine. Its drainage basin contains ....
 Log-Drivers, a statue of Hannibal Hamlin
Hannibal Hamlin

Hannibal Hamlin was the List of Vice Presidents of the United States Vice President of the United States, serving under President of the United States Abraham Lincoln from 1861-1865....
 at Kenduskeag Mall, and an image of "Lady Victory" at Norumbega Parkway.

The abstract aluminum sculpture "Continuity of Community" (1969) in West Market Square is by the Castine
Castine

Castine is the name of a number of towns in the United States as well as a band:Places*Castine, Maine*Castine, OhioOther*USS Castine, two ships in the United States Navy...
 sculptor Clark Battle Fitz-Gerald (1917-2004) whose works also stand at Coventry Cathedral
Coventry Cathedral

Coventry Cathedral, also known as Michael Cathedral, is the seat of the Bishop of Coventry and the Diocese of Coventry, in Coventry, West Midlands , England....
, Independence Hall, and Columbia University
Columbia University

Columbia University in the City of New York , is a private university in the United States and a member of the Ivy League. Columbia's main campus lies in the Morningside Heights, Manhattan neighborhood in the borough of Manhattan, in New York City....


The U.S. Post Office in Bangor contains the three-part mural "Autumn Expansion" (1980) by noted artist Yvonne Jacquette
Yvonne Jacquette

Yvonne Jacquette , is an American Painting and printmaker known in particular for her depictions of Aerial landscape arts, especially her low-altitude and oblique aerial views of cities or towns, often painted using a distinctive, pointillistic technique....
.

A large bronze commemorating the 2nd Maine Volunteer Infantry Regiment
2nd Maine Volunteer Infantry Regiment

The 2nd Maine Volunteer Infantry Regiment was mustered in Bangor, Maine for two year's service on May 28, 1861 and mustered out in the same place on June 9, 1863....
 (1962) by Wisconsin sculptor Owen Vernon Shaffer stands at the entrance to Mt. Hope Cemetery
Mount Hope Cemetery, Bangor

Mt. Hope Cemetery in Bangor, Maine is the second oldest rural cemetery in the United States. It was designed by architect Charles G. Bryant in 1834, the same year that Bangor was incorporated as a city, and likely modeled after Mt....


Public safety

Ironically, this city associated with the novels of Stephen King
Stephen King

Stephen Edwin King is an United States author of contemporary horror fiction, fantasy fiction and science fiction.Having sold an estimated List of bestselling fiction authors of his books, King is best known for his work in horror fiction, in which he demonstrates a thorough knowledge of the genre's history....
 is among the safest in the United States. Its crime rate is the second lowest among American metropolitan areas of comparable size.

Beginning 19 January 2007 the city has banned smoking in automobiles if children under 18 are present. Offenders can be fined $50 under the ordinance. According to the New York Times, Bangor is "believed to be the first city to outlaw smoking in cars with children."

Government

Bangor has had a Council-Manager form of government since 1931, with a nine-member City Council
City council

A city council is a form of local government, usually covering a city or other urban area, such as a town. The system of government has roots back at least to the Roman Empire....
. Three city councilors are elected to three-year terms each year. Although Bangor has no "Mayor", the Chair of the City Council is often informally referred to as the City's Mayor.

In 1996, Bangor's City Council was the first in North America to unanimously approve a resolution opposing the sale of sweat-shop produced clothing in local stores.

Bangor and Augusta have together produced the largest number of Governors of Maine (nine each, including two non-consecutive terms by Edward Kent
Edward Kent

Edward Kent was the List of Governors of Maine of the U.S. state of Maine during the Aroostook War. Born in 1802 in Concord, New Hampshire, he later moved to Bangor, Maine and spent the rest of his life there....
). This list includes the present governor, Democrat John Baldacci
John Baldacci

John Elias Baldacci is an United States politician who has served as the Governor of Maine of the U.S. state of Maine since 2003. A Democratic Party , he also served as a member of the United States House of Representatives from 1995 to 2003....
, and the last Republican governor, John R. McKernan. A number of others were born or lived in suburban towns such as Brewer
Brewer, Maine

Brewer is a city in Penobscot County, Maine, Maine, United States. It is part of the Bangor, Maine Metropolitan Statistical Area. The city is named after its first settler, Colonel John Brewer....
, Hampden, and Orono
Orono, Maine

Orono is a New England town in Penobscot County, Maine, Maine, United States. It was first settled in 1774 and named in honor of Chief Joseph Orono of the Penobscot....
.

Events

The Bangor State fair
State fair

A state fair is a competitive and recreational gathering of a U.S. state's population. It is a larger version of a county fair, often including only exhibits or competitors that have won in their categories at the more-local county fairs....
, held starting the last Friday of each July, for more than 150 years, is one of the country's oldest fairs, featuring agricultural exhibits, carnival
Funfair

The word fair comes from the Latin word ?feria?, meaning a holiday.A funfair or simply fair is a small to medium sized traveling exhibition primarily composed of stalls and other amusement ride....
 attractions, and live performances.

In 2002, 2003, and 2004, Bangor was the host of the National Folk Festival
National Folk Festival (USA)

The National Folk Festival is an itinerant folk festival in the United States. Since 1934, it has been run by the National Council for the Traditional Arts and has been presented in 26 communities around the nation....
. In August 2005, the newly created American Folk Festival began as an annual event on the city's waterfront. The annual Bangor Book Festival brings Maine-based writers together at the Bangor Public Library
Bangor Public Library

The Bangor Public Library in was founded in 1830 as the Bangor Mechanic Association's private library. In 1873, several other associations' libraries combined with it to form the Bangor Mechanic Association Public Library....
 and other venues.

The Kenduskeag Stream
Kenduskeag Stream

Kenduskeag Stream is a stream, approximately 25 miles long, in the U.S. state of Maine. It is a tributary of the Penobscot River. The stream rises at the outlet of Garland Pond in the town of Garland, Maine, and flows southeast through Corinth, Maine, Kenduskeag, Maine, and Glenburn, Maine, before entering the city of Bangor, Maine....
 Canoe Race, a celebrated white-water event which begins just north of Bangor in the town of Kenduskeag, has been held annually for the last 40 years. Bangor also hosts an annual Soapbox Derby race, and a Paul Bunyon marathon.

Media

The Bangor region has a large number of media outlets for an area its size. The city has an unbroken history of newspaper publishing extending from 1815. Almost 30 dailies, weeklies, and monthlies had been launched there by the end of the Civil War .

The Bangor Daily News
Bangor Daily News

The Bangor Daily News is an United States newspaper that was founded on June 18, 1889; in 1900 the paper merged with the Bangor Whig and Courier. The Bangor Publishing Company publishes the paper in Bangor, Maine, in addition to several weekly papers that they distribute throughout Maine....
 was founded in the late nineteenth century, and is one of the few remaining family-owned newspapers left in the United States. Bangor Metro, founded in 2005, is the area's glossy business, lifestyle, and opinion magazine. The alternative/lifestyle weekly The Maine Edge
The Maine Edge

The Maine Edge is a 14,000 circulation free weekly lifestyle/cultural arts publication put out by Edge Media Group in Bangor, Maine....
 also publishes in the city.

Bangor has more than a dozen radio
Radio

Radio is the transmission of signals, by modulation of electromagnetic radiation with frequency below those of visible light.Electromagnetic radiation radio propagation by means of oscillating electromagnetic fields that pass through the air and the vacuum of space....
 stations and seven television
Television

Television is a widely used telecommunication mass-media for transmitting and receiving moving , either monochrome or color, usually accompanied by sound....
 stations, including WLBZ 2
WLBZ

WLBZ, channel 2, is the NBC-affiliated television station for Bangor, Maine. Its transmitter is located on Rider Bluff in Holden, Maine. Owned by Gannett, the station has studios on Mount Hope Avenue in Bangor....
 (NBC), WABI 5
WABI-TV

WABI-TV, channel 5, is the CBS-affiliated television station for Bangor, Maine. Its transmitter is located on Peaked Mountain in Dixmont, Maine....
 (CBS
CBS

CBS Broadcasting Inc. is an American radio network and television network. The name is derived from the initials of Columbia Broadcasting System, its former legal name....
), WVII 7 (ABC), WBGR 33
WBGR-LP

WBGR-LP is a low-powered television station located in Bangor, Maine, licensed to both Bangor and Dedham, Maine. The station is affiliated with the America One and Ion Television networks, and broadcasts on channel 33....
, and WFVX 22 (Fox). WMEB 12
Maine Public Broadcasting Network

The Maine Public Broadcasting Network is a television and radio broadcasting network located in the state of Maine in the United States. It is operated by the Maine Public Broadcasting Corporation, which holds the licenses for all the Public Broadcasting Service and National Public Radio stations licensed in the state....
, licensed to nearby Orono
Orono, Maine

Orono is a New England town in Penobscot County, Maine, Maine, United States. It was first settled in 1774 and named in honor of Chief Joseph Orono of the Penobscot....
, is the area's PBS
Public Broadcasting Service

The Public Broadcasting Service is an United States non-profit public broadcasting television service with 354 member TV stations in the United States....
 member station. Radio stations in the city include WKIT
WKIT

WKIT-FM is a rock music formatted radio station licensed to Brewer, Maine, Maine with studios and offices in Bangor, Maine.In addition to WZON Amplitude Modulation 620 and 103.1 WDME , the station is part of the Zone Corporation, a central Maine broadcasting group owned by authors Tabitha King and Stephen King....
 and WZON
WZON

WZON is a radio station broadcasting a sports talk format. The station is licensed to Bangor, Maine, USA.Along with sister stations WKIT and WDME-FM, WZON is owned by The Zone Corporation, the broadcast company owned by authors Tabitha King and Stephen King....
, owned by Zone Radio Corporation, a company owned by Bangor resident novelist Stephen King. is a non-commercial alternative rock station licensed to Bangor and run and operated by staff and students at the New England School of Communications located on the campus of Husson College
Husson College

Husson University, formerly Husson College, is a private university located in Bangor, Maine, United States, named after its founder Chesley Husson....
. Several other stations in the market are owned by Clear Channel Broadcasting and Cumulus Media
Cumulus Media

Cumulus Media, Inc. is a large owner of radio stations in markets in the United States, operating 344 stations in 67 markets as of September 30, 2007.....
.

ChannelCall SignNetwork
2WLBZ
WLBZ

WLBZ, channel 2, is the NBC-affiliated television station for Bangor, Maine. Its transmitter is located on Rider Bluff in Holden, Maine. Owned by Gannett, the station has studios on Mount Hope Avenue in Bangor....
NBC
5WABI
WABI-TV

WABI-TV, channel 5, is the CBS-affiliated television station for Bangor, Maine. Its transmitter is located on Peaked Mountain in Dixmont, Maine....
CBS
CBS

CBS Broadcasting Inc. is an American radio network and television network. The name is derived from the initials of Columbia Broadcasting System, its former legal name....
, The CW
The CW Television Network

The CW Television Network is a television network in the United States launched at the beginning of the 2006-07 United States network television schedule....
7WVII
WVII-TV

WVII-TV is the American Broadcasting Company-affiliated television station for Bangor, Maine. The station broadcasts a high-definition television digital signal on VHF channel 7 identifying as 7.1 via PSIP....
ABC
9WMEB-TV
Maine Public Broadcasting Network

The Maine Public Broadcasting Network is a television and radio broadcasting network located in the state of Maine in the United States. It is operated by the Maine Public Broadcasting Corporation, which holds the licenses for all the Public Broadcasting Service and National Public Radio stations licensed in the state....
PBS
Public Broadcasting Service

The Public Broadcasting Service is an United States non-profit public broadcasting television service with 354 member TV stations in the United States....
22WFVX-LP
WFVX-LP

WFVX-LP, channel 22, is the Low-power broadcasting primary Fox Network and secondary MyNetworkTV-affiliated television station for Bangor, Maine....
FOX
Fox Broadcasting Company

The Fox Broadcasting Company, commonly referred to as Fox and stylized as FOX, is an United States television network owned by Fox Entertainment Group, part of Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation....
, MyNetworkTV
MyNetworkTV

MyNetworkTV is a television network in the United States, owned by the Fox Entertainment Group, a division of News Corporation. It is the lowest-rated of the six major US English-language commercial broadcast networks....
33WBGR-LP
WBGR-LP

WBGR-LP is a low-powered television station located in Bangor, Maine, licensed to both Bangor and Dedham, Maine. The station is affiliated with the America One and Ion Television networks, and broadcasts on channel 33....
America One
America One

America One is an over-the-air television network in the United States. The network serves over 170 LPTV, Class A, Full Power, Cable and Satellite affiliate stations....
, ION


Sport and recreation

The Eastern Maine High school basketball Tournament is held each February at the Bangor Auditorium
Bangor Auditorium

The Bangor Auditorium is a 5,948 seat multipurpose arena located in downtown Bangor, Maine. It opened in 1955 and is used for concerts , sporting events, circus performances, political rallies, as well as trade shows with 16,000 square feet of space....
 drawing fans from central, eastern and northern Maine. The nearby University of Maine
University of Maine

The University of Maine, established in 1865, is the largest campus, in terms of full-time equivalent enrollments, of the seven campuses in the University of Maine System....
 fields major college sports teams in football
College football

College football is American football played by teams of student athletes fielded by American University, colleges, and United States military academies....
, ice hockey
Ice hockey

Ice hockey, often referred to simply as hockey, is a team sport played on ice. It is a fast paced and physical sport. Ice hockey is most popular in areas that are sufficiently cold for natural reliable seasonal ice cover such as Canada, the northern United States, Scandinavia and Russia, though with the advent of indoor artificial ice r...
, baseball
Baseball

Baseball is a bat-and-ball sport played between two team sport of nine players each. The goal of baseball is to score run by hitting a thrown Baseball with a baseball bat and touching a series of four markers called base arranged at the corners of a ninety-foot square, or diamond. Players on one team take turns hitting against...
, and men's and women's basketball
Basketball

Basketball is a team sport in which two teams of five active players each try to score points against one another by propelling a basketball through a 10 feet  high hoop under organized rules....
. Bangor has also been home to two minor league baseball
Minor league baseball

Minor league baseball is a hierarchy of professional baseball leagues in North America that compete at levels below that of Major League Baseball....
 teams in the past decade: the Bangor Blue Ox (1996-1997) and the Bangor Lumberjacks
Bangor Lumberjacks

|- align="center" bgcolor="#eeeeee"|| Founded || 2003|- align="center"|| Ballpark || Mahaney Diamond , Winkin Sports Complex |- align="center" bgcolor="#eeeeee"...
 (2003-2004). Both were affiliated with the Northeast League that existed under that name from 1995-1998.

Bangor High School sports teams are traditionally strong competitors. In the state "class A" division of both baseball and basketball, Bangor holds the record for number of combined champion and runner-up placements. In football they share that record with South Portland
South Portland, Maine

South Portland is a city in Cumberland County, Maine, Maine, United States, and is the fourth-largest city in the state. Founded in 1895, as of the 2000 United States Census, the city population was 23,324....
. Both the boy's and the girl's swim teams have also tallied the most state-wide wins. Bangor Raceway offers live harness racing
Harness racing

Harness racing is a form of horse-racing in which the horses race in a specified gait. They usually pull two-wheeled carts called sulky, although races to saddle are still occasionally conducted, especially in Europe....
 and features an off-track betting
Off-track betting

Off-track betting refers to sanctioned gambling on horse racing outside a race track.At legal off-track betting parlors, if bettors win, they have to pay the parlor a surcharge taken directly from the winnings....
 center. Also, nearby Hollywood Slots is Maine's first slot machine
Slot machine

A slot machine , fruit machine , or poker machine is a casino gambling machine with three or more reels which spin when a button is pushed....
 gambling
Gambling

Gambling is the wikt:wager#Verb of money or something of material Value on an event with an uncertain outcome with the primary intent of winning additional money and/or material goods....
 center. In 2007, construction began on a $131 million casino
Casino

A casino is, in the modern sense of the word, a facility that houses and accommodates certain types of gambling activities. Casinos are most commonly built near or combined with hotels, restaurants, retail shopping, cruise ships and other tourist attractions....
 complex in Bangor that will house, among other things, a gaming floor featuring up to 1,500 slot machines, a seven-story hotel, and a four-level parking garage. The new racino is slated to open in the summer of 2008. Maine is one of few states where racinos are legal, and the one in Bangor is expected to change the city's tourism profile.

Every August (since 2002) Bangor has been home to the Senior League World Series
Little League

Little League Baseball is the name of a non-profit organization in the United States which organizes local children's leagues of Amateur baseball in the United States and softball throughout the USA and the rest of the world....
.

Bangor has also been of historical importance to professional wrestling. Vince McMahon
Vince McMahon

Vincent Kennedy "Vince" McMahon Jr. is an American Professional wrestling, promoter, in-ring announcer, play-by-play sportscaster and film producer, known by the ring name Mr....
 promoted his very first wrestling event in Bangor in 1979. In 1985, the WWC Universal Heavyweight Championship changed hands for the first time outside of Puerto Rico in Bangor at an IWCCW show.

The Bangor City Forest
Bangor City Forest

The Bangor City Forest is a large recreation area in Bangor, Maine. The park consists of approximately and features close to of hiking, cycling, and cross-country skiing trails....
 and other nearby parks, forests and waterways support a wide variety of outdoor activities including hiking, sailing, canoeing, hunting, fishing, skiing, and snowmobiling.

The Penobscot has always been the premier salmon
Salmon

Salmon is the common name for several species of fish of the family Salmonidae. Several other fish in the family are called trout,the difference is often attributed to the migratory life of the salmon as compared to the residential behaviour of trout, this holds true for the Atlantic salmon....
-fishing river in Maine, and the Bangor Salmon Pool traditionally sent the first fish caught to the President of the United States. Low fish stocks resulted in a ban on salmon fishing in 1999-2006 but the wild salmon
Salmon

Salmon is the common name for several species of fish of the family Salmonidae. Several other fish in the family are called trout,the difference is often attributed to the migratory life of the salmon as compared to the residential behaviour of trout, this holds true for the Atlantic salmon....
 population (and the sport) is slowly recovering. The Penobscot River Restoration Project is presently working to help the fish population by removing certain dams north of Bangor.

Transportation

Bangor is located along I-95
Interstate 95 in Maine

In the U.S. state of Maine, Interstate 95, or I-95, is a long freeway running from the New Hampshire state line near Kittery, Maine to the Canada border near Houlton, Maine....
, U.S. 1
U.S. Route 1 in Maine

In the U.S. state of Maine, U.S. Route 1 is a major north-south state highway serving the eastern part of the state. It parallels the Atlantic Ocean from New Hampshire north through Portland, ME, Brunswick, ME, and Belfast, ME to Calais, ME, and then the St....
, US 2, and State Route 15
Maine State Route 15

State Route 15 is a numbered state highway in Maine, United States. Route 15 runs over from Stonington, Maine in the south to Jackman, Maine in the north....
. I-395
Interstate 395 (Maine)

Interstate 395 is a 4.99 mile long Auxiliary Interstate Highway in the Bangor, Maine, Maine area. The western terminus of the route is at a cloverleaf interchange with Interstate 95 in Maine near downtown Bangor, where I-395 continues west as U.S....
 branches from I-95 and runs to the east. Three major bridges, including the Joshua Chamberlain
Joshua Chamberlain

Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain was an United States college professor from the State of Maine, who volunteered during the American Civil War to join the Union Army....
 Bridge and Penobscot River Bridge
Penobscot River Bridge

The Penobscot River Bridge was originally a truss bridge between Bangor, Maine and Brewer, Maine, before being replaced in 1997 by a newer beam bridge, which currently spans the river....
, connect Bangor to its neighbor Brewer.

Five major airlines offer over 60 flights a day to and from Bangor International Airport
Bangor International Airport

Bangor International Airport is a joint civil-military public airport located 3 miles west in the city of Bangor, Maine, in Penobscot County, Maine, Maine, United States....
, giving the city non-stop service to Boston, Newark
Newark, New Jersey

Newark is the largest City in New Jersey, and the county seat of Essex County, New Jersey. Newark has a population of 281,402, making it not only List of Municipalities in New Jersey but also the 65th List of United States cities by population Newark is also home to major corporations, such as Prudential Financial....
, Philadelphia, Detroit, Cincinnati, Atlanta, Orlando
Orlando, Florida

Orlando is a major city in Central Florida, United States and is the county seat of Orange County, Florida, Florida. It is also the principal city of Orlando-Kissimmee, Florida, Metropolitan Statistical Area....
, and seasonal non-stop service to New York
New York

The State of New York is a U.S. state in the Mid-Atlantic States and Northeastern United States regions of the United States and is the nation's List of U.S....
's LaGuardia Airport
LaGuardia Airport

LaGuardia Airport is an airport located in Queens County on Long Island in the New York City. The airport is located on the waterfront of Flushing Bay, and borders the neighborhoods of Astoria, Queens, Jackson Heights, Queens and East Elmhurst, Queens....
 and Minneapolis. Most of the major car rental
Car rental

A car rental, rent-a-car or car hire agency is a company that rents automobiles for short periods of time for a fee. It is an elaborate form of a rental shop, organized in numerous local Branch#Organizationses, primarily located near airports or busy city areas and often complemented by a website allowing online Computer reser...
 companies have desks at the airport.

Ferry service from nearby Bar Harbor connects the area with the Canadian province of Nova Scotia
Nova Scotia

Nova Scotia is a Canadian Provinces and territories of Canada located on Canada's southeastern coast. It is the most populous province in Atlantic Canada....


Daily bus service provided by six companies connects Bangor with nearly all large surrounding towns and cities in Maine, as well as with Boston; Portsmouth, New Hampshire
Portsmouth, New Hampshire

Portsmouth is a city in Rockingham County, New Hampshire, New Hampshire in the United States. It is the fourth-largest community in the county, with a population of 20,784 at the United States Census, 2000....
; and St. John, New Brunswick.

Public transportation within Bangor and to adjacent towns such as Orono
Orono, Maine

Orono is a New England town in Penobscot County, Maine, Maine, United States. It was first settled in 1774 and named in honor of Chief Joseph Orono of the Penobscot....
 is offered by the BAT Community Connector system. There is also a seasonal (summer) shuttle between Bangor and Bar Harbor.

Military installations

Although Dow Air Force Base has been the city-owned Bangor International Airport
Bangor International Airport

Bangor International Airport is a joint civil-military public airport located 3 miles west in the city of Bangor, Maine, in Penobscot County, Maine, Maine, United States....
 since 1969, the US military and the Maine Air National Guard
Maine Air National Guard

The Maine Air National Guard consists of the 101st Air Refueling Wing, which is based at Bangor IAP, and the 243rd Engineering and Installation Squadron and 265th Combat Communications Squadron, both based at South Portland, ME....
 continue to house units there and share the runway. These include the 101st Air Refueling Wing
101st Air Refueling Wing

The United States Air Force's 101st Air Refueling Wing is an Air National Guard aerial refueling unit located at Bangor IAP, Maine....
 of the United States Air Force
United States Air Force

The United States Air Force is the aerial warfare branch of the Military of the United States and one of the uniformed services of the United States....
 (USAF) and its 132nd Air Refueling Squadron
132nd Air Refueling Squadron

The 132d Air Refueling Squadron flies the KC-135R Stratotanker. It is a unit of the Maine Air National Guard. Its parent unit is the 101st Air Refueling Wing....
, which mostly fly KC-135 tanker planes. The 132nd, which has been based in Bangor since 1947, and calls itself “The Mainiacs”, was a fighter squadron until 1976.

In 1990, the USAF East Coast Radar System (ECRS) Operation Center was activated in Bangor with over 400 personnel. The center controlled the Over-The-Horizon Backscatter (OTH-B)
Over-the-horizon radar

Over-the-horizon radar, or OTH , is a design concept for radar systems to allow them to detect targets at very long ranges, typically up to thousands of kilometers....
 radar system, whose transmitter was in Moscow, Maine
Moscow, Maine

Moscow is a town in Somerset County, Maine, Maine, United States. The population was 577 at the 2000 United States Census....
, and receiver in coastal Columbia Falls
Columbia Falls, Maine

Columbia Falls is a town in Washington County, Maine, Maine, United States. The population was 599 at the 2000 United States Census....
. Designed and built by General Electric
General Electric

The General Electric Company, or GE is a multinational corporation United States technology and Service s conglomerate incorporated in the State of New York....
, and incorporating 28 Digital Equipment VAX
VAX

VAX was an instruction set architecture developed by Digital Equipment Corporation in the mid-1970s. A 32-bit complex instruction set computer ISA, it was designed to extend or replace DEC's various Programmed Data Processor ISAs....
 computers housed in Bangor, it was the most powerful radar in the world, capable of monitoring virtually the entire North Atlantic, from Iceland
Iceland

Iceland, officially the Republic of Iceland , is an island country located in the North Atlantic Ocean between mainland Europe and Greenland....
 to the Caribbean
Caribbean

The Caribbean is a region consisting of the Caribbean Sea, its islands , and the surrounding coasts. The region is located southeast of the Gulf of Mexico and Northern America, east of Central America, and to the north of South America....
. A similar system on the West Coast was built but never activated. With the end of the Cold War
Cold War

The Cold War was the continuing state of conflict, tension and competition that existed between a number of world powers, including the United States, the Soviet Union, People's Republic of China, France, United Kingdom and those countries' respective allies from the mid-1940s to the early 1990s....
, the facility's mission of guarding against a Soviet air attack became superfluous, and though it briefly turned its attention toward drug interdiction, the system was decommissioned in 1997 as an expensive Cold War
Cold War

The Cold War was the continuing state of conflict, tension and competition that existed between a number of world powers, including the United States, the Soviet Union, People's Republic of China, France, United Kingdom and those countries' respective allies from the mid-1940s to the early 1990s....
 relic.

In 1960-64, Bangor had a similar experience as one of a dozen BOMARC anti-aircraft missile bases. Abandoned by the Air Force four years after construction, the fortified concrete missile bunkers long survived as ghostly landmarks, and a deactivated BOMARC missile was briefly mounted, statue-like, next to Paul Bunyan
Paul Bunyan

Paul Bunyan is a mythological lumberjack who appears in tall tales of American folklore. He is usually portrayed as a giant as well as a lumberjack of unusual skill....
 at Bass Park.

Famous and notable Bangorians


Statesmen

Clinton and Cohen Meeting At the Pentagon
Bangor is the hometown of Hannibal Hamlin
Hannibal Hamlin

Hannibal Hamlin was the List of Vice Presidents of the United States Vice President of the United States, serving under President of the United States Abraham Lincoln from 1861-1865....
, who served as Abraham Lincoln
Abraham Lincoln

Abraham Lincoln was the List of Presidents of the United States President of the United States. He successfully led the country through its greatest internal crisis, the American Civil War, preserving the Union and ending slavery....
's first Vice President
Vice president

A vice president is an Corporate officer in government or business who is below a president in rank. The name comes from the Latin List of Latin phrases #vice meaning 'in place of'....
, and was a strong opponent of slavery. His statue stands in a downtown park, and his house is on the National Register of Historic Places
National Register of Historic Places

The National Register of Historic Places is the United States government official list of districts, sites, buildings, structures, and objects deemed worthy of preservation....
. His daughter and son were present in Ford's Theatre
Ford's Theatre

Ford's Theatre is a historic theatre in Washington, D.C., used for various stage performances beginning in the 1860s. It is also the site of the Abraham Lincoln assassination on April 14, 1865....
 the night Lincoln was shot. Lincoln's Secretary of the Treasury
United States Secretary of the Treasury

The United States Secretary of the Treasury is the head of the United States Department of the Treasury, concerned with finance and monetary matters, and, until 2003, some issues of national security and defense....
, William P. Fessenden
William P. Fessenden

William Pitt Fessenden was an Politics of the United States from the U.S. state of Maine.Fessenden was a United States Whig Party and member of the List of United States political families#The Fessendens....
, practiced law in Bangor in the early 1830s.

William Cohen
William Cohen

William Sebastian Cohen is an author and Politics of the United States from the U.S. state of Maine. A Republican Party , Cohen served as United States Secretary of Defense under Democratic Party President of the United States Bill Clinton....
, former U.S. Senator and United States Secretary of Defense
United States Secretary of Defense

File:USSecDefflag.PNGThe United States Secretary of Defense is the head of the United States Department of Defense , concerned with the Military of the United States and Military of the United States....
 under President Bill Clinton
Bill Clinton

William Jefferson "Bill" Clinton served as the List of Presidents of the United States President of the United States from 1993 to 2001. He was the fifteenth Democrat elected to that office....
, is a Bangor native. A local middle school is named in his honor. Current U.S. Senator Susan Collins
Susan Collins

Susan Margaret Collins is the junior United States Senate from Maine and a member of the Republican Party . Collins was re-elected on November 4, 2008....
 lives in Bangor.

Sixteen citizens of Bangor have served as U.S. Congressmen: Francis Carr
Francis Carr

Francis Carr was a United States House of Representatives from the District of Maine, which was then part of Massachusetts. He was also the father of U.S....
 (1812-13); James Carr
James Carr (Massachusetts politician)

James Carr was a member of the United States House of Representatives from Maine, then a District of Massachusetts.Carr was born in Haverhill, Massachusetts on September 9, 1777....
 (1815-17); William D. Williamson
William D. Williamson

William Durkee Williamson was a United States Democratic-Republican Party governor of the U.S. state of Maine who served from May 29, 1821 to December 5, 1821....
 (1821-23); Gorham Parks
Gorham Parks

Gorham Parks was a United States House of Representatives from Maine.Born in Westfield, Massachusetts, Parks attended the common schools and graduated from Harvard University in 1813, where he studied law....
 (1833-37); Elisha Hunt Allen
Elisha Hunt Allen

Elisha Hunt Allen was an United States lawyer, diplomat, and Hawaiian justice. He was born in New Salem, Massachusetts, attended New Salem Academy and graduated from Williams College in 1823....
 (1841-43); Charles Stetson
Charles Stetson

Charles Stetson was a United States Representative from Maine, and the eldest member of a powerful Bangor, Maine political family. He was born in New Ipswich, New Hampshire on November 2, 1801, but moved with his parents to Hampden, Maine in 1802....
 (1849-51); John A. Peters
John A. Peters (1822-1904)

John Andrew Peters was a United States House of Representatives from Maine, and the uncle of John A. Peters . He was also Chief Justice of the Maine Supreme Judicial Court....
 (1822-1904); Samuel F. Hersey
Samuel F. Hersey

Samuel Freeman Hersey was a politician and "lumber baron" from the U.S. state of Maine. He served in the Maine State Senate and as a United States Congressman from the district which included his home-town of Bangor, Maine....
 (1873-75); Harris M. Plaisted
Harris M. Plaisted

Harris Merrill Plaisted was an American Civil War general officer, United States House of Representatives, and Governor of Maine....
 (1875-77); George W. Ladd
George W. Ladd

George Washington Ladd was a United States House of Representatives from Maine.Born in Augusta, Maine, Ladd attended the common schools and Kents Hill Seminary....
 (1879-1883); Charles A. Boutelle
Charles A. Boutelle

Charles A. Boutelle was an American seaman, shipmaster, naval officer and Civil War veteran, newspaper editor and publisher, conservative republican politico and nine term representative to Congress from the 4th Congressional District of Maine....
 (1882-1901); Donald F. Snow
Donald F. Snow

Donald Francis Snow was a member of the US House of Representatives from Maine. He was born in Bangor, Maine on September 6, 1877. He attended the public schools of his native city and was graduated from Bowdoin College, in Brunswick, Maine, in 1901....
 (1929-1933); John G. Utterback
John G. Utterback

John Gregg Utterback was a United States House of Representatives from Maine, and cousin of Hubert Utterback.Born in Franklin, Indiana, Utterback attended the public schools of his native city....
 (1933-35); Frank Fellows
Frank Fellows

Frank Fellows was the head coach of the Maryland Terrapins men's basketball team from 1967-1969. He compiled a 16-34 record....
 (1941-51); John R. McKernan (1983-87); and John Baldacci
John Baldacci

John Elias Baldacci is an United States politician who has served as the Governor of Maine of the U.S. state of Maine since 2003. A Democratic Party , he also served as a member of the United States House of Representatives from 1995 to 2003....
 (1995-2003). Four of them (Williamson, Plaisted, McKernan, and Baldacci) became Governors of Maine. Boutelle was Chairman of the House Committee on Naval Affairs during the building of the Great White Fleet
Great White Fleet

The Great White Fleet was the popular nickname for the United States Navy battle fleet that completed a circumnavigation of the globe from 16 December 1907 to 22 February 1909 by order of President of the United States Theodore Roosevelt....
. Hersey willed his estate to the City of Bangor, which used it to found the Bangor Public Library
Bangor Public Library

The Bangor Public Library in was founded in 1830 as the Bangor Mechanic Association's private library. In 1873, several other associations' libraries combined with it to form the Bangor Mechanic Association Public Library....
 in 1883. Snow was sentenced to two years in prison for embezzlement in 1935, but was pardoned a few months later.

Seven U.S. Congressmen from other states were either born in Bangor or formerly lived there, namely Abner Taylor
Abner Taylor

Abner Taylor was a United States House of Representatives from Illinois.Born in Bangor, Maine, Taylor moved with his parents to Champaign County, Ohio in 1832, thence to Fort Dodge, Iowa, and subsequently to Chicago, Illinois in 1860....
 (Illinois), Orrin Larrabee Miller
Orrin Larrabee Miller

Orrin Larrabee Miller was a U.S. Representative from Kansas.Miller was born in Newburgh, Maine, January 11, 1856 and attended the common schools and was graduated from the Maine Central Institute at Pittsfield, Maine....
 (Kansas), Donald C. McRuer
Donald C. McRuer

Donald Campbell McRuer was a California United States Republican Party politician and U.S. Congressman.McRuer was born 1826 in Bangor, Maine....
  (California), Mark Trafton
Mark Trafton

Mark Trafton was a United States House of Representatives and member of the Know Nothing from Massachusetts.Trafton was born in Bangor, Maine ....
 (Massachusetts), Daniel T. Jewett
Daniel T. Jewett

Daniel Tarbox Jewett was a United States Senator from Missouri in 1870 and 1871. Born in Pittston, Maine, he completed preparatory studies, attended Colby College, graduated from Columbia College of Columbia University in 1830 and from the Harvard Law School....
 (Missouri), and Loren Fletcher
Loren Fletcher

Loren Fletcher was a U.S. Representative from Minnesota; born in Mount Vernon, Maine, Kennebec County, Maine; he attended the public schools and Kents Hill School, Kents Hill, Maine; moved to Bangor, Maine in 1853; was a stonecutter, clerk in a store, and an employee of a lumber company; moved to Minneapolis, Minnesota, in 1856 and engaged i...
 & Solomon Comstock
Solomon Comstock

Solomon Gilman Comstock was a U.S. Representative from Minnesota as a member of the 51st Congress of the United States of America....
 (Minnesota).

The vice presidential candidate of the Green Party
Green Party (United States)

One of the political parties in the United States, and similar in mission to many of the worldwide Green party, the Greens have been active as a third party since 2001....
 in the 2004 election, Patricia LaMarche was raised in Bangor. The first African-American elected to the Maine State Legislature was Bangor-born Gerald E. Talbot, who served 1972-78.

Bangor elected the only member of the Spiritualist religion known to have achieved state-wide office in the United States: attorney Mark Alton Barwise, who served in the Maine House of Representatives, and then the Maine State Senate, in 1921-26. Barwise was a trustee (and senior counsel) of the National Spiritualist Association and Curator of its Bureau of Phenomenal Evidence. He also wrote prolifically on Spiritualism.

Writers

Stephenking House
The most famous Bangor resident is undoubtedly Stephen King
Stephen King

Stephen Edwin King is an United States author of contemporary horror fiction, fantasy fiction and science fiction.Having sold an estimated List of bestselling fiction authors of his books, King is best known for his work in horror fiction, in which he demonstrates a thorough knowledge of the genre's history....
, the author best known for his horror-themed stories, novels, and movies. His wife, Tabitha Spruce-King
Tabitha King

Tabitha King is an United States author and activist.Tabitha King was born Tabitha Jane-Frances Spruce in Old Town, Maine, Maine. She was born to Raymond George and Sarah Jane White Spruce and is one of eight children....
, is also a writer, as are sons Joseph Hillstrom King (aka Joe Hill
Joe Hill (writer)

Joseph Hillstrom King is an United States writer of fiction, writing under the pen name of Joe Hill....
) and Owen King
Owen King

Owen Philip King is an United States author and the youngest son of authors Stephen King and Tabitha King. He has two older siblings, Naomi and Joe Hill , and grew up in Bangor, Maine....
. The family donates a substantial amount of money to local libraries and hospitals and have funded a baseball stadium, Mansfield Stadium (home to the Senior League World Series
Little League

Little League Baseball is the name of a non-profit organization in the United States which organizes local children's leagues of Amateur baseball in the United States and softball throughout the USA and the rest of the world....
), and the Beth Pancoe Aquatic Center, both on the grounds of Hayford Park, for the citizens (especially the children) of the city. King's fictional town, Derry, Maine
Derry (Stephen King)

Derry, Maine is part of Stephen King's fictional Maine topography, and, like Castle Rock , it has served as the setting for a number of his novels, novellas, and short stories....
, shares many points of correspondence with Bangor — the rivers, the Paul Bunyan
Paul Bunyan

Paul Bunyan is a mythological lumberjack who appears in tall tales of American folklore. He is usually portrayed as a giant as well as a lumberjack of unusual skill....
 Statue, the Thomas Hill Standpipe
Thomas Hill Standpipe

Thomas Hill Standpipe, which holds 1,750,000 gallons of water, is a riveted wrought iron tank with a wood frame jacket located on Thomas Hill in Bangor, Maine, United States....
, the hospital — but is always referred to as separate from Bangor. King also features Bangor in many of his stories, such as The Langoliers
The Langoliers

The Langoliers is one of four novellas published in the Stephen King book Four Past Midnight in 1990 in literature....
 and Storm of the Century
Storm of the century

Storm of the century is a term usually applied to a particularly damaging or notable weather event during a specific century. It may refer to:...
. King owns radio stations WKIT
WKIT

WKIT-FM is a rock music formatted radio station licensed to Brewer, Maine, Maine with studios and offices in Bangor, Maine.In addition to WZON Amplitude Modulation 620 and 103.1 WDME , the station is part of the Zone Corporation, a central Maine broadcasting group owned by authors Tabitha King and Stephen King....
 and WZON
WZON

WZON is a radio station broadcasting a sports talk format. The station is licensed to Bangor, Maine, USA.Along with sister stations WKIT and WDME-FM, WZON is owned by The Zone Corporation, the broadcast company owned by authors Tabitha King and Stephen King....
.

Hayford Peirce
Hayford Peirce

Hayford Peirce is an United States writer of science fiction, Mystery fiction, and spy thrillers. He attended Phillips Exeter Academy and received his Bachelor's degree from Harvard College....
, the science-fiction writer and nephew of Waldo Peirce
Waldo Peirce

Waldo Peirce was an United States Painting, born in Bangor, Maine.For many years, until his death, Peirce was both a prominent painter and a well-known character....
, is likewise a Bangor native. Other contemporary authors from Bangor include novelists Don J. Snyder
Don J. Snyder

Don J. Snyder is an United States novelist and screenwriter. Born in Pennsylvania in 1950 , Snyder grew up in Bangor, Maine. He graduated from Colby College in 1968 and earned a Masters Of Fine Arts from the Iowa Writers Workshop in 1986 where he was chosen for a prestigious Teaching-Writing Fellowship....
, Christina Baker Kline, Barbara Goldscheider, Henry Garfield, Christopher Willard, and Mameve Medwed; poets Terry Godbey
Terry Godbey

Terry Godbey is an American poet and a copy editor for the Orlando Sentinel. Her poems have appeared in Slipstream and other literary magazines and she published a book of poems called "Behind Every Door." She grew up in Texas, Canada, Ohio, and California, and now lives in Maitland, Florida with her husband and son....
, Sarah Ruth Jacobs, and Annaliese Jakimides; and children's book authors Susan Lubner
Susan Lubner

Susan Lubner is an American author of children's books. She grew up in Bangor, Maine, but currently resides in Massachusetts.Her works include Ruthie Bon Bair: Do Not Go To Bed With Wringing Wet Hair! and Noises at Night, both of which were illustrated by Bruce Whatley....
 and Bruce McMillan.

Bangor had strong links to Transcendentalism
Transcendentalism

Transcendentalism was a group of new ideas in literature, religion, culture, and philosophy that emerged in New England in the early to middle 19th century....
 through Frederick Henry Hedge
Frederick Henry Hedge

Frederick Henry Hedge was a New England Unitarianism minister and Transcendentalism. He was a founder of the Transcendental Club, originally called Hedge's Club, and active in the development of Transcendentalism....
, minister of the Congregational Church
Congregational church

Congregational churches are Protestantism Christianity churches practicing congregationalist church governance, in which each Wiktionary:congregation independently and autonomously runs its own affairs....
 there in the 1830s. His circle, which included Ralph Waldo Emerson
Ralph Waldo Emerson

Ralph Waldo Emerson was an American essayist, philosopher, poet, and leader of the transcendentalism movement in the early 19th century. His teachings directly influenced the growing New Thought movement of the mid 1800s....
 and Henry David Thoreau
Henry David Thoreau

Henry David Thoreau was an United States author, poet, Natural history, tax resistance, development criticism, surveyor, historian, philosophy, and leading Transcendentalism....
, met as "Hedge's Club" or the Transcendental Club
Transcendental Club

The Transcendental Club was the group of New England intellectuals of the early-to-mid-19th century which gave rise to Transcendentalism....
 whenever Hedge returned to his native Cambridge, Massachusetts
Cambridge, Massachusetts

Cambridge is a city in the Greater Boston area of Massachusetts, United States. It was named in honor of the University of Cambridge in England....
. Emerson had previously lectured in Bangor and Hedge took the position here on his advice. Thoreau visited Bangor a number of times (his aunt and cousins also lived here) and describes the city in his book The Maine Woods.

Pulitzer Prize
Pulitzer Prize

The Pulitzer Prize is an United States award regarded as the highest national honor in newspaper journalism, literary achievements and musical composition....
 winning playwright Owen Davis
Owen Davis

Owen Gould Davis, Sr. was an American dramatist. He received the 1923 Pulitzer Prize for Drama for his 1923 play Icebound, and penned hundreds of plays and scripts for radio and film....
 (1874-1956) lived in Bangor until he was 15, and his prize-winning play Icebound (1923) is set in neighboring Veazie. Davis wrote between 200 and 300 plays, as well as radio and film scripts, and two autobiographies. He was inducted into the American Academy of Arts and Letters, and was president of the Author's League of America and the American Dramatist's Guild.

Christine Goutiere Weston
Christine Goutiere Weston

Christine Goutiere Weston was a novelist and author of short stories. She was born in Unao, now in Uttar Pradesh, India, the daughter of a Great Britian indigo planter of France descent, who was also born in India....
 (1904-1989), author of ten novels, more than thirty short stories, and two non-fiction books (about Ceylon and Afghanistan
Afghanistan

Afghanistan , officially the Islamic republic of Afghanistan, is a landlocked country that is located approximately in the center of Asia....
), lived the latter part of her life in Bangor. She had been born in India
India

India, officially the Republic of India , is a country in South Asia. It is the List of countries and outlying territories by total area country by geographical area, the List of countries by population country, and the most populous liberal democracy in the world....
 and much of her fiction was set there.

Katya Alpert Gilden
Katya Alpert Gilden

Katya Alpert Gilden was a best-selling novelist who wrote with her husband Bert Gilden under the pen-name "K.B. Gilden". The couple produced two major novels, Hurry Sundown , which was made into an Otto Preminger film in 1967, and Between the Hills and the Sea , published the year of Bert's death....
 (1919-1991) of Bangor co-authored with her husband Bert Gilden the best-selling 1965 novel Hurry Sundown
Hurry Sundown (film)

Hurry Sundown is a 1967 in film film starring Michael Caine, Faye Dunaway, Jane Fonda, and Diahann Carroll. It is based on the novel "Hurry Sundown", by K....
, which became an Otto Preminger
Otto Preminger

Otto Ludwig Preminger was an Austrian-born Jewish film director who moved from the theatre to Hollywood, directing over 35 feature films in a five-decade career....
 film in 1967. Blanche Willis Howard
Blanche Willis Howard

Blanche Willis Howard was a best-selling American novelist who lived most of her productive years in southern Germany. Born in Bangor, Maine, the daughter of D.M....
, a best-selling late nineteenth century novelist, was born and raised in Bangor. She eventually moved to Stuttgart, Germany and married the court physician to King Charles I of Württemberg
Charles I of Württemberg

Charles of W?rttemberg was the third List of rulers of W?rttemberg, from 25 June 1864 until his death in 1891.He was born 6 March 1823 at Stuttgart, as HRH Charles Frederick Alexander, Crown Prince of W?rttemberg the son of William I of W?rttemberg and his third wife Pauline of W?rttemberg ....
, thus becoming the Baroness von Teuffel.

Eugene T. Sawyer
Eugene T. Sawyer

Eugene T. Sawyer was a newspaper editor and author of dime novels, particularly for the Nick Carter series. In an interview given in 1902, he confessed to having written over 75 examples of that genre, most anonymously....
, the "Prince of Dime Novelists
Dime novel

Dime novel, though it has a specific meaning, has also become a catch-all term for several different forms of late 19th century and early 20th century U.S....
", was born and raised in Bangor. In a 1902 interview, he claimed to have authored 75 examples of that genre, mostly for the Nick Carter
Nick Carter

Nick Carter may refer to:...
 series, once producing a 60,000 word novel in two days. His major innovation was to "begin the plot with the first word", i.e. "We will have the money, or she shall die!"

Bangor-born Henry Payson Dowst
Henry Payson Dowst

Henry Payson Dowst was an American novelist and short-story writer active in the early twentieth century. Born in Bangor, Maine and educated at Bangor High School, Dowst was a graduate of the Harvard class of 1899, and lived briefly in Calais, Maine before becoming General Manager of the Boston publishing house Maynard & Co....
 (1872-1921) was a novelist and short-story writer, and saw a number of his stories made into silent films. One was The Dancin' Fool (1920) starring Wallace Reid
Wallace Reid

Wallace Reid was an actor in silent film referred to by Motion Picture Magazine as "the screen's most perfect lover"....
. He spent his later life in a New York advertising agency, but was buried in Bangor.

Ruel Perley Smith
Ruel Perley Smith

Ruel Perley Smith was a novelist and newspaper editor best known for the Rival Camper series of boy's books published by L.C. Page & Co. of Boston in the first decade of the 20th century....
 (1869-1937), born in Bangor, was the author of the Rival Campers series of boy's book in the early 20th century. His regular job was as Night and Sunday Editor of the New York World
New York World

The New York World was a newspaper published in New York from 1860 until 1931. It played a major role in the history of American newspapers....
 newspaper.

Artists

Waldo, Hayford, and Respective Wives
The painter and bohemian Waldo Peirce
Waldo Peirce

Waldo Peirce was an United States Painting, born in Bangor, Maine.For many years, until his death, Peirce was both a prominent painter and a well-known character....
, confidante of Ernest Hemingway
Ernest Hemingway

Ernest Miller Hemingway was an American novelist, short story author, and journalist. He was part of the 1920s expatriate community in Paris, France, and one of the veterans of World War I later known as "the Lost Generation"....
, was from a prominent Bangor family.

Portrait painter Jeremiah Pearson Hardy (1800-1887), who apprenticed under Samuel F.B. Morse, lived and worked in Bangor for most of his career, sustained largely by the patronage of lumber barons. His children Anna Eliza Hardy and Francis William Hardy, and sister Mary Ann Hardy, were also part of a 19th century circle of Bangor painters. Other members of this circle included Florence Whitney Jennison and Isabel Graham Eaton, who was also an author.

Walter Franklin Lansil studied first under Hardy, and then at the Academie Julian
Académie Julian

The Acad?mie Julian was an art school in Paris, France.Rodolphe Julian established the Acad?mie Julian in 1868 at the Passage des Panoramas, as a private studio school for art students....
 in Paris. He established a studio in Boston and became a celebrated landscape and marine artist. His brother Wilbur H. Lansil, a noted painter of rural landscapes, accompanied him to Boston.

Frederic Porter Vinton
Frederic Porter Vinton

Frederic Porter Vinton , sometimes spelled "Frederick", was an United States portrait painter from Bangor, Maine. He grew up in Chicago, and moved to Boston in 1861 For twenty years he worked as a bookkeeper, during which he studied art under William Rimmer at the Lowell Institute....
 (1846-1911) left Bangor at age 14 for Boston, where he became that city's most sought-after portrait painter - producing over 300 canvases - and one of the original members of The Boston School. He studied in Munich and with Leon Bonnat
Léon Bonnat

L?on Joseph Florentin Bonnat was a France Painting.He was born in Bayonne, but from 1846 to 1853 he lived in Madrid, Spain, where his father owned a bookshop....
 in Paris, as well as with William Morris Hunt
William Morris Hunt

William Morris Hunt United States Painting, was born at Brattleboro, Vermont to Jane Maria Hunt and Jonathan Hunt , who raised one of the preeminent families in American art....
.

Show-business people

Bangor is the birthplace of comedian/actor Charles Rocket
Charles Rocket

Charles Rocket was an United States film and television actor, notable for his tenure as a cast member on Saturday Night Live as well as for his appearances as the villain Nicholas Andre in the film Dumb and Dumber and Adam, the Angel of Death, in the series Touched by an Angel....
 (1949-2005), who was a cast member on Saturday Night Live
Saturday Night Live

Saturday Night Live is a weekly late-night 90-minute American sketch comedy/variety show filmed in New York City. It made its debut on October 11, 1975....
, and appeared in more than eighty other television shows and films, including Touched by an Angel
Touched by an Angel

Touched by an Angel is an United States drama television series that chronicles the missions of a group of angels sent by God. Created by John Masius and produced by Martha Williamson , it ran on CBS for nine seasons, from September 21, 1994 to April 27, 2003, and aired in many countries all around the world....
, Miami Vice
Miami Vice

Miami Vice is an United States of America television series produced by Michael Mann for NBC. The show became noted for its heavy integration and use of music and visual effects to tell a story....
, and Star Trek: Voyager
Star Trek: Voyager

Star Trek: Voyager is a science fiction television series set in the Star Trek universe. The show was created by Rick Berman, Michael Piller, and Jeri Taylor and is the fourth incarnation of Star Trek, which began with the 1960s series Star Trek: The Original Series, created by Gene Roddenberry....
.

Sportscaster Gary Thorne
Gary Thorne

Gary Thorne is a play-by-play announcer for ESPN and American Broadcasting Company, working Major League Baseball, College football and Frozen Four hockey contests....
 was also born here and once served as an assistant district attorney in the city.

Actor Wayne Maunder
Wayne Maunder

Wayne E. Maunder is a retired actor, originally from Canada, who starred in three United States television series between 1967 and 1974....
, who played George Armstrong Custer
George Armstrong Custer

George Armstrong Custer was a United States Army officer and cavalry commander in the American Civil War and the Indian Wars. At the start of the Civil War, Custer was a cadet at the United States Military Academy at West Point, New York, and his class's graduation was accelerated so that they could enter the war....
 in the series Custer
Custer (TV series)

Custer, also known as The Legend of Custer, is a 17-episode military-Western television series which ran on American Broadcasting Company from September 6 to December 27, 1967, with Wayne Maunder in the starring role of then Lieutenant Colonel George Armstrong Custer....
 on ABC in 1967, and co-starred with Andrew Duggan
Andrew Duggan

Andrew Duggan was a tall and authoritative character actor who appeared in 70 movies including The Incredible Mr. Limpet as Harlock with Don Knotts , and over 140 television shows between 1949 and 1987....
, James Stacy
James Stacy

James Stacy , is a former United States actor whose career was effectively ended in a motorcycle crash which left him an amputee and took the life of his girlfriend....
, and Paul Brinegar
Paul Brinegar

Paul Brinegar was an United States character actor.Brinegar made over 100 appearances between 1946 and 1994, appearing in many Western films, and played the barman in Clint Eastwood's High Plains Drifter in 1973....
 on CBS's Lancer
Lancer (TV series)

Lancer is a 1968-1970 Western television series on Columbia Broadcasting System, which starred Andrew Duggan, James Stacy, and Wayne Maunder as a father with two half-brother sons, an arrangement similar to the more successful Bonanza on National Broadcasting Company....
 western
Western (genre)

The Western is a fiction genre seen in film, television, radio, literature, painting and other visual arts. Westerns are devoted to telling stories set primarily in the later half of the 19th century in what became the Western United States , but also in Western Canada, Mexico , Alaska and even Australia ....
 series, was reared in Bangor though born in New Brunswick
New Brunswick

New Brunswick is one of Canada's three Maritime provinces and is the only Constitution of Canada bilingual province in the federation. The provincial capital is Fredericton....
, Canada.

Actress Stephanie Niznik
Stephanie Niznik

Stephanie Niznik is an United States film, television, and theatre actress most famous for her role as Nina Feeney on Everwood. She has been cast in the upcoming film, The Twenty....
 of the television series Everwood
Everwood

Everwood was a prime time television drama that aired in the United States on The WB Television Network. The series was set in the fictional small town of Everwood, Colorado....
 and the film Star Trek: Insurrection
Star Trek: Insurrection

Star Trek: Insurrection is a 1998 in film science fiction feature film, the ninth based on the Star Trek television series. It is the third film to star the cast of Star Trek: The Next Generation, and the second to not feature the original series' cast....
 was also reared in Bangor.

Character actor Everett Glass (1891-1966) was born in Bangor. He appeared in more than seventy films and television shows from the 1940s through the 1960s, including Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1956) and episodes of Superman
Superman

Superman is a Character , a comic book superhero widely considered to be an American cultural icon. Created by American writer Jerry Siegel and Canadian-born artist Joe Shuster in 1932 while both were living in Cleveland, Ohio, Ohio, and sold to DC Comics in 1938, the character first appeared in Action Comics Action Comics 1 and subseque...
, Lassie
Lassie

Lassie is a fictional character and a stage name for several dog actors. The fictional character was created by Eric Knight in a short story expanded to novel length called Lassie Come-Home ....
, and Perry Mason
Perry Mason

Perry Mason is a fictional character, a defense Lawyer who originally was the main character in numerous pieces of detective fiction authored by Erle Stanley Gardner....
.

Bangorian Leonard Horn
Leonard Horn

Leonard J. Horn was a director of prime time television programs in the 1960s and 1970s, and helped shape a number of ?classic? adventure and sci-fi series, including Mission: Impossible, Mannix, Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea, and Wonder Woman ....
 (1926-1975) directed episodes of twenty-nine prime-time television series and a number of made-for-TV movies between 1959 and 1975, including Mission: Impossible
Mission: Impossible

Mission: Impossible began as an American television series that chronicles the missions of a team of secret United States government agents known as the Impossible Missions Force ....
, Mannix
Mannix

Mannix is an United States Police procedural that ran from 1967 in television through 1975 in television on CBS. Created by Richard Levinson and William Link and developed by television producer Bruce Geller, the title character, Joe Mannix, is an Armenian-American private investigator....
, It Takes a Thief, Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea
Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea

Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea is a science fiction film produced and directed by Irwin Allen. The film was released in 1961 in film by 20th Century Fox....
, The Outer Limits
The Outer Limits

The Outer Limits is an United States television series. Similar in style to the earlier The Twilight Zone , with more science fiction than fantasy stories, The Outer Limits is an anthology of discrete story episodes, sometimes with a plot twist at the end....
, and Lost in Space
Lost in Space

Lost in Space is a science fiction TV series created and produced by Irwin Allen, produced by 20th Century Fox Television, and broadcast on CBS....
.

Bangor-born actor Ralph Sipperly (ca.1890-1928) appeared in ten films between 1923 and 1932, most of them silent, including the Academy Award winning Sunrise: A Song of Two Humans.

Comedian Ed Wynn
Ed Wynn

Ed Wynn was a popular United States comedian and actor noted for his Perfect Fool comedy character, his pioneering radio show of the 1930s, and his later career as a dramatic actor....
 once ran out of money in Bangor and took a job playing piano
Piano

The piano is a musical instrument played by means of a keyboard instrument. Widely used in Western music for solo performance, ensemble use, chamber music, and accompaniment, the piano is also very popular as an aid to musical composition and rehearsal....
 in a brothel
Brothel

A brothel, also known as a bordello, cathouse or whorehouse, is an establishment specifically dedicated to prostitution, providing the prostitutes a place to meet and to have sex with clients....
.

Actress Myrna Fahey (1933-1973), who was born in nearby Carmel
Carmel, Maine

Carmel is a town in Penobscot County, Maine, Maine, United States. It is located at , near the intersection of Penobscot County Road 69 and US State Highway 2 ....
, is buried at Mt. Pleasant Cemetery in Bangor. From the 1950s to the 1970s she appeared in more than forty films and television shows, including House of Usher (1960) where she co-starred with Vincent Price
Vincent Price

Vincent Leonard Price, Jr. was an United States film actor, remembered for his distinctive voice, his 6-foot 4-inch stature and serio-comic attitude in a series of horror films done in the latter part of his career....
, and episodes of such series as Zorro
Zorro

Zorro is a fictional character created in 1919 by pulp magazine writer Johnston McCulley. He has been featured in several books, films, television series and other media....
, Gunsmoke
Gunsmoke

Gunsmoke is an American radio and television Western drama series created by director Norman MacDonnell and writer John Meston. The stories take place in and around Dodge City, Kansas, during the settlement of the American West....
, Bonanza
Bonanza

Bonanza is an United States television series that ran on NBC from September 12, 1959 to January 16, 1973. Lasting 14 seasons, it is among the longest running Western television series and continues to air in syndication....
, Perry Mason
Perry Mason

Perry Mason is a fictional character, a defense Lawyer who originally was the main character in numerous pieces of detective fiction authored by Erle Stanley Gardner....
, Batman
Batman

Batman is a Character , a comic book superhero co-created by artist Bob Kane and writer Bill Finger , appearing in publications by DC Comics. The character first appeared in Detective Comics #27 in May 1939....
, and The Time Tunnel
The Time Tunnel

The Time Tunnel is a 1966?1967 United States color science fiction TV series. The show was created and produced by Irwin Allen, his third science fiction television series....
. She dated Joe DiMaggio
Joe DiMaggio

Joseph Paul DiMaggio A member of the Baseball Hall of Fame, DiMaggio was a 3-time MLB Most Valuable Player Award winner and 13-time Major League Baseball All-Star Game ....
 after his divorce from Marilyn Monroe
Marilyn Monroe

Marilyn Monroe was an American actress, singer, model, and a sex symbol.After spending much of her childhood in foster homes, Monroe began a career as a model, which led to a film contract in 1946....
.

Bangor-born Guy Nicolucci was on the writing team from the TV show Late Night with Conan O'Brian which won an Emmy in 2007. Niccolucci also wrote for The Daily Show
The Daily Show

The Daily Show is an United States news satire television program airing each Monday through Thursday on Comedy Central in the United States....
.

Eric Saindon
Eric Saindon

'Eric Saindon' born in Bangor, Maine is an United States visual effects supervisor for several movies, including Fantastic Four , Night at the Museum, X-Men: The Last Stand and worked on others such as, King Kong, I, Robot, The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King , The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers , The...
 of Bangor was visual effects
Visual effects

Visual effects are the various processes by which imagery is created and/or manipulated outside the context of a live action shoot. Visual effects often involve the integration of live-action footage and computer generated imagery in order to create environments which look realistic, but would be dangerous, costly, or simply impossible to...
 supervisor for the films King Kong
King Kong (2005 film)

King Kong is a 2005 remake of the King Kong about a fictional giant ape called King Kong. The film was directed by Peter Jackson and stars Naomi Watts as Ann Darrow, Jack Black as Carl Denham, Adrien Brody as Jack Driscoll and, through performance capture, Andy Serkis as Kong....
 and Night at the Museum
Night at the Museum

Night at the Museum is a 2006 in film American adventure comedy film. It is based on The Night at the Museum by Milan Trenc. It follows a divorced father trying to settle down, impress his son, and find his destiny....
, and a key member of the visual effects team of I, Robot
I, Robot

I, Robot is a collection of nine science fiction short stories by Isaac Asimov, first published by Gnome Press in 1950 in an edition of 5,000 copies....
 and the Lord of the Rings trilogy. He is a three-time winner of the Visual Effects Society Award. A second visual effects man from Bangor, Christopher Mills, has contributed to such films as Evan Almighty
Evan Almighty

Evan Almighty is a 2007 comedy film, and sequel to the 2003 film Bruce Almighty. It was directed by Tom Shadyac and stars Steve Carell, Lauren Graham, John Goodman, and Morgan Freeman reprising his role as God....
, The Golden Compass, and Night at the Museum
Night at the Museum

Night at the Museum is a 2006 in film American adventure comedy film. It is based on The Night at the Museum by Milan Trenc. It follows a divorced father trying to settle down, impress his son, and find his destiny....


Comedian Bob Marley
Bob Marley (comedian)

Robert "Bob" Marley is a comedian from Portland, Maine. He has stated that when he was born, his dad had no idea there was a singer named Bob Marley....
, born and raised in Bangor, has appeared on The Late Show with David Letterman, The Tonight Show with Jay Leno
The Tonight Show with Jay Leno

The Tonight Show with Jay Leno is an United States late night television talk show currently hosted by Jay Leno, on NBC. It made its debut on May 25, 1992, following Johnny Carson retirement as host of The Tonight Show....
, and Late Night with Conan O'Brien
Late Night with Conan O'Brien

Late Night with Conan O'Brien was an United States late night television talk show hosted by Conan O'Brien that aired 2,725 episodes on NBC from 1993 to 2009....
 as well as Comedy Central
Comedy Central

Comedy Central is an United States cable television and satellite television channel that carries predominantly comedy programming, both original and broadcast syndication....
.

Singers, musicians and song-writers

Singer/songwriter Howie Day
Howie Day

Howard Kern "Howie" Day is an American singer-songwriter. Beginning his career as a solo artist in the late 1990s in music, Day became known for his extensive touring and in-concert use of Sampler and effects pedals in order to accompany himself....
, who recorded the hit Collide
Collide

Collide is an industrial rock/darkwave band founded in 1992, in Los Angeles, California, USA, that has incorporated elements of trip hop, darkwave, techno and music from the Middle East into their sound....
, was born in Bangor, and got his start playing local clubs. Country singer Dick Curless
Dick Curless

Richard William Curless was an United States country-music singer, a pioneer of the trucking music genre, commonly known as the "Baron of Country Music." He was easily distinguished because of the patch he usually wore over his right eye....
, who recorded the 1965 hit Tombstone Every Mile, also lived there.

George Frederick Root
George Frederick Root

George Frederick Root was an American songwriter, who found particular fame during the American Civil War.He was born at Sheffield, Massachusetts, and was named after the German-born British composer George Frideric Handel....
 (1820-95), a noted Civil War
Civil war

A civil war is a war between organized groups to take control of a nation or region, or to change government policies. It is high-intensity conflict, often involving Regular Army, that is sustained, organized and large-scale....
 era composer of songs such as The Battle Cry of Freedom, lived in Bangor before becoming a successful music publisher in Chicago
Chicago

Chicago is the largest city in the U.S. state of Illinois and the Midwestern United States, as well as the List of United States cities by population city in the United States with more than 2.8 million residents....
.

The celebrated composer (and collector of folk songs) Norman Cazden, who was a victim of McCarthyism
McCarthyism

McCarthyism is the politically motivated practice of making accusations of disloyalty, subversion, or treason without proper regard for evidence....
 in the 1950s, taught at the nearby University of Maine
University of Maine

The University of Maine, established in 1865, is the largest campus, in terms of full-time equivalent enrollments, of the seven campuses in the University of Maine System....
 from 1969 and died in Bangor in 1980.

Paul T. White (1895-1973), composer, professor of music at the University of Rochester
University of Rochester

The University of Rochester is a private university, nonsectarian, research university located in Rochester, New York. The university grants undergraduate, graduate, doctoral, and professional degrees through six schools and various interdisciplinary programs....
, and conductor of the Rochester Civic Orchestra (1953-1965) was born in Bangor, as was Rudolph Ringwall, associate conductor of the Cleveland Orchestra
Cleveland Orchestra

The Cleveland Orchestra is an American orchestra based in Cleveland, Ohio, Ohio. It is one of the five American orchestras commonly referred to as the "Big Five "....
 (1934-56). Berlin-born Werner Torkanowsky
Werner Torkanowsky

Werner Torkanowsky was a successful German Conductor in both the concert hall and opera house.He was born in Berlin, Germany, and raised on a kibbutz in Israel, coming to the United States in 1948 to study the violin....
, director of the New Orleans Symphony Orchestra, came to Bangor in 1981 to direct the Bangor Symphony and did so until his death in 1992.

Kay Gardner
Kay Gardner (composer)

Kay Gardner was a musician, composer, author, and musical producer involved in using music for creative and healing purposes. Her compositions include works for chamber orchestra, symphony orchestra, choir, flute, voice and piano....
 (1941-2002), flutist and pioneering composer of 'healing music' lived and died in Bangor.

Athletes

Bangor is the home of Philadelphia Phillies
Philadelphia Phillies

The Philadelphia Phillies are a Major League Baseball team based in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and are the reigning 2008 World Series champions....
 hitter Matt Stairs
Matt Stairs

Matthew Wade Stairs is a Major League Baseball outfielder who plays for the Philadelphia Phillies. He married Lisa Astle of Fredericton, New Brunswick with whom he has three daughters, Nicole, Alicia and Chandler....
. Major League baseball player Matt Kinney
Matt Kinney

Matthew John Kinney is a Major League Baseball right-handed pitcher who currently pitches for the Saitama Seibu Lions of Japan's Pacific League....
 of the Minnesota Twins
Minnesota Twins

The Minnesota Twins are a professional baseball based in Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA. The Twins are a member of the American League Central of Major League Baseball's American League....
, Milwaukee Brewers
Milwaukee Brewers

The Milwaukee Brewers, commonly referred to as "The Brew Crew" or simply "The Crew" by sports writers and fans, are a Major League Baseball team based in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, which plays in the Central Division of the National League....
, Kansas City Royals
Kansas City Royals

The Kansas City Royals are a Major League Baseball team based in Kansas City, Missouri. The Royals are a member of the American League Central of Major League Baseball's American League....
 and now Japan's Seibu Lions
Seibu Lions

The are a professional baseball team in Japan's Pacific League. As a company, it is a subsidiary of Prince Hotels, belonging to Seibu Railway. Recently, the team had stood on shaky financial ground, until the Boston Red Sox signed Daisuke Matsuzaka....
 is also a native, as is Jon DiSalvatore
Jon DiSalvatore

Jon DiSalvatore is a professional ice hockey player currently with the Lowell Devils of the American Hockey League...
, of the National Hockey League
National Hockey League

The National Hockey League is a professional ice hockey league composed of 30 teams in North America. It is considered to be the premier professional ice hockey league in the world, and one of the North American Major professional sports leagues of the United States and Canada....
 (now with the Phoenix Coyotes
Phoenix Coyotes

The Phoenix Coyotes are a professional ice hockey team based in Glendale, Arizona, just outside of Phoenix, Arizona. They are members of the Pacific Division of the Western Conference of the National Hockey League ....
). Fictional character Julie "The Cat" Gaffney (Meghan MacDonald in real life) from the Mighty Ducks
Mighty Ducks

Mighty Ducks is a half-hour The Walt Disney Company animated series that aired on American Broadcasting Company and The Disney Afternoon in the fall of 1996....
 movies grew up in Bangor, according to a voice-over biography in D2: The Mighty Ducks
D2: The Mighty Ducks

D2: The Mighty Ducks also known as The Mighty Ducks 2 is the second film in The Mighty Ducks films and the first theatrical sequel to The Mighty Ducks, produced by Avnet-Kerner Productions and Walt Disney Pictures, distributed by Buena Vista Distribution, and originally released to movie theatres on March 25 1994....
.

Former Major League baseball
Major League Baseball

Major League Baseball is the highest level of play in American professional baseball. Specifically, Major League Baseball refers to the organization that operates the National League and the American League, by means of a joint organizational structure that has developed gradually between them since 1903 ....
 players born in Bangor include Bobby Messenger (1901-1964) of the Chicago White Sox
Chicago White Sox

The Chicago White Sox are a Major North American professional sports teams baseball team based in Chicago, Illinois. The White Sox presently play in the American League's American League Central in Major League Baseball....
 and St. Louis Browns
Baltimore Orioles

The Baltimore Orioles are a professional baseball based in Baltimore. They are a member of the American League East of Major League Baseball's American League....
; Jack Sharrott (1869-1927) of the New York Giants
New York Giants

The New York Giants are a professional American football team based in East Rutherford, New Jersey. The team plays its home games at Giants Stadium, which also serves as its headquarters, and trains at an adjacent practice facility within the Meadowlands Sports Complex....
 and Philadelphia Phillies
Philadelphia Phillies

The Philadelphia Phillies are a Major League Baseball team based in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and are the reigning 2008 World Series champions....
; and Pat O'Connell (1861-1943) of the Baltimore Orioles
Baltimore Orioles

The Baltimore Orioles are a professional baseball based in Baltimore. They are a member of the American League East of Major League Baseball's American League....
. Shortstop Mike Bordick
Mike Bordick

Michael Todd Bordick is a former shortstop in Major League Baseball. He played from 1990 to 2003 with four different teams: the Oakland Athletics, Baltimore Orioles, New York Mets, and Toronto Blue Jays....
, who played for the Oakland Athletics
Oakland Athletics

The Oakland Athletics are a professional baseball based in Oakland, California. The Athletics are a member of the American League West of Major League Baseball's American League....
, New York Mets
New York Mets

The New York Mets are a professional baseball based in Flushing, Queens, New York City, New York. The Mets are a member of the National League East of Major League Baseball's National League....
, Baltimore Orioles
Baltimore Orioles

The Baltimore Orioles are a professional baseball based in Baltimore. They are a member of the American League East of Major League Baseball's American League....
, and Toronto Bluejays, grew up in the adjacent towns of Winterport
Winterport (town), Maine

Winterport is a New England town in Waldo County, Maine, Maine, United States. The population was 3,602 at the United States Census, 2000....
 and Hampden
Hampden

Hampden' may refer to:...
, and was a star player on the University of Maine
University of Maine

The University of Maine, established in 1865, is the largest campus, in terms of full-time equivalent enrollments, of the seven campuses in the University of Maine System....
 team in nearby Orono
Orono, Maine

Orono is a New England town in Penobscot County, Maine, Maine, United States. It was first settled in 1774 and named in honor of Chief Joseph Orono of the Penobscot....
.

Former National Basketball Association
National Basketball Association

The National Basketball Association is North America's premier professional men's basketball league, composed of thirty teams: twenty-nine in the United States and one in Canada....
 player Jeff Turner
Jeff Turner

Jeffrey Steven Turner is a retired United States professional basketball player. A 6' 9" Power forward /Center from Vanderbilt University, he was selected by the New Jersey Nets with the 17th pick of the 1984 NBA Draft....
 of the New Jersey Nets
New Jersey Nets

The New Jersey Nets are a professional basketball team in the National Basketball Association that plays in the Eastern Conference 's Atlantic Division ....
 and Orlando Magic
Orlando Magic

The Orlando Magic is a professional basketball team based in Orlando, Florida. They play in the Southeast Division of the Eastern Conference of the National Basketball Association and are currently coached by Stan Van Gundy....
 was born in Bangor. He also won a gold medal
Gold medal

A gold medal is typically the highest medal awarded for achievement in a non-military field. The concept comes from the military, initially with a simple recognition of military rank, and later decorations for admission to military orders dating back to medieval times....
 at the 1984 Los Angeles Olympic Games
1984 Summer Olympics

The 1984 Summer Olympics, officially known as the Games of the XXIII Olympiad, was an international multi-sport event held in Los Angeles, California, United States in 1984....
 as a member of the U.S. Basketball Team.

Former National Football League
National Football League

The National Football League is the Major North American professional sports leagues American football Sports league in the United States. It is an unincorporated 501#501.28c.29.286.29 association controlled by its members....
 player Al Harris
Al Harris

Alshinard "Al" Harris is an American football cornerback who plays for the Green Bay Packers of the National Football League. Harris is known throughout the league for his physical, bump-and-run coverage style....
 (b. 1956) of the Chicago Bears
Chicago Bears

The Chicago Bears are a professional American football team based in Chicago, Illinois. They are members of the NFC North Division of the National Football Conference in the National Football League ....
 and Philadelphia Eagles
Philadelphia Eagles

The Philadelphia Eagles are a professional American football team based in Philadelphia. They are members of the NFC East of the National Football Conference in the National Football League ....
 comes from Bangor.

Toronto Blue Jays
Toronto Blue Jays

The Toronto Blue Jays are a professional baseball based in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. The Blue Jays are a member of the American League East of Major League Baseball 's American League....
 bench coach Brian Butterfield
Brian Butterfield

Brian Butterfield is the current bench coach for the Toronto Blue Jays Major League Baseball team.Butterfield is the son of Jack Butterfield, the former vice-president of player development and scouting for the New York Yankees....
 was born in Bangor, as was Clemson University
Clemson University

Clemson University is a state university , coeducational, Land-grant_university, research university located in Clemson, South Carolina, South Carolina, United States....
 baseball coach Jack Leggett
Jack Leggett

Jack Leggett , is the head baseball coach for Clemson University. In 15 seasons, he has led the Tigers to 680 wins . In every season until 2008, the Tigers have reached the NCAA Tournament, including the College World Series five times....
 and Ohio Wesleyan University
Ohio Wesleyan University

Ohio Wesleyan University is a private university Liberal arts colleges in the United States in Delaware, Ohio, Ohio, United States. It was founded in 1842 by Methodist leaders and Ohio Valley residents as a nonsectarian institution, and is a member of the Five Colleges of Ohio ? a consortium of Ohio liberal arts colleges....
 football coach Mike Hollway. Jerry "The Hammer" Smith, former Bangor boxer, is Chief of Ushers at Fenway Park
Fenway Park

Fenway Park is a stadium located near busy Kenmore Square in Boston, Massachusetts, in the Fenway-Kenmore neighborhood. The stadium's address is 4 Yawkey Way....
 (home of the Red Sox in Boston).

Professional Mixed Martial Arts
Mixed martial arts

Mixed martial arts is a Contact sport combat sport that allows a wide variety of fighting techniques, from a mixture of martial arts traditions and non-traditions, to be used in competitions....
 (MMA) Fighter Marcus Davis
Marcus Davis

Marcus Paul Davis , nicknamed "The Irish Hand Grenade" , is an American mixed martial arts fighter. He currently fights as a welterweight in the Ultimate Fighting Championship and in independent MMA promotions in the United States....
 and his Team Irish currently call Bangor their home.

Kevin Mahaney of Bangor won a silver medal
Silver medal

A silver medal is a medal awarded to the second place finisher of contests such as the Olympic Games, Commonwealth Games, etc.First and third place finishers traditionally receive a gold medal and bronze medal, respectively....
 in sailing at the 1992 Barcelona Olympic Games, and went on to reach the finals of the America's Cup
America's Cup

The America?s Cup is the most prestigious regatta and match race in the sport of sailing, and the oldest active trophy in international sport, predating the Summer Olympics by 45 years....
 trials with his Bangor-based PACT-95 team.

Cross-country biking champion Adam Craig
Adam Craig

Adam Craig is a professional Mountain biking currently living in Bend, Oregon. Originally from Corinth, Maine, Craig was educated at the University of Maine....
 was born in Bangor and grew up in nearby Corinth, Maine
Corinth, Maine

Corinth is a town in Penobscot County, Maine, Maine, United States. The population was 2,511 at the 2000 United States Census....
. He was a member of the U.S. Biking Team at the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games

Jack McAuliffe
Jack McAuliffe

Jack McAuliffe was an Irish-American boxer. Jack McAuliffe's parents were Cornelius McAuliffe and Jane Bailey who were living at 5 Christ Church Lane, Cork City at the time of Jack's birth....
, World Lightweight Boxing Champion in the 1880s-90s and known as "The Napoleon of the Ring", learned to fight growing up as a child in a tough Bangor neighborhood. He retired with an unbeaten record. Another local boxer, Michael Daley, became Lightweight Boxing Champion of New England, but was arrested in Bangor in 1903, along with George La Blanche, the former Middleweight Champion of the World, for robbing a man at a local hotel.

In the 1890s, Harry Orman Robinson
Harry Orman Robinson

Harry Orman ?Jake? Robinson was an American football coach. The Bangor, Maine native served as head coach at the University of Texas at Austin in 1896....
 of Bangor was Head Coach of the University of Texas football team, the Texas Longhorns, and before that the University of Missouri
University of Missouri

The University of Missouri System is a state university system providing centralized administration for four universities, a health care system, an extension program, five research and technology parks, and a publishing press....
 team, the Missouri Tigers
Missouri Tigers

The Missouri Tigers athletics programs include the extramural and intramural sports teams of the University of Missouri, located in Columbia, Missouri....
.

Karen Colburn of Bangor was Girl's National Free-Style Ski Champion in 1975.

Scholars

The "Father of American Sociology", Albion Woodbury Small
Albion Woodbury Small

Albion Woodbury Small founded the first Department of Sociology in the United States at the University of Chicago in Chicago, Illinois in 1892....
, attended grade-school in Bangor. He was the first American professor of sociology, founder of the first dept. of sociology (at the University of Chicago
University of Chicago

The University of Chicago is a private university located principally in the Hyde Park, Chicago neighborhood of Chicago. Although an older university by the same name existed prior to its founding, the modern University of Chicago credits its founding to the oil magnate John D....
), edited the discipline's first American journal, and was President of the American Sociological Society (1912-13).

Edith Lesley
Edith Lesley

Edith Lesley, American educator and founder of Lesley University, was born 27 January 1872 in the Panama, then a U.S. protectorate, and died 16 May 1953 at Boston1 in the U.S....
, founder of Lesley University
Lesley University

Lesley University is a private university with campuses in Boston, Massachusetts and Cambridge, Massachusetts, in the U.S. state of Massachusetts....
 in Massachusetts, grew up in Bangor.

University of Maine psychologist Doris Allen
Doris Allen

Doris Twitchell Allen was a noted psychologist and the founder of Children's International Summer Villages. She specialized in development and psychodrama....
 (1901-2002), who was born in nearby Old Town
Old Town

Old Town is the typical designation of a historic or original core of a city or town. Although the city may be larger in its present form, many cities have redesignated this part of the city to commemorate its origins after thorough renovations....
, and practiced at the Bangor Mental Health Institute in the 1970s, was nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize
Nobel Peace Prize

The Nobel Peace Prize is one of five Nobel Prizes bequeathed by the Swedish industrialist and inventor Alfred Nobel. According to Nobel's will , the Peace Prize should be awarded "to the person who shall have done the most or the best work for :wikt:fraternity between nations, for the abolition or reduction of standing armies and for the h...
 for founding the Children's International Summer Villages. She was also President of the International Council of Psychologists.

William Witherle Lawrence (1876-1958) of Bangor became a Professor of English at Columbia University
Columbia University

Columbia University in the City of New York , is a private university in the United States and a member of the Ivy League. Columbia's main campus lies in the Morningside Heights, Manhattan neighborhood in the borough of Manhattan, in New York City....
 and a ground-breaking scholar of Beowulf
Beowulf

Beowulf is an Old English language heroic Epic poetry of unknown authorship, dating as recorded in the Nowell Codex manuscript from between the 8th to the early 11th century, and relates events described as having occurred in what is now Denmark and Sweden....
 and the works of Chaucer and Shakespeare. He was awarded the Royal Order of Vasa with the rank of knight by the King of Sweden.

John Irwin Hutchinson
John Irwin Hutchinson

John Irwin Hutchinson was an United States mathematician born in Bangor, Maine He was educated at Bates College, , Clark University , and the University of Chicago ....
 (1967-1935) of Bangor became a noted professor of mathematics at Cornell University
Cornell University

Cornell University located in Ithaca, New York, USA, is a private university with four Statutory college. Its two medical campuses are in New York City and Education City, Qatar....
, and Vice President of the American Mathematical Society
American Mathematical Society

The American Mathematical Society is an association of professional mathematicians dedicated to the interests of mathematics research and scholarship, which it does with various publications and conferences as well as annual monetary awards and prizes to mathematicians....
.

Robert Winslow Gordon
Robert Winslow Gordon

Robert Winslow Gordon was born September 2, 1888 in Bangor, Maine. Educated at Harvard University, he joined the English faculty at the University of California at Berkley in 1918....
 of Bangor became the first Director of the Archives of the American Folk Song at the Library of Congress
Library of Congress

The Library of Congress is the de facto national library of the United States and the research arm of the United States Congress. Located in three buildings in Washington, D.C., it is the largest library in the world by shelf space and holds the largest number of books....
. In the 1910s-1930s he was arguably the leading authority on this genre of music, personally recorded nearly a thousand folk songs and transcribing the lyrics of 10,000 more.

Hayford Peirce Sr., father of the science fiction author and brother of painter Waldo Peirce
Waldo Peirce

Waldo Peirce was an United States Painting, born in Bangor, Maine.For many years, until his death, Peirce was both a prominent painter and a well-known character....
, was a noted scholar of Byzantine Art
Byzantine art

Byzantine art is the term commonly used to describe the artistic products of the Byzantine Empire from about the 4th century until the Fall of Constantinople in 1453....
.

William D. Williamson
William D. Williamson

William Durkee Williamson was a United States Democratic-Republican Party governor of the U.S. state of Maine who served from May 29, 1821 to December 5, 1821....
, a Brown University
Brown University

Brown University is a private university university located in , United States and is a member of the Ivy League. Founded in 1764 as the College of Rhode Island, it is the third-oldest institution of higher education in New England and Colonial Colleges in the United States....
-educated Bangor lawyer who became the second Governor of Maine, was also the state's first historian, producing a two-volume History of the State of Maine as early as 1832. It remained the standard reference throughout the 19th century.

Bangor-born Egyptologist Sarah Parcak
Sarah Parcak

Dr. Sarah Parcak , is an United States archaeology and List of Egyptologists, noted for being the first List of Egyptologists to use satellite imaging to identify new archaeological sites in Egypt....
 of the University of Alabama
University of Alabama

The University of Alabama is a state university coeducational university located in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, Alabama, United States. Founded in 1831, UA is the flagship university of the University of Alabama System....
 was the first member of her discipline to experiment with satellite imaging, and was able to locate 132 undiscovered ancient Egyptian archaeological sites.

Historian of Japan Gregory Clancey, winner of the 2007 Sidney Edelstein Prize for his book "Earthquake Nation", was born in Bangor. He is Assistant Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences at the National University of Singapore
National University of Singapore

File:NUS, University Cultural Centre 3, Nov 06.JPGThe National University of Singapore is Singapore's oldest university. It is the largest university in the country in terms of student enrollment and curriculum offered....


Soldiers and sailors


Maj. Gen. Joshua Chamberlain
Joshua Chamberlain

Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain was an United States college professor from the State of Maine, who volunteered during the American Civil War to join the Union Army....
, a hero of the Battle of Gettysburg
Battle of Gettysburg

The Battle of Gettysburg , fought in and around the town of Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, as part of the Gettysburg Campaign, was the battle with the largest number of casualties in the American Civil War and is frequently cited as the war's Turning point of the American Civil War....
 who also accepted the surrender of General Lee
Robert E. Lee

Robert Edward Lee , was a career United States United States Army officer , an engineer, and among the most celebrated generals in American history....
's Army at Appomattox
Appomattox

Appomattox may refer to:*Appomattox, Virginia, a town*Appomattox County, Virginia*Appomattox Basin, a name for the Tri-Cities, Virginia region...
, was born in the neighboring city of Brewer
Brewer, Maine

Brewer is a city in Penobscot County, Maine, Maine, United States. It is part of the Bangor, Maine Metropolitan Statistical Area. The city is named after its first settler, Colonel John Brewer....
 but studied at the Bangor Theological Seminary
Bangor Theological Seminary

Bangor Theological Seminary is an ecumenical seminary, founded in 1814, in the Congregational tradition of the United Church of Christ. It is located in Bangor, Maine and Portland, Maine....
. The bridge connecting the two cities is named for him. Chamberlain, a professor at Bowdoin College
Bowdoin College

Bowdoin College , founded in 1794, is a private Liberal arts colleges in the United States located in the coastal New England town of Brunswick, Maine, Maine....
 when the war began, and later its president, could read seven foreign languages. He was also elected Governor of Maine, as was another Civil War general from Bangor, Harris Merrill Plaisted. Cyrus Hamlin
Cyrus Hamlin (general)

Cyrus Hamlin was an attorney, politician, and a general in the Union Army during the American Civil War....
, who commanded a regiment of African-American troops, and Charles Hamlin, both sons of Vice President Hannibal Hamlin
Hannibal Hamlin

Hannibal Hamlin was the List of Vice Presidents of the United States Vice President of the United States, serving under President of the United States Abraham Lincoln from 1861-1865....
, also became generals in the Civil War. Other Bangorians who achieved a general's rank in the same conflict included Edward Hatch
Edward Hatch

Edward Hatch was a career United States soldier who served as a general in the Union Army during the American Civil War. After the war he became the first commander of the 9th Cavalry Regiment , a Buffalo soldier regiment with African-American troops commanded by white officers....
, who commanded the cavalry division of Grant's Army of the Tennessee
Army of the Tennessee

The Army of the Tennessee was a Union Army army in the Western Theater of the American Civil War of the American Civil War, named for the Tennessee River....
; Augustus B. Farnham, Chief of Staff of the Third Division, who was severely wounded; Charles G. Roberts; George Varney; and John F. Appleton. Col. Daniel Chaplin, who died in battle, was posthumously made a Maj. General. Naval Lt. Charles A. Boutelle
Charles A. Boutelle

Charles A. Boutelle was an American seaman, shipmaster, naval officer and Civil War veteran, newspaper editor and publisher, conservative republican politico and nine term representative to Congress from the 4th Congressional District of Maine....
 accepted the surrender of the Confederate fleet after the Battle of Mobile Bay
Battle of Mobile Bay

The Battle of Mobile Bay of August 5, 1864, was an engagement of the American Civil War in which a Federal fleet commanded by Rear Admiral David G....
, where he commanded an ironclad.

Charles Albert Whittier (d. 1908), who was born in Bangor but became a wealthy merchant in Boston and New York, volunteered for the Spanish-American War
Spanish-American War

The Spanish?American War was an armed military conflict between Spain and the United States that took place between April and August 1898, over the issues of the liberation of Cuba....
 and was made a Brigadier General for his part in the capture of Manila
Manila

The 'City of Manila' , or simply 'Manila', is the Capital of the Philippines and one of the 17 cities and municipalities that make up Metro Manila....
. He subsequently became Collector of Customs in the Philippine capital. His daughter Susan married Prince Sergei Beloselsky-Belozersky
Beloselsky-Belozersky Palace

Beloselsky-Belozersky Palace is a Neo-Baroque palace at the intersection of the Fontanka River and Nevsky Prospekt in Saint Petersburg, Russia....
, son of the aide-de-camp to the Tsar of Russia, and a second daughter, Polly Whittier
Pauline Whittier

Pauline "Polly" Whittier was an United States golfer who competed in the 1900 Summer Olympics.She was born in Boston, Massachusetts.Whittier won the silver medal in the women's competition....
, won the silver medal in women's golf at the 1900 Paris Olympics.

Vice Adm. Carl Frederick Holden of Bangor began World War II
World War II

World War II, or the Second World War , was a global military conflict which involved a Participants in World War II, including all of the great powers, organised into two opposing military alliances: the Allies of World War II and the Axis powers....
 as executive officer of the battleship USS Pennsylvania
USS Pennsylvania (BB-38)

USS Pennsylvania was the lead ship of Pennsylvania class battleship of United States Navy "super-dreadnought" battleships. She was the third Navy ship named for the state of Pennsylvania....
 during the attack on Pearl Harbor. He became the first captain of the battleship USS New Jersey
USS New Jersey (BB-62)

USS New Jersey , is an , and was the second ship of the United States Navy to be named in honor of the U.S. state of New Jersey. New Jersey earned more battle stars for combat actions than the other three completed Iowa-class battleships, and is the only one to serve off Vietnam during the Vietnam War....
, and ended the war as a Rear Adm. commanding Cruiser Division Pacific. He was on the deck of the USS Missouri
USS Missouri (BB-63)

USS Missouri is a United States Navy Iowa class battleship, and was the fourth ship of the United States Navy to be named in honor of the U.S....
 to witness the Japanese surrender in 1945.

Lieutenant Frank Bostrom won the Distinguished Flying Cross
Distinguished Flying Cross

Distinguished Flying Cross may mean:*Distinguished Flying Cross , including Commonwealth countries*Distinguished Flying Cross ...
 for piloting the bomber which rescued Gen. Douglas MacArthur
Douglas MacArthur

General of the Army Douglas MacArthur, Order of the Bath was an United States General officer, United Nations general and Field Marshal of the Philippine Army....
, his staff, and family, from the Philippines in 1942, flying them to Australia over Japanese-occupied territory.

Lt. Gen. Donald Norton Yates of Bangor selected June 6, 1944 as the date for D-Day
D-Day

D-Day is a term often used in military parlance to denote the day on which a combat attack or operation is to be initiated. "D-Day" often represents a variable , designating the day upon which some significant event will occur or has occurred; see Military designation of days and hours for similar terms....
, the Allied invasion of Europe, in his capacity as chief meteorologist on General Dwight D. Eisenhower
Dwight D. Eisenhower

Dwight David ?Ike? Eisenhower was the List of Presidents of the United States President of the United States from 1953 until 1961 and a General of the Army in the United States Army....
's staff. He chose well - it turned out to be the only day that month the invasion could have been successfully launched - and was subsequently decorated by three governments. He went on to become the chief meteorologist of the U.S. Air Force, Commander of the Air Force Missile Test Center at Patrick Air Force Base
Patrick Air Force Base

Patrick Air Force Base is a United States Air Force Base located between Satellite Beach and Cocoa Beach, in Brevard County, Florida, United States....
 in Florida, and retired as Deputy Director of Defence Research and Engineering in the Pentagon.

Other Bangorians who have risen to flag rank in the armed services include Lt. Gen. Walter F. Ulmer, former Commandant of Cadets at West Point and commander of the III Corps and Fort Hood; Rear Adm. George Adams Bright, surgeon and Medical Director of the Naval Hospital
Naval Hospital

Naval Hospital may refer to:* Bob Wilson Naval Hospital, San Diego, California, USA* Mound City Civil War Naval Hospital, Illinois, USA* Naval Hospital Boston Historic District, Massachusetts, USA...
 in Washington, D.C.; and Maj. Gen. Elmer P. Yates, an early proponent of nuclear power in the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.

Astronauts

Two future astronauts were among the pilots stationed at Bangor's Dow Air Force Base in the 1950s. Robert A. Rushworth
Robert A. Rushworth

Robert Aitken Rushworth was a United States Air Force test pilot for the North American X-15 program. Born in Madison, Maine, Maine on October 9, 1924....
 of Madison, Maine, and a graduate of the University of Maine
University of Maine

The University of Maine, established in 1865, is the largest campus, in terms of full-time equivalent enrollments, of the seven campuses in the University of Maine System....
 in nearby Orono
Orono, Maine

Orono is a New England town in Penobscot County, Maine, Maine, United States. It was first settled in 1774 and named in honor of Chief Joseph Orono of the Penobscot....
, was at Dow in 1951-53. He was one of 9 test pilots initially selected to be astronauts in 1958, and undertook a record number of rocket research flights (34) in the X-15, then the world's fastest and highest-flying winged aircraft. James A. McDivitt, a fighter pilot at Dow in 1953-54, became the command pilot of the NASA
NASA

The National Aeronautics and Space Administration is an agency of the Federal government of the United States, responsible for the nation's public list of space agencies....
 spacecraft Gemini 4
Gemini 4

Gemini 4 was a June 1965 manned space flight in NASA's Gemini program. It was the 2nd manned Project Gemini flight, the 10th manned American flight and the 18th spaceflight of all time ....
 in 1965. This space mission was the first in which an American astronaut (Edward Higgins White
Edward Higgins White

Edward Higgins White, II was a United States Air Force officer and a NASA astronaut. On June 3 1965, he became the first American to conduct a Extra-vehicular activity....
) conducted a space-walk. McDivitt took the famous photographs of that event. He was later commander of the Apollo 9
Apollo 9

Apollo 9 was the first manned flight of the Apollo Command/Service Module along with the Apollo Lunar Module . Its three-person crew of Mission Commander Jim McDivitt, Command Module Pilot David Scott, and Lunar Module Pilot Rusty Schweickart tested several aspects critical to landing on the moon including the LM engines, backpack life suppo...
 mission, which first tested the lunar module, and subsequently became Manager of the Apollo space program itself.

Inventors

Commercial Chewing gum
Chewing gum

Chewing gum is a type of confection traditionally made of chicle, a natural latex product, or synthetic rubber. For reasons of economy and quality, many modern chewing gums use rubber instead of chicle....
 was invented in Bangor in 1848 by John B. Curtis
John B. Curtis

John Bacon Curtis was an United States businessman....
, who marketed his product as "State of Maine Pure Spruce Gum". He later opened a successful gum factory in Portland, Maine
Portland, Maine

Portland is the largest city in the U.S. state of Maine and the county seat of Cumberland County, Maine. The city population was 64,249 at the 2000 United States Census....


L.B. Davies of Augusta, Maine, who came to work as a millwright in Bangor when he was 17, and subsequently joined the crew of a local steamboat, ended up in Ohio. There he invented the cow-catcher. He never patented it, nor made a cent from its widespread use.

Bangor's Hinkley & Egery Ironworks (later Union Ironworks) was a local center for invention in the 19th and early 20th centuries. A new type of steam engine
Steam engine

File:Steam-powered fire engine.jpgA steam engine is a heat engine that performs mechanical work using steam as its working fluid.Steam engines have a long history, going back at least 2000 years....
 built there, named the "Endeavor", won a Gold Medal at the New York Crystal Palace
New York Crystal Palace

New York Crystal Palace was an exhibition building constructed for the Exhibition of the Industry of All Nations in New York City in 1853. The building stood in Reservoir Square and was originally built for the World's Fair held in the summer of 1853....
 Exhibition of the American Institute in 1856. The firm won a diploma for a shingle-making machine the following year. In the 1920s, Union Iron Works engineer Don A. Sargent invented the first automotive snow plow. Sargent patented the device and the firm manufactured it for a national market.

Bangor-born physicist Hobart C. Dickinson invented the guarded hot plate, an improved calorimeter
Calorimeter

| |}A calorimeter is a device used for calorimetry, the science of measuring the heat of chemical reactions or physical changes as well as heat capacity....
, and other important testing devices while working at the National Bureau of Standards. He was also on the design team of the Liberty aircraft engine during World War I
World War I

World War I, or the First World War , was a global military conflict which involved the Great powers, organized into two opposing military alliances: the Allies of World War I and the Central Powers....
 and designed and built the first altitude chamber
Altitude chamber

A hypobaric chamber, or altitude chamber, is a chamber used during aerospace physiology or high terrestrial altitude research or training to simulate the effects of high altitude on the human body, especially hypoxia and hypobaria ....
 to test full-sized aircraft. After the war he founded the research lab of the Society of Automotive Engineers
Society of Automotive Engineers

SAE International is a professional organization for mobility engineering professionals in the aerospace, automotive, and commercial vehicle industries....
 and later became that organization's president.
Mos 6502ad 4585 Top
Col. Paul E. Watson
Paul E. Watson

Paul E. Watson was a pioneer researcher in the development of radar. Born in Bangor, Maine, Watson was a civilian engineer employed by the U.S....
 of Bangor, chief engineer of the U.S. Army Signal Corps, headed the team that built the army's first long-range radar
Radar

Radar is a system that uses electromagnetic radiation waves to identify the range, altitude, direction, or speed of both moving and fixed objects such as aircraft, ships, motor vehicles, weather formations, and terrain....
 in 1936-37. This was the radar deployed in Hawaii at the time of the Pearl Harbor Attack. The Army's radar laboratory was named "Watson Laboratories" after his death, and became the kernal of the present USAF Rome Laboratory
Rome Laboratory

The Rome Laboratory, formerly known as the Rome Air Development Center, is a research and development lab run by the US Air Force located at Griffiss AFB in Rome, NY....
.

Chuck Peddle
Chuck Peddle

Electronics engineer Chuck Peddle is mostly known as the main designer of the MOS Technology MOS Technology 6502 microprocessor; the KIM-1 single-board computer; and its successor the Commodore PET personal computer, both based on the 6502....
, who developed the MOS 6502
MOS Technology 6502

The MOS Technology 6502 is an 8-bit microprocessor that was designed by Chuck Peddle and Bill Mensch for MOS Technology in 1975. When it was introduced, it was the least expensive full-featured central processing unit on the market by a considerable margin, costing less than one-sixth the price of competing designs from larger companies such...
 microprocessor
Microprocessor

A microprocessor incorporates most or all of the functions of a central processing unit on a single integrated circuit . The first microprocessors emerged in the early 1970s and were used for electronic calculators, using Binary-coded decimal arithmetic on 4-bit Word ....
 in 1975, was born in Bangor in 1937.

Architects and engineers

Maine's first architect, Charles G. Bryant (1803-1858), lived and practiced in Bangor in the 1830s and designed Mt. Hope Cemetery
Mount Hope Cemetery, Bangor

Mt. Hope Cemetery in Bangor, Maine is the second oldest rural cemetery in the United States. It was designed by architect Charles G. Bryant in 1834, the same year that Bangor was incorporated as a city, and likely modeled after Mt....
, the second garden cemetery
Rural cemetery

The rural cemetery or garden cemetery is a style of burial ground that uses landscaping in a park-like setting.As early as 1711 the architect Sir Christopher Wren had advocated the creation of burial grounds on the outskirts of town, "inclosed with a strong Brick Wall, and having a walk round, and two cross walks, decently planted w...
 in the United States. Bryant later moved to Texas
Texas

Texas is a U.S. state located in the South Central United States, nicknamed the Lone Star State. Texas is the second largest U.S. state in both area and population, spanning , and with a growing population of 24.3 million residents....
 (Galveston) and became the first architect in that state, where, joining the Texas Rangers
Texas Ranger Division

The Texas Ranger Division, commonly called the Texas Rangers, is a police with statewide jurisdiction based in Austin, Texas, the capital of Texas, in the United States....
, he was eventually killed and scalped by Apache
Apache

Apache is the collective term for several culturally related groups of Native Americans in the United States. These indigenous peoples of North America speak a Southern Athabaskan languages language, and are related linguistically to the languages of Athabaskan speakers of Alaska and western Canada....
 Indians. Other prominent Bangor architects, many of whose buildings survive in the city and nearby towns, included Calvin Ryder, Benjamin S. Deane, George W. Orff, C. Parker Crowell, and Wilfred E. Mansur. The modern architect Eaton Tarbell has also strongly influenced Bangor's cityscape.

Edward Austin Kent (1854-1912) became a leading architect in Buffalo, New York
Buffalo, New York

Buffalo , is the second largest city in the state of New York. Located in Western New York on the eastern shores of Lake Erie and at the head of the Niagara River, Buffalo is the principal city of the Buffalo-Niagara Falls metropolitan area and the county seat of Erie County, New York....
 and three-time president of the American Institute of Architects
American Institute of Architects

The American Institute of Architects is a professional organization for architects in the United States. Located in Washington, D.C., the AIA offers education, government advocacy, community redevelopment, and public outreach to support the architecture profession and improve its public image....
. He went down on the Titanic in 1912.

Bangorian Charles Davis Jameson, an engineer who taught at MIT, subsequently went to China
China

China is a Culture of China, an ancient civilization, and, depending on perspective, a national or multinational entity extending over a large area in East Asia....
 and became Chief Consulting Engineer and Architect to the Imperial Chinese Government
Qing Dynasty

The Qing Dynasty , also known as the Manchu Dynasty, followed the Ming Dynasty in History of China, and was the last ruling Chinese Dynasties of China, ruling from 1644 to 1912 ....
 (1895-1918). He planned important hydraulics projects and witnessed the Boxer Rebellion
Boxer Rebellion

The Boxer Rebellion, or more properly Boxer Uprising, was a violent anti-foreign, anti-Christian movement by the "Righteous Fists of Harmony,? Yihe tuan or Society of Righteous and Harmonious Fists in China....


Another hydraulic engineer from Bangor, Hiram Francis Mills (1836-1920), headed the Lawrence Experiment Station
Lawrence Experiment Station

The Lawrence Experiment Station, now known as the Senator William X. Wall Experiment Station, was the world's first trial station for drinking water purification and sewage treatment....
, which was the first in America to develop a practical method of treating wastewater. Mills' work stopped a typhoid fever
Typhoid fever

Typhoid fever, also known as enteric fever, or commonly just typhoid, is an illness caused by the bacterium Salmonella typhi. Common worldwide, it is transmitted by the ingestion of food or water contaminated with feces from an infected person....
 epidemic in Massachusetts, and he was subsequently christened "The Father of American Sanitary Engineering".

Although not strictly an engineer, Bangor lawyer Francis Clergue
Francis Clergue

Francis Hector Clergue was an American businessman who became the leading industrialist of Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario, Ontario, at the turn of the 20th century....
, born in neighboring Brewer
Brewer, Maine

Brewer is a city in Penobscot County, Maine, Maine, United States. It is part of the Bangor, Maine Metropolitan Statistical Area. The city is named after its first settler, Colonel John Brewer....
 oversaw one of the most ambitious engineering projects in North America, the development of Sault Ste Marie Michigan and Ontario as a major hydropower
Hydropower

Hydropower, hydraulic power or water power is power that is derived from the force or energy of moving water, which may be harnessed for useful purposes....
 and industrial center in the 1890s-1900s. Before that Clergue had organized the Bangor Street Railway (the first electric railway in Maine) and the Bangor Waterworks, and had tried and failed to build a railroad across Persia and a waterworks in its capital, Tehran
Tehran

Tehran is the capital and largest city of Iran, and the administrative center of Tehran Province. Tehran is a sprawling city at the foot of the Alborz mountain range with an immense network of highways unparalleled in Western Asia....
.

Prominent Chicago architect Ernest Alton Gunsfeld was a draftsman at Dow Field in Bangor during the Korean War.

Physicians

Elliott Carr Cutler
Elliott Cutler

Elliot Carr Cutler was an United States surgeon and medical educator. He was Moseley Professor of Surgery at Harvard Medical School and Surgeon-in-Chief at Peter Bent Brigham Hospital from 1932 to 1947....
 (1888-1947), son of a Bangor lumber merchant, became Chairman of the Dept. of Surgery at Harvard Medical School
Harvard Medical School

Harvard Medical School is one of the graduate schools of Harvard University and currently the #1 medical school in America, as ranked by U.S. News and World Report....
 and a pioneer in cardiac surgery
Cardiac surgery

Cardiac surgery is surgery on the heart and/or great vessels performed by a cardiac surgeon. Frequently, it is done to treat complications of ischemic heart disease , correct congenital heart disease, or treat valvular heart disease created by various causes including endocarditis....
, inventing a number of important techniques and publishing over 200 papers. He was elected President of the American Surgical Association, and later became surgeon-in-chief at Brigham Hospital in Boston. During the Second World War he was Chief Surgical Consultant in the European Theatre of Operations with the rank of Brigadier General. Another Bangor-born Harvard Medical School
Harvard Medical School

Harvard Medical School is one of the graduate schools of Harvard University and currently the #1 medical school in America, as ranked by U.S. News and World Report....
 professor, Frederick T. Lord, was a pioneer in the use of serum to treat pneumonia
Pneumonia

Pneumonia is an Inflammation illness of the lung. Frequently, it is described as lung parenchyma/alveolus inflammation and abnormal alveolar filling with fluid ....
, and was elected President of the American Association of Thoracic Surgery.

Charlotte Blake Brown (1846-1904) of Bangor was a pioneering female physician who co-founded what became Children's Hospital of San Francisco in 1878, with an all-female staff and board of directors. In 1880 she also founded the first nursing school
Nursing school

A Nursing school is a type of Education, or part thereof, providing education and training to become a fully-qualified nurse. The nature of Nurse education and nursing qualifications varies considerably across the world....
 in the American West. Children's Hospital merged with another institution to become California Pacific Medical Center
California Pacific Medical Center

California Pacific Medical Center is one of the largest private, non-profit, academic medical centers in Northern California. The Medical Center is a combination of four of San Francisco's oldest medical institutions: Pacific Presbyterian Hospital, Children's Hospital of San Francisco and Davies Medical Center, now known as the Pacific Campu...
 in 1991.

Judges

Chief Justice
Chief Justice

The Chief Justice in many countries is the name for the presiding member of a Supreme Court in Commonwealth or other countries with an Anglo-Saxon justice system based on English common law, such as the Supreme Court of the United States, the Supreme Court of Canada, the Supreme Court of India, the Supreme Court of Pakistan, the Supreme Court...
 of the U.S. Supreme Court Melville Weston Fuller (who served 1888-1910) read law in Bangor with his two uncles after graduating from Bowdoin College
Bowdoin College

Bowdoin College , founded in 1794, is a private Liberal arts colleges in the United States located in the coastal New England town of Brunswick, Maine, Maine....
 in 1853. He was admitted to the bar in Bangor in 1855. His brother Henry Weld Fuller, who was a Bangor druggist in the 1850s, later moved to Chicago and became President of the American Pharmaceutical Association. One of Fuller's uncles, Bangor attorney George Melville Weston, wrote books and essays opposing slavery, and eventually became the Librarian of the Senate
United States Senate Librarian

The Senate Library is an administrative office that reports into the Secretary of the United States Senate. It serves as a legislative and general reference library that provides both traditional and computerized information services and maintains a comprehensive collection of congressional, governmental, and other publications for the use of...
.

Edward Kent Jr., son of Bangor Mayor, Maine Governor, and Maine Supreme Judicial Court
Maine Supreme Judicial Court

The Maine Supreme Judicial Court is the highest court in Maine's Maine Judicial Branch. Known as the Law Court when sitting as an appellate court, it is composed of seven justices, who are appointed by the Governor of Maine and confirmed by the Maine Senate....
 Justice Edward Kent
Edward Kent

Edward Kent was the List of Governors of Maine of the U.S. state of Maine during the Aroostook War. Born in 1802 in Concord, New Hampshire, he later moved to Bangor, Maine and spent the rest of his life there....
, was appointed by his Harvard classmate Theodore Roosevelt as Chief Justice
Chief Justice

The Chief Justice in many countries is the name for the presiding member of a Supreme Court in Commonwealth or other countries with an Anglo-Saxon justice system based on English common law, such as the Supreme Court of the United States, the Supreme Court of Canada, the Supreme Court of India, the Supreme Court of Pakistan, the Supreme Court...
 of the Arizona Territory
Arizona Territory

The Territory of Arizona was an organized territory of the United States that existed between 1863 and 1912. A forerunner, almost identical in name but largely differing in location and size, was the Arizona Territory that existed officially from 1861 to 1863, when it was re-captured by the U.S., after which the Union created in 1863 their...
 Supreme Court, 1902-1912. He is noted for a landmark ruling on water rights (the Kent Decree of 1910)

Bangor lawyer John Appleton (1804-1891) was Chief Justice
Chief Justice

The Chief Justice in many countries is the name for the presiding member of a Supreme Court in Commonwealth or other countries with an Anglo-Saxon justice system based on English common law, such as the Supreme Court of the United States, the Supreme Court of Canada, the Supreme Court of India, the Supreme Court of Pakistan, the Supreme Court...
 of the Maine Supreme Judicial Court
Maine Supreme Judicial Court

The Maine Supreme Judicial Court is the highest court in Maine's Maine Judicial Branch. Known as the Law Court when sitting as an appellate court, it is composed of seven justices, who are appointed by the Governor of Maine and confirmed by the Maine Senate....
 from 1862 to 1883. A disciple of Jeremy Bentham
Jeremy Bentham

Jeremy Bentham was an England jurist, philosopher, and legal and social reformer. He was the brother of Samuel Bentham. He was a political radical, and a leading theorist in Anglo-American philosophy of law....
, his was the first U.S. court to rule that the accused could testify in criminal trials (1864), an innovation that only became Federal law in 1878.

They married well

Bettina Brown Gorton, the wife of Australian Prime Minister Sir John Gorton
John Gorton

Sir John Grey Gorton, Order of St Michael and St George, Order of Australia, Order of the Companions of Honour , Australian politician, was the 19th Prime Minister of Australia....
 (who served 1968-71) was from Bangor. She is the only wife of an Australian PM to have been foreign-born.

Marie Jennings Reid Parkhurst, a Washington
Washington

Washington is a U.S. state in the Pacific Northwest region of the United States. Washington was carved out of the western part of Washington Territory which had been ceded by Britain in 1846 by the Oregon Treaty as settlement of the Oregon Boundary Dispute....
 socialite and wife of Bangor politician Frederic Hale Parkhurst, who lived for a time on West Broadway, divorced him and married (in 1901) an Italian Prince she had met in Bar Harbor. As Princess Rospigliosi, Reid created headlines through the 1910s as she attempted to have her previous marriage to Protestant Parkhurst annulled by the Pope
Pope

The Pope is the Bishop of Rome, the leader of the Roman Catholic Church and head of state of Vatican City. The current pope is Pope Benedict XVI, who was elected April 19, 2005 in Papal conclave, 2005....
. Parkhurst eventually became Governor of Maine. Reid's son Girolamo became the 9th Prince Rospigliosi, and caused his own sensation by eloping with American oil heiress Marian Snowden in 1931. Elizabeth Muzzy of Bangor married William Drew Washburn, U.S. Congressman and Senator from Minnesota
Minnesota

Minnesota is a U.S. state in the Midwestern United States of the United States. The twelfth largest state by area in the U.S., it is the twenty-first most populous, with just over five million residents....
, a co-founder of the Pillbury-Washburn Flour Mills, which eventually became the Pillsbury Company. Three of her brothers-in-law were also U.S. Congressmen, including Israel Washburn
Israel Washburn

Israel Washburn, Sr. was a Massachusetts politician and brother of Reuel Washburn. He married Patty Washburn and had eleven children with her, including seven sons ....
, who represented Bangor at the time of the Civil War
Civil war

A civil war is a war between organized groups to take control of a nation or region, or to change government policies. It is high-intensity conflict, often involving Regular Army, that is sustained, organized and large-scale....
, and Cadwallader Washburn, who founded General Mills
General Mills

General Mills is a Fortune 500 corporation, mainly concerned with food products, which is headquartered in Golden Valley, Minnesota, Minnesota, a suburb of Minneapolis, Minnesota....
, the company which would eventually absorb Pillsbury.

Ella Nye (1851-1931) of Bangor married Alva Adams
Alva Adams (governor)

Alva Adams was an United States politician who served as Governor of Colorado. He was born in Iowa County, Wisconsin. He served as governor of Colorado from 1887 to 1889, from 1897 to 1899, and for a few months in 1905....
, the first Governor of Colorado
Colorado

The State of Colorado is a U.S. state located in the Mountain States of the United States of America. Colorado may also be considered to be a part of the Western United States and Southwestern United States regions of the United States....
. Their son Alva B. Adams
Alva B. Adams

Alva Blanchard Adams was a Coloradan and United States Democratic Party politician who represented Colorado in the United States Senate from 1923 until 1925 and from 1933 to 1941....
 became a U.S. Senator from the same state.

Beer baroness and conservative political donor Holland "Holly" Hanson Coors
Holly Coors

Holland "Holly" Coors was an United States Conservatism in the United States political activist and philanthropist who had been married to Joseph Coors, the president of Coors Brewing Company....
 (1920-2009) was born in Bangor. The widow of Joseph Coors
Joseph Coors

Joseph Coors, Sr. , was the grandson of Adolph Coors and president of Coors Brewing Company. He did not have a middle name or initial....
, Colorado
Colorado

The State of Colorado is a U.S. state located in the Mountain States of the United States of America. Colorado may also be considered to be a part of the Western United States and Southwestern United States regions of the United States....
 brewer and founder of the Heritage Foundation
Heritage Foundation

The Heritage Foundation is an American American conservatism-leaning think tank based in Washington, D.C.The foundation took a leading role in the conservative movement during the presidency of Ronald Reagan, whose policies drew significantly from Heritage's policy study Mandate for Leadership....
, Holly Coors sat on that organization's board of trustees.

Diplomats

Patrick Duddy of Bangor is the U.S. Ambassador to Venezuela
Venezuela

Venezuela , officially the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela , is a country on the northern coast of South America.The country comprises a continental mainland and numerous islands located off the Venezuelan coastline in the Caribbean Sea....
.

Other diplomats who were born or lived in Bangor include Robert Newbegin II, U.S. Ambassador to Honduras
Honduras

Honduras is a democratic republic in Central America. It was formerly known as Spanish Honduras to differentiate it from British Honduras ....
 (1958) and Haiti
Haiti

Haiti , officially the Republic of Haiti , is a Haitian Creole language- and French language-speaking Caribbean country. Along with the Dominican Republic, it occupies the island of Hispaniola, in the Greater Antilles archipelago....
 (1960-61); Charles Stetson Wilson, U.S. Ambassador to Bulgaria
Bulgaria

The state of Bulgaria , Scientific transliteration Balgarija, officially the Republic of Bulgaria has played a significant role in the Balkans in south-eastern Europe for over fourteen centuries....
 (1921-28); Romania
Romania

Romania is a country located in Southeastern Europe Central Europe, North of the Balkan Peninsula, on the Lower Danube, within and outside the Carpathian Mountains, bordering on the Black Sea....
 (1928), and Yugoslavia
Yugoslavia

File:LocationYugoslavia2.pngYugoslavia is a term that describes three political entities that existed successively on the Balkan Peninsula in Europe, during most of the 20th century....
 (1933); William Pennell Snow, U.S. Ambassador to Burma (1959) and Paraguay
Paraguay

Paraguay, officially the Republic of Paraguay , is one of the only two landlocked countries in South America . It lies on both banks of the Paraguay River and is bordered by Argentina to the south and southwest, Brazil to the east and northeast, and Bolivia to the northwest....
 (1961-67); Chester E. Norris, U.S. Ambassador to Equatorial Guinea
Equatorial Guinea

The Republic of Equatorial Guinea is a Spanish-speaking country located in Central Africa. With an area of 28,000 km2 it is one of the smallest countries in continental Africa, having a population estimated at half a million....
 (1988-91); Gorham Parks
Gorham Parks

Gorham Parks was a United States House of Representatives from Maine.Born in Westfield, Massachusetts, Parks attended the common schools and graduated from Harvard University in 1813, where he studied law....
, U.S. Consul in Rio de Janeiro
Rio de Janeiro

Rio de Janeiro , is the second largest city of Brazil and South America, behind S?o Paulo, and the third largest metropolitan area in South America, behind S?o Paulo and Buenos Aires....
 (1945-49); Wyman Bradbury Seavy Moor, U.S. Consul-General to Canada
Canada

Canada is a country occupying most of northern North America, extending from the Atlantic Ocean in the east to the Pacific Ocean in the west and northward into the Arctic Ocean....
 (1857-61); and Aaron Young, Jr., U.S. Consul in Rio Grande do Sul
Rio Grande do Sul

is the southernmost States of Brazil of Brazil, and the State with the fourth highest Human Development Index . In Rio Grande do Sul is the most southern city of the country, Chu?, on Uruguayan border....
, Brazil (1863-73), who was formerly Maine's State Botanist and Secretary of the Bangor Natural History Society. Hannibal Hamlin
Hannibal Hamlin

Hannibal Hamlin was the List of Vice Presidents of the United States Vice President of the United States, serving under President of the United States Abraham Lincoln from 1861-1865....
, Lincoln's Vice President and Bangor politician, served as U.S. Ambassador to Spain
Spain

Spain or the Kingdom of Spain , is a country located in Southern Europe on the Iberian Peninsula.The Spanish constitution does not establish any official denomination of the country, even though Espa?a , Estado espa?ol and Naci?n espa?ola are used interchangeably....
 later in his career.

While former Maine Governor Edward Kent
Edward Kent

Edward Kent was the List of Governors of Maine of the U.S. state of Maine during the Aroostook War. Born in 1802 in Concord, New Hampshire, he later moved to Bangor, Maine and spent the rest of his life there....
 was U.S. Consul in Rio de Janeiro
Rio de Janeiro

Rio de Janeiro , is the second largest city of Brazil and South America, behind S?o Paulo, and the third largest metropolitan area in South America, behind S?o Paulo and Buenos Aires....
 1849-53, he lost two of his three children to yellow fever
Yellow fever

Yellow fever is an acute Virus disease. It is an important cause of hemorrhage illness in many African and South American countries despite existence of an effective vaccine....
. His wife died the year they returned to Bangor, and his surviving child soon after.

Bangor politician Elisha Hunt Allen
Elisha Hunt Allen

Elisha Hunt Allen was an United States lawyer, diplomat, and Hawaiian justice. He was born in New Salem, Massachusetts, attended New Salem Academy and graduated from Williams College in 1823....
 served as U.S. Consul to the Kingdom of Hawaii
Kingdom of Hawaii

The Kingdom of Hawaii was established during the years 1795 to 1810 with the subjugation of the smaller independent chiefdoms of Oahu, Maui, Molokai, Lanai, Kauai and Niihau by the chiefdom of Hawaii into one unified government....
 1850-56, and then joined the Hawaiian government as Chancellor and Chief Justice 1857-76. In that capacity he accompanied King Kalakaua on his first and only trip to the United States in 1874. Allen returned to Washington as Ambassador of the Kingdom of Hawaii
Kingdom of Hawaii

The Kingdom of Hawaii was established during the years 1795 to 1810 with the subjugation of the smaller independent chiefdoms of Oahu, Maui, Molokai, Lanai, Kauai and Niihau by the chiefdom of Hawaii into one unified government....
 to the United States, and died on the job during a White House
White House

The White House is the official residence and principal workplace of the President of the United States. Located at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue in Washington, D.C., it was built between 1792 and 1800 of white-painted Aquia sandstone in the late Georgian architecture and has been the executive residence of every U.S....
 diplomatic reception in 1883.

Journalists

Joseph W. Grigg of Bangor was the Chief European Correspondent for United Press International
United Press International

United Press International is a news agency headquartered in the United States with roots dating back to 1907. Once a mainstay in the newswire service along with Associated Press and Reuters, it began to decline as afternoon newspapers, its chief client category, began to fail with the rising popularity of television news....
 for 25 years. He was the only American reporter in Berlin
Berlin

Berlin is the Capital of Germany city and one of sixteen States of Germany of Germany. With a population of 3.4 million within its city limits, Berlin is the country's largest city....
 at both the beginning and end of the Second World War, and one of the first in Warsaw
Warsaw

Warsaw is the Capital and World's largest cities of Poland. It is located on the Vistula River roughly from both the Baltic Sea coast and the Carpathian Mountains....
 after its fall to the Nazis. He was briefly interred in Germany when America entered the war. He was among the first to report on the Nazi murder of Jews in Eastern Europe, and later covered the trial of Adolf Eichmann
Adolf Eichmann

Karl Adolf Eichmann , sometimes referred to as "the architect of the Holocaust", was a Nazism and Schutzstaffel-Obersturmbannf?hrer . Due to his organizational talents and ideological reliability, he was charged by Obergruppenf?hrer Reinhard Heydrich with the task of facilitating and managing the logistics of mass deportation of J...
.

Margherita Arlina Hamm
Margherita Arlina Hamm

Margherita Arlina Hamm was among the earliest American female journalists, and perhaps the first one to cover a war from the front lines. She was also a prolific author of popular books, especially relating to travel and famous people....
, who spent part of her childhood in Bangor, was a pioneering female journalist who covered the Sino-Japanese War
First Sino-Japanese War

The First Sino-Japanese War was a war fought between Qing Dynasty China and Meiji period Imperial Japan over the control of Korea. The Sino-Japanese War would come to symbolize the degeneration and enfeeblement of the Qing Dynasty and demonstrate how successful modernization had been in Japan since the Meiji Restoration as compared with the...
 and Spanish-American War
Spanish-American War

The Spanish?American War was an armed military conflict between Spain and the United States that took place between April and August 1898, over the issues of the liberation of Cuba....
 for New York newspapers, sometimes from the front lines. She was also a prolific author of popular non-fiction books. A suffragette
Suffragette

File:British suffragette.jpgSuffragette is a term originally coined by the Daily Mail newspaper as a derogatory label for the more Political radicalism and militant members of the late-19th and early-20th century movement for women's suffrage Women's suffrage in the United Kingdom, in particular members of the Women's Social and Politica...
, she was nonetheless a defender of American imperialism, chairing the pro-war "Woman's Congress of Patriotism and Independence" and writing an heroic biography of Admiral George Dewey
George Dewey

George Dewey was an admiral of the United States Navy, best known for his victory at the Battle of Manila Bay during the Spanish-American War....
 .

Ralph W. 'Bud' Leavitt Jr.
Ralph W. 'Bud' Leavitt Jr.

File:Bangor Maine.JPGRalph W. 'Bud' Leavitt Jr. was a Maine newspaperman who was executive sports editor of Bangor Daily News, and a longtime outdoor literature recognized statewide....
 was a longtime columnist and editor for The Bangor Daily News. Born in Old Town, Maine
Old Town, Maine

Old Town is a city in Penobscot County, Maine, Maine, United States. The population was 8,130 at the 2000 United States Census. The city's developed area is chiefly located on a relatively large island, though its boundaries extend beyond that....
, Leavitt became a cub reporter at The Bangor Daily Commercial at age 17 in 1934. Following the Second World War, Leavitt signed on with The News, where he filed, during the course of his career, 13,104 columns devoted to the outdoors, and where he served for many years as executive sports editor. Leavitt also hosted two long-running TV shows about the outdoors on Maine television.

Clergymen and missionaries

The Bangor Theological Seminary
Bangor Theological Seminary

Bangor Theological Seminary is an ecumenical seminary, founded in 1814, in the Congregational tradition of the United Church of Christ. It is located in Bangor, Maine and Portland, Maine....
 produced a number of influential ministers, missionaries, and scholars in the 19th century. The seminary's first professor and director, Jehudi Ashmun
Jehudi Ashmun

Jehudi Ashmun was a religious leader and social reformer born in Champlain , New York. Ashmun was the leader of a group of settlers and missionaries who came to Liberia on the ship "Elizabeth" in 1822....
 later led a group of 32 freed slaves to the American Colonization Society
American Colonization Society

The American Colonization Society was an organization that helped in founding Liberia, a colony on the coast of West Africa. In 1821 Black Americans traveled there from the United States....
's African colony in Liberia
Liberia

Liberia , officially the Republic of Liberia, is a country on the west coast of Africa, bordered by Sierra Leone, Guinea, C?te d'Ivoire, and the Atlantic Ocean....
 in 1822, and is considered one of the founders of that nation. Cyrus Hamlin
Cyrus Hamlin

For the Civil War general, see Cyrus Hamlin .Cyrus Hamlin was an United States Congregational church missionary and educator, the father of Alfred Dwight Foster Hamlin....
, who graduated from the seminary in 1837, was the founder and first president of Robert College
Robert College

Robert College of Istanbul , is the most selective independent private high school in Turkey. Robert College is a co-educational, boarding school with a 65-acre wooded campus on the European side of Istanbul between the two bridges on the Bosphorus, with the Arnavutk?y district to the east, and the upscale Ulus district to the west....
 in Istanbul, Turkey, and later president of Middlebury College
Middlebury College

Middlebury College is a private Liberal arts colleges in the United States located in Middlebury , Vermont, Vermont, United States. Drawing 2,350 undergraduates from all 50 United States and over 70 countries, Middlebury offers 44 majors in the arts, humanities, literature, foreign languages, social sciences, and natural sciences....
 (1880-85) in Vermont. His friend and classmate Elkanah Walker left Bangor in 1838 to become one of the first missionaries (or American settlers) in the Oregon Territory
Oregon Territory

The Oregon Territory is the name applied both to the unorganized Oregon Country claimed by both the United States and United Kingdom , as well as to the Organized incorporated territories of the United States formed from it that existed between 1848 and 1859....
. His son Cyrus Hamlin Walker was the first child born of American settlers west of the Rocky Mountains to live to adulthood.

Seminarian Daniel Dole (1808-78) left Bangor in 1839 to establish one of the earliest Protestant missions in Hawaii
Hawaii

File:Pahoehoe and Aa flows at Hawaii.jpgThe State of Hawaii is a U.S. state in the United States, located on an archipelago in the central Pacific Ocean southwest of the continental United States, southeast of Japan, and northeast of Australia....
, and ended up founding a local dynasty. His son Sanford Dole led the successful coup d'etat
Coup d'état

A coup d??tat , often simply called a coup, is the sudden unconstitutional overthrow of a government by a part of the state establishment – usually the military – to replace the branch of the stricken government, either with another civil government or with a military government....
 against the Kingdom of Hawaii
Kingdom of Hawaii

The Kingdom of Hawaii was established during the years 1795 to 1810 with the subjugation of the smaller independent chiefdoms of Oahu, Maui, Molokai, Lanai, Kauai and Niihau by the chiefdom of Hawaii into one unified government....
 in 1893, becoming the only President of the Republic of Hawaii
Republic of Hawaii

The Republic of Hawaii was the formal name of the government that controlled Hawaii from 1894 to 1898 when it was run as a republic. The republic period occurred between the administration of the Provisional Government of Hawaii which ended on July 4, 1894 and the adoption of the Newlands Resolution in the United States Congress in which th...
 and, later, the first American territorial governor. Daniel's nephew James Drummond Dole became the "Pineapple King".

Another seminary graduate, Edwin Pond Parker (1836-1920), became a member of Mark Twain
Mark Twain

Samuel Langhorne Clemens , better known by the pen name Mark Twain, was an United Statesmerican author and humorist. Twain is most noted for his novels Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, which has since been called the Great American Novel, and The Adventures of Tom Sawyer....
's literary circle in Hartford, Connecticut
Hartford, Connecticut

Hartford is the Capital of the Connecticut. It is located in Hartford County, Connecticut on the Connecticut River, north of the center of the state, south of Springfield, Massachusetts....
, and inspired him to write The Prince and the Pauper
The Prince and the Pauper

The Prince and the Pauper is an English language novel by American author Mark Twain. It was first published in 1881 in Canada before its 1882 publication in the United States....
. Parker himself wrote or arranged over 200 hymns, and was the first Congregational minister in the Northeast to celebrate Christmas. He was also the father-in-law of writer and bohemian Dorothy Parker
Dorothy Parker

Dorothy Parker was an American writer and poet, best known for her caustic wit, wisecracks, and sharp eye for 20th century urban foibles.From a conflicted and unhappy childhood, Parker rose to acclaim, both for her literary output in such venues as The New Yorker and as a founding member of the Algonquin Round Table, a group she later...
.

Father John Bapst (1815-1887) a Swiss-born member of the Jesuit order, was sent to Old Town, Maine
Old Town, Maine

Old Town is a city in Penobscot County, Maine, Maine, United States. The population was 8,130 at the 2000 United States Census. The city's developed area is chiefly located on a relatively large island, though its boundaries extend beyond that....
 in the late 1840s to minister to the Catholic Penobscot
Penobscot

The Penobscot are a sovereign people indigenous to what is now Maritime Canada and the northeastern United States, particularly Maine. They were and are significant participants in the historical and present Wabanaki Confederacy, along with the Passamaquoddy, Maliseet and Mi'kmaq nations....
 tribe. Soon he was conducting a roving ministry to 33 Maine towns, largely as a result of Irish-Catholic immigration. In 1851 he was embroiled in a religious controversy over grammar school education in Ellsworth, Maine
Ellsworth, Maine

Ellsworth is a city in and the county seat of Hancock County, Maine, Maine, United States. In the United States Census, 2000, it had a population of 6,456....
, and was brutalized, robbed, and tarred and feathered
Tarred and Feathered

"Tarred and Feathered" is a song by England punk rock band Dogs and is featured on their debut album, Turn Against This Land. Released on November 28, 2005, it was the fifth and final Single taken from the album....
 by a Protestant mob, inspired by the Know-Nothing Party, which was popular in coastal Maine. He fled to Bangor, where a large Irish-Catholic community was gathering, and where members of the local elite presented him with a new watch, his previous one having been stolen in Ellsworth. Bapst stayed in Bangor until 1859, overseeing the construction of the large brick St. John's Catholic Church in 1855. He left in 1860 to become the first rector of Boston College
Boston College

Boston College is a private university located in the village of Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts, in the city of Newton, Massachusetts, Massachusetts, in the New England region of the United States, rendering it neither in Boston nor a college....
. Later he became superintendent of the Jesuit order in New York
New York

The State of New York is a U.S. state in the Mid-Atlantic States and Northeastern United States regions of the United States and is the nation's List of U.S....
 and Canada
Canada

Canada is a country occupying most of northern North America, extending from the Atlantic Ocean in the east to the Pacific Ocean in the west and northward into the Arctic Ocean....
, and died in Baltimore, Maryland
Baltimore, Maryland

Baltimore is an independent city and the largest city in the U.S. state of Maryland in the United States. Baltimore is located in central Maryland along the tidal portion of the Patapsco River, an arm of the Chesapeake Bay....
. The present John Bapst Memorial High School
John Bapst Memorial High School

John Bapst Memorial High School is a private school, independent, collegepreparatory high school in Bangor, Maine, United States. It serves just under 500 ninth through twelfth grade students from 45 different communities in the region....
 in Bangor, formerly Catholic but now non-sectarian, is named for him.

Bangor Methodist Minister Benjamin Franklin Tefft became president of Genesee College in New York (the nucleus of the later Syracuse University
Syracuse University

Syracuse University is a private research university located in Syracuse, New York, New York. It was founded as a university in 1870, but its roots can be traced back to a seminary founded by the Methodist Episcopal Church in 1832 which eventually became Genesee College....
), and, in 1862, U.S. Consul in Stockholm
Stockholm

is the capital and largest city of Sweden. It is the site of the national Swedish Government of Sweden, the Parliament of Sweden, and the official residence of the Swedish Monarchy of Sweden....
 and acting Ambassador to Sweden
Sweden

Sweden , officially the Kingdom of Sweden , is a Nordic countries on the Scandinavian Peninsula in Northern Europe. Sweden has land borders with Norway to the west and Finland to the northeast, and it is connected to Denmark by the ?resund Bridge in the south....


Rev. Charles Carroll Everett
Charles Carroll Everett

Charles Carroll Everett was an United States divine and philosopher.Everett graduated from Bowdoin College in 1850, after which he studied at the Humboldt University of Berlin....
, pastor of the Bangor Unitarian Church 1859-69, later became a noted philosopher of religion and Dean of the Harvard Divinity School
Harvard Divinity School

Harvard Divinity School is one of the constituent schools of Harvard University, located in Cambridge, Massachusetts, in the United States of America....
.

Bangor-born carpenter Joseph W. Coolidge became an early Mormon
Mormon

Mormon is a term used to describe the adherents, practitioners, followers or constituents of Mormonism. The term most often refers to a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints , which is commonly called the Mormon Church....
 church Elder under Joseph Smith
Joseph Smith

Joseph Smith may refer to:The founder of the Latter Day Saint movement and his relatives:* Joseph Smith, Jr. , founder* Joseph Smith, Sr....
 in Nauvoo, Illinois
Nauvoo, Illinois

Nauvoo is a small city in Hancock County, Illinois, Illinois, United States. Although the current population is just 1,063 , and it is difficult to reach over secondary highways in a remote corner of Illinois, Nauvoo attracts large numbers of visitors for its historic importance and its religious significance to members of both the The Churc...
, where he also built Smith's House. When Smith was killed by a mob, Coolidge became administrator of his estate. He refused to follow Brigham Young
Brigham Young

Brigham Young was an American leader in the Latter Day Saint movement. He was the President of the Church of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints from 1847 until his death....
 and most of the church to Utah
Utah

The State of Utah is a western United States U.S. state of the United States. It was the List of U.S. states by date of statehood admitted to the United States on January 4, 1896....
, however, settling instead in Glenwood, Iowa
Glenwood, Iowa

Glenwood is a city in Mills County, Iowa, Iowa, United States. The population was 5,358 at the 2000 census. It is the county seat of Mills County, Iowa....
. Likewise, Josephine Curtis Woodbury of Bangor was one of the earliest proponents of Christian Science
Christian Science

Christian Science is a religious belief system claimed to have been discovered in the year 1866 by Mary Baker Eddy. Practiced most prominently by members of the Church of Christ, Scientist that she founded, Christian Science asserts that humanity and the universe as a whole are, correctly viewed, spiritual rather than material; that truth an...
 but later published books debunking that religion, and prosecuted a lawsuit against the church's founder, Mary Baker Eddy
Mary Baker Eddy

Mary Baker Eddy was the founder of the Christian Science movement. Deeply religious, she advocated Christian Science as a spiritual practical solution to health and moral issues....
. Woodbury attempted to establish her own religious sect based on the "immaculate conception" of her illegitimate son, whom she named 'Prince of Peace'.

Rev. Dana W. Bartlett of Bangor moved to Los Angeles, California
Los Angeles, California

Los Angeles is the largest city in the U.S. state of California and the List of United States cities by population in the United States. Often abbreviated as L.A. and nicknamed The City of Angels, Los Angeles is rated as a beta global city, has an estimated population of 3.8 million and spans over in Southern California....
 in 1896, founded a settlement house (the Bethlehem Institute) and became a major figure in the local progressive
Progressivism

The term progressive has varying meanings in different countries.In some countries, the word refers to left-wing politics. For instance, in the United States, the term progressive emerged in the late 19th century into the 20th century in reference to a more general response to the vast changes brought by industrialization: an alternativ...
 and City Beautiful movements. He is an honoree in the California Social Work Hall of Distinction
California Social Work Hall of Distinction

The California Social Work Hall of Distinction was established in 2002 to honor those involved in bringing about the betterment of society and to ensure that the contributions of social work leaders, innovators and pioneers would be recognized and preserved for the future....
.

Two Bangor-born Episcopal Bishops took pro-active positions on the Civil Rights
Civil rights

Civil and political rights are a class of rights ensuring things such as the protection of peoples' physical integrity; procedural fairness in law; protection from discrimination based on sexism, religious intolerance, Racism, Homophobia, etc; individual freedom of freedom of belief, freedom of speech, freedom of association, and freedom...
 struggle in the 1950s/60s. Norman Burdett Nash was Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Massachusetts
Episcopal Diocese of Massachusetts

The Episcopal Diocese of Massachusetts is one of the List of Original Dioceses of ECUSA Dioceses of the Episcopal Church in the United States of America....
, and Gerald Francis Burrill of the Episcopal Diocese of Chicago
Episcopal Diocese of Chicago

The Episcopal Diocese of Chicago is the official organization of the Episcopal Church in the United States of America in Chicago and Northern Illinois, USA....
. Bangor-born Edward C. O'Leary was Bishop of the Catholic Diocese of Maine in the 1970s-80s.

Spirit mediums

Joseph Osgood Barrett (1823-1898), born in Bangor, was a Universalist minister who became a prominent spiritualist and spirit medium in Illinois and Wisconsin. He was also a lecturer and author of books on spiritualism
Spiritualism

Spiritualism is a monotheism belief system or religion, postulating a belief in God, but the distinguishing feature is belief that spirits of the dead can be contacted, either by individuals or by gifted or trained "Mediumships", who can provide information about the afterlife....
, and editor of the Chicago-based newspaper The Spiritual Republic. He became known as an advocate of women's rights
Women's rights

The term women's rights refers to Freedom and entitlements of women and girls of all ages. These rights may or may not be institutionalized, ignored or suppressed by law, local custom, and behavior in a particular society....
 with the publication of his book Social Freedom; Marriage: As It Is and As It Should Be in 1873.

Civil servants

William Hammatt Davis of Bangor, brother of playwright Owen Davis
Owen Davis

Owen Gould Davis, Sr. was an American dramatist. He received the 1923 Pulitzer Prize for Drama for his 1923 play Icebound, and penned hundreds of plays and scripts for radio and film....
, served as Chairman of the War Labor Board under Franklin Roosevelt, where his job was keeping industrial peace between management and labor. He was appointed US Economic Stabilizer at the end of the war. He also helped draft the National Labor Relations Act
National Labor Relations Act

The National Labor Relations Act is a 1935 United States federal law that protects the rights of most workers in the private sector to organize trade unions, to engage in collective bargaining, and to take part in Strike actions and other forms of concerted activity in support of their demands....
 (the Wagner Act) of 1935, which gave labor unions the right to organize.

Artemus E. Weatherbee (d. 1995) of Bangor was an Assistant Secretary of the Treasury (1959-70) and thereafter U.S. Director of the Asian Development Bank
Asian Development Bank

The Asian Development Bank is a Multilateral development bank established in 1966 to promote economic and social development in Asian and Pacific countries through loans and technical assistance....
 with the rank of Ambassador.

Jay Stone of Bangor was Chief Clerk of the War Department
War Department

War Department may refer to:* War Department , the United Kingdom government department* United States Department of War , under the leadership of the United States Secretary of War...
 in the 1920s.

Bangor-born Portland
Portland, Maine

Portland is the largest city in the U.S. state of Maine and the county seat of Cumberland County, Maine. The city population was 64,249 at the 2000 United States Census....
 lawyer Ralph Lancaster served as Independent Counsel investigating corruption charges against Clinton Administration Secretary of Labor
United States Secretary of Labor

The United States Secretary of Labor is the head of the United States Department of Labor who exercises control over the department and enforces and suggests laws involving unions, the workplace and all other issues involving any form of business-person controversies....
 Alexis Herman
Alexis Herman

Alexis Margaret Herman served as the 23rd U.S. Secretary of Labor under President of the United States Bill Clinton. Prior to her appointment, she was Assistant to the President and Director of the White House Office of Public Liaison....
.

Politicos

Bangor-born Joseph Homan Manley
Joseph Homan Manley

Joseph Homan Manley was an United States History of the United States Republican Party official and close associate of Maine Republican politician and presidential candidate James G....
, a protege and close associate of presidential candidate James G. Blaine
James G. Blaine

James Gillespie Blaine was a United States House of Representatives, Speaker of the United States House of Representatives, United States Senate from Maine, two-time United States Secretary of State, and champion of the Half-Breed ....
, was Chairman of the National Executive Committee of the Republican Party
Republican Party (United States)

The Republican Party is one of the two major party contemporary political parties in the United States, along with the Democratic Party . It is often called the Grand Old Party or the GOP....
 in the 1890s, and Maine's "political boss".

Former State Senator from Bangor Marion E. Martin founded what is now the National Federation of Republican Women
National Federation of Republican Women

Founded in 1938, the National Federation of Republican Women is a grassroots political organization with more than 1,600 local clubs in the 50 states and in the U.S....
 in 1937 and was Assistant Chairman of the Republican National Committee
Republican National Committee

The Republican National Committee provides national leadership for the Republican Party . It is responsible for developing and promoting the Republican political platform, as well as coordinating fundraising and election strategy....
.

Bangor-born Boston lawyer Paul P. Brountas was National Chairman of the Committee to Elect Michael S. Dukakis President of the United States in 1987-88. He was also the Democratic candidate's closest advisor. Brountas had previously been an aide and advisor to presidential hopeful Edmund Muskie
Edmund Muskie

Edmund Sixtus "Ed" Muskie was an United States Democratic Party politician from Maine. He served as Governor of Maine, as United States Senate, and as United States Secretary of State....
.

Survivors

David Thibodeau, one of only 9 survivors of the Branch Davidian
Branch Davidian

The Branch Davidian Seventh Day Adventists are a Protestant sect that originated in 1955 from a Schism in the Shepherd's Rod , a reform movement that began within the Seventh-day Adventist Church around 1930....
 conflagration
Waco Siege

The Waco Siege began on February 28, 1993 when the United States Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives attempted to execute a search warrant at the Branch Davidian ranch at Mount Carmel Center, a property located nine miles east-northeast of Waco, Texas Texas....
 in Waco, Texas
Waco, Texas

Waco is a city in and the county seat of McLennan County, Texas. The city has a 2007 estimated total population of 122,222. It is the 26th largest city by population in Texas, and 195th in the US....
, is from Bangor. He wrote a book about the experience.

Bangor in popular culture


Books and plays

Bangor or its alter ego Derry
Derry (Stephen King)

Derry, Maine is part of Stephen King's fictional Maine topography, and, like Castle Rock , it has served as the setting for a number of his novels, novellas, and short stories....
 are the fictional settings for so many novels and stories by Stephen King
Stephen King

Stephen Edwin King is an United States author of contemporary horror fiction, fantasy fiction and science fiction.Having sold an estimated List of bestselling fiction authors of his books, King is best known for his work in horror fiction, in which he demonstrates a thorough knowledge of the genre's history....
 that the city has become the capital of Translymainia, a gothic horror-scape King invented largely by himself (with some help from the 1960s television show Dark Shadows
Dark Shadows

Dark Shadows is a Gothic Romanticism soap opera that originally aired weekdays on the American Broadcasting Company television network, from June 27, 1966 to April 2, 1971....
).

Bangor is the home of the protagonist in John Guare
John Guare

John Guare is an American playwright. He is best known as the author of The House of Blue Leaves, Six Degrees of Separation , and Landscape of the Body....
's famous play Landscape of the Body
Landscape of the Body

Landscape Of The Body is a two-act play by John Guare, written in 1977....
. In Henry James
Henry James

Henry James, Order of Merit , son of theologian Henry James Sr., brother of the philosopher and psychologist William James and diarist Alice James, was an United States author....
' short story A Bundle of Letters
A Bundle of Letters

"A Bundle of Letters" is a comic short story by Henry James, originally published in The Parisian magazine in 1878, which is also when the story takes place....
, Miranda Hope from Bangor is a tourist in Paris. Billy Barry, the fictional hero in Horace Porter's Young Aeroplane Scouts novel series of 1916-19, is also from Bangor, as is Edward Wozny, the protagonist in Lew Grossman's 2004 novel Codex, and Sir Kevin Dean de Courtney MacNair in Hayford Peirce
Hayford Peirce

Hayford Peirce is an United States writer of science fiction, Mystery fiction, and spy thrillers. He attended Phillips Exeter Academy and received his Bachelor's degree from Harvard College....
's time-travel novel Napoleon Disentimed
Napoleon Disentimed

Napoleon Disentimed is a science-fiction novel by Hayford Peirce first published by Tor Books in 1987. It is a humorous treatment of two standard science-fiction themes, those of time travel and of Parallel universe s....
.

Bangor is the setting for Christina Baker Kline's 1999 novel Desire Lines. The 1988 novel Pink Chimneys by Ardeana Hamlin Knowles, is set in 19th century Bangor. Owen Davis
Owen Davis

Owen Gould Davis, Sr. was an American dramatist. He received the 1923 Pulitzer Prize for Drama for his 1923 play Icebound, and penned hundreds of plays and scripts for radio and film....
' Pulitzer Prize
Pulitzer Prize

The Pulitzer Prize is an United States award regarded as the highest national honor in newspaper journalism, literary achievements and musical composition....
 winning 1923 play Icebound is set in neighboring Veazie. Bangor is also one location in the 1992 novel Prussian Blue by Tom Hyman.

A "frolicsome night place" in Bangor called "The Sea Hag" figures incidentally in the Tennessee Williams
Tennessee Williams

Tennessee Williams was an American playwright who received many of the top theatrical awards. He moved to New Orleans in 1939 and changed his name to "Tennessee", the state of his father's birth....
 short-story Sabbatha and Solitude. In Rudyard Kipling
Rudyard Kipling

Joseph Rudyard Kipling was an English author and poet. Born in Mumbai, British India , he is best known for his works of fiction The Jungle Book , Kim , many short stories, including The Man Who Would Be King ; and his poems, including Mandalay , Gunga Din , and If? ....
's and Wolcott Balestier's The Naulahka: A Story of East and West, a family of missionaries in India hails from Bangor (and even has their maple syrup
Maple syrup

Maple syrup is a sweetener made from the sap of maple trees. In Canada and the United States it is most often eaten with waffles and pancakes. It is sometimes used as an ingredient in baking, the making of candy, preparing desserts, or as a sugar source and flavoring agent in making beer....
 delivered from home).

Henry David Thoreau
Henry David Thoreau

Henry David Thoreau was an United States author, poet, Natural history, tax resistance, development criticism, surveyor, historian, philosophy, and leading Transcendentalism....
's The Maine Woods includes this passages describing Bangor: "Like a star at the edge of the night, still hewing the forests of which it is built, already overflowing with the luxuries and refinements of Europe, and sending its vessels to Spain, to England, to the West Indies for its groceries"

In John Steinbeck
John Steinbeck

John Ernst Steinbeck III was an American literature. He wrote the Pulitzer Prize-winning novel The Grapes of Wrath, published in 1939 and the novella Of Mice and Men, published in 1937....
's Travels with Charley, he learns an important lesson in a little restaurant just outside of Bangor.

Margaret Atwood
Margaret Atwood

Margaret Eleanor Atwood, Order of Canada is a Canada author, poet, literary criticism, feminist and activism. She is among the most-honored authors of fiction in recent history; she is a winner of the Arthur C....
's The Handmaid's Tale
The Handmaid's Tale

The Handmaid's Tale is a utopian and dystopian fiction by Canadian literature Margaret Atwood, first published by McClelland and Stewart 1985 in literature....
 begins with the discovery of a footlocker full of cassette tapes in the ruins of what was once Bangor, a prominent way-station on "The Underground Femaleroad" in the dystopic Republic of Gilead
Republic of Gilead

The Republic of Gilead is a theocracy fictional country that is the setting of the Margaret Atwood dystopian novel The Handmaid's Tale....
.

Poems

Robert Lowell
Robert Lowell

Robert Traill Spence Lowell IV was an American poet, considered the founder of the confessional poetry movement. He was appointed the sixth Poet Laureate Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress in 1946....
's Flying from Bangor to Rio 1957 was written at the poet's summer house in nearby Castine, Maine
Castine, Maine

Castine is a New England town in Hancock County, Maine, Maine, United States. The population was 1,343 at the 2000 United States Census. Castine is the home of Maine Maritime Academy, a four-year institution that graduates officers and engineers for the United States Merchant Marine and marine related industries....
 about the experience of seeing off his friend, the poet Elizabeth Bishop
Elizabeth Bishop

Elizabeth Bishop was an American poet and writer. She was the Poet Laureate Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress from 1949 to 1950, and a Pulitzer Prize for Poetry in 1956....
 at the Bangor Airport.

Songs

Bangor is mentioned in King of the Road
King of the Road (song)

"King of the Road" is a 1965 song written and originally recorded by country singer Roger Miller. The lyrics tell of an individual who although living a hand-to-mouth existence, also feels free, and describes himself with joking introspection as the "king of the road"....
, a country song by Roger Miller
Roger Miller

Roger Dean Miller was an United States singer, songwriter and musician, best known for his mid-1960s country/pop hits such as King of the Road , Dang Me and England Swings....
. The line goes "Third boxcar, midnight train. Destination: Bangor, Maine." Southbound Train by Travis Tritt
Travis Tritt

James Travis Tritt is a Grammy award-winning American country music artist and occasional actor, more commonly known as Travis Tritt.Starting with the debut single release of "Country Club" in 1989, Travis Tritt has charted more than thirty singles on the U.S....
 has a similar reference. This formula — using rhyming Maine and train, and Bangor as an edge destination — first appeared in the popular 1871 song Riding Down From Bangor (or Riding Up From Bangor) by Louis Shreve Osborne. The lyric goes: "Riding down from Bangor in an eastern train, after six weeks of hunting in the woods of Maine". It was recorded in Britain
United Kingdom

The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, commonly known as the United Kingdom , the UK or Britain,is a sovereign state located off the northwestern coast of continental Europe....
 and South Africa
South Africa

The Republic of South Africa, also known by Official names of South Africa, is a country located at the southern tip of the continent of Africa....
, though never in the United States. George Orwell
George Orwell

Eric Arthur Blair , better known by his pen name George Orwell, was an England author. His work is marked by a profound consciousness of social injustice, an intense dislike of totalitarianism, and a passion for clarity in language....
 wrote about the song in his 1947 essay Riding Down From Bangor. As a child, he remembered, "my picture of nineteenth-century America was given greater precision by a song which is still fairly well known and which can be found (I think) in the Scottish Student's Song Book." The most recent play on this formula was a song by Garrison Keillor
Garrison Keillor

Gary Edward "Garrison" Keillor is an United States of America author, storyteller, humorist, columnist, musician, satirist, and radio personality....
, sung on his radio show Prairie Home Companion on May 3, 2008, which went "Bangor Maine, Bangor Maine; Take a boat or ride the train; Take a slicker, it might rain; In Bangor, Maine"

A fatal accident on the Bangor and Piscataquis Railroad between Bangor and Old Town
Old Town

Old Town is the typical designation of a historic or original core of a city or town. Although the city may be larger in its present form, many cities have redesignated this part of the city to commemorate its origins after thorough renovations....
 in 1848 is the subject of the earliest known railroad song, Henry Sawyer.

Bangor is named in the North American version of I've Been Everywhere
I've Been Everywhere

The song "I've Been Everywhere" was written by Geoff Mack in 1959 and made popular by the singer Leslie Morrison in 1962.It listed Australian towns....
 by Lucky Starr
Leslie Morrison

Leslie Morrison , better known by his stage name Lucky Starr, is an Australian singer.He began his rock 'n' roll career in 1957 as lead singer of The Hepparays....
. How 'bout them Cowgirls by George Strait
George Strait

George Harvey Strait is a Grammy Award -winning United States country music singer. Strait is referred to as the "King of Country," and critics call Strait a living legend....
 includes the line "I've crisscrossed down to Key Biscayne, and Chi-town via Bangor, Maine."

The Rooftops of Bangor by the Minneapolis indie group The God Damn Doo Wop Band was inspired by a line in a love letter to member Katie (Kat) Naden.

Old Town
Old Town

Old Town is the typical designation of a historic or original core of a city or town. Although the city may be larger in its present form, many cities have redesignated this part of the city to commemorate its origins after thorough renovations....
 native Patty Griffin
Patty Griffin

Patty Griffin, born Patricia Jean Griffin, March 16, 1964, is an United States singer-songwriter, musician, and Grammy award nominee, whose songs have been performed by the elite of several musical genres....
 mentions a "bus that's going to Bangor" in the first line of her autobiographical song Burgundy Shoes from her 2007 Grammy Award
Grammy Award

The Grammy Awards ?or Grammys?are presented annually by the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences of the United States for outstanding achievements in the music industry....
-nominated album Children Running Through
Children Running Through

Children Running Through is Patty Griffin's sixth Commercely released album. It was released on 6 February 2007. The album features vocals from Emmylou Harris on "Trapeze"....
.

The song Band of Brothers by Dierks Bentley
Dierks Bentley

Dierks Bentley is an American country music artist. After years of playing various local venues, Dierks was discovered and signed to Capitol Records in 2003....
 also mentions Bangor. The lyrics go "From the bars of San Diego to the county fair way up in Bangor, Maine".

Film and television

Several movie versions of Stephen King
Stephen King

Stephen Edwin King is an United States author of contemporary horror fiction, fantasy fiction and science fiction.Having sold an estimated List of bestselling fiction authors of his books, King is best known for his work in horror fiction, in which he demonstrates a thorough knowledge of the genre's history....
's stories have been filmed in and around Bangor. The Langoliers
The Langoliers

The Langoliers is one of four novellas published in the Stephen King book Four Past Midnight in 1990 in literature....
, mentioned above, was set and filmed in part at Bangor International Airport
Bangor International Airport

Bangor International Airport is a joint civil-military public airport located 3 miles west in the city of Bangor, Maine, in Penobscot County, Maine, Maine, United States....
. Pet Cemetery
Pet cemetery

A pet cemetery is a cemetery for animals.File:Home Burial Animal Companion .jpgIn addition to burying human remains, many human cultures also regularly burial animal remains....
 and Graveyard Shift
Graveyard shift

Graveyard shift means a Shift work running through the early hours of the morning, especially one from midnight until 8 am. There is no certainty as to the origin of this phrase; according to Michael Quinion it is little more than "an evocative term for the night shift ......
 include scenes filmed at Mt. Hope Cemetery
Mount Hope Cemetery, Bangor

Mt. Hope Cemetery in Bangor, Maine is the second oldest rural cemetery in the United States. It was designed by architect Charles G. Bryant in 1834, the same year that Bangor was incorporated as a city, and likely modeled after Mt....
 and The Bangor Water Works. Creepshow 2
Creepshow 2

Creepshow 2 is an American horror comedy anthology film Film director by Michael Gornick, who was George A. Romero's cinematographer on the original Creepshow....
 includes scenes filmed in Bangor, Brewer
Brewer, Maine

Brewer is a city in Penobscot County, Maine, Maine, United States. It is part of the Bangor, Maine Metropolitan Statistical Area. The city is named after its first settler, Colonel John Brewer....
 and nearby Dexter, Maine
Dexter, Maine

Dexter is a town in Penobscot County, Maine, Maine, United States. The population was 3,890 at the 2000 United States Census. It is part of the Bangor, Maine, Maine Metropolitan Statistical Area....
. In the 1996 film Thinner
Thinner

Thinner may mean:*Paint thinner, a solvent used in painting and decorating, for thinning oil based paint and cleaning brushes.*Thinner , a 1984 horror novel by Stephen King, written as Richard Bachman...
 King himself plays a character named "Dr. Bangor". The 1984 movie Firestarter
Firestarter

Firestarter is a novel by Stephen King originally published in 1980. It was serialized in Omni magazine prior to being published....
, based on a King novel, held its world premiere at the Bangor Cinema, with King, Drew Barrymore
Drew Barrymore

Drew Blyth Barrymore is an American actor and film producer. She is the youngest member of the Barrymore family of American actors. She began acting when she was eleven months old....
 and Dino de Laurentis in attendance.

The 1946 film The Strange Woman starring Hedy Lamarr
Hedy Lamarr

Hedy Lamarr was an Austrian-born United States actress and scientist. Though known primarily for her acting , she also co-invented an early form of spread spectrum, a key to modern wireless communication....
, and based on the novel by Ben Ames Williams
Ben Ames Williams

Ben Ames Williams American writer who published over thirty novels, including The Strange Woman , House Divided , Leave Her to Heaven , and Come Spring ....
 is set in early 19th century Bangor.

The fictional town of Collinsport, Maine, the setting for 1960s gothic TV soap opera Dark Shadows
Dark Shadows

Dark Shadows is a Gothic Romanticism soap opera that originally aired weekdays on the American Broadcasting Company television network, from June 27, 1966 to April 2, 1971....
, was 50 miles from Bangor, according to the script of the first episode. The equally fictional "Bangor Pine Hotel" was a location in two first-season scenes. Likewise, The Dead Zone
The Dead Zone

The Dead Zone may refer to:* The Dead Zone , a 1979 novel by Stephen King* The Dead Zone , a 1983 film adaption of the novel, starring Christopher Walken and directed by David Cronenberg...
, a series based on the Stephen King novel, takes place in a suburb of Bangor called Cleaves Mills.

The title character in the 2004 TV movie Celeste in the City was from Bangor.

In 1987 The Late Show with David Letterman conducted an on-air campaign to get Bangor to watch Dave, after discovering he had unusually low ratings there. He even resorted to reading random names from the local phonebook.

The Canadian television series Trailer Park Boys
Trailer Park Boys

Trailer Park Boys is a popular Canada mockumentary television series created and directed by Mike Clattenburg that focused on the misadventures of a group of trailer park residents, some of whom are ex-convicts, living in Sunnyvale Trailer Park located in Dartmouth, Nova Scotia....
 featured a train convention in Bangor on the season 7 episode "Friends of the Road".

Comic books

Modok
MODOK
Modok

Modok may refer to:*MODOK, a supervillain from Marvel Comics.*Another name for Madoc, a legendary Wales prince....
, the villainous Marvel Comics
Marvel Comics

Marvel Comics is an American comic book and related media company owned by Marvel Publishing, Inc., a subsidiary of Marvel Entertainment, Inc. Marvel counts among as its List of Marvel Comics characters such well-known properties as Captain America, the Fantastic Four, the Hulk , Iron Man, Spider-Man, the X-Men, and many others....
 character, was created from the benign lab technician George Tarleton, a native of Bangor. The GI Joe character Sneak Peak is also from Bangor, along with Crystal Ball's mother. The location of DC Comics
DC Comics

DC Comics is one of the largest and most popular American comic book and related media companies, along with Marvel Comics. A subsidiary of Warner Bros....
 second "Dial H for Hero" series is a suburb of Bangor.

Sport

A skillful competitor in the sport of birling
Logrolling (sport)

Logrolling, or birling, is a sport that originated in the lumberjack/log driving tradition of the northeastern United States and Canada, involving logs in a river or other body of water....
 (log-rolling) has traditionally been known as a Bangor Tiger. This was the name given Penobscot
Penobscot

The Penobscot are a sovereign people indigenous to what is now Maritime Canada and the northeastern United States, particularly Maine. They were and are significant participants in the historical and present Wabanaki Confederacy, along with the Passamaquoddy, Maliseet and Mi'kmaq nations....
 river-drivers in the nineteenth century.

Food

The earliest documented recipe for chocolate brownies referred to them as Bangor Brownies. Fanny Farmer
Fanny Farmer

Fanny Farmer is an United States candy manufacturer and retailer.Fanny Farmer was started in Rochester, New York, New York by Frank Patrick O'Connor in 1919....
 invented "brownies" in her 1896 cookbook, but these were molasses-flavored, had a nut on top, and were baked in individual pans. The first recipe for what we'd recognize today as chocolate brownies was published in the Boston Daily Globe on 2 April 1905, pg. 34 and read:

BANGOR BROWNIES. Cream 1/2 cup butter, add 2 eggs, 1 cup sugar, 2 squares of chocolate (melted), 1/2 cup broken walnuts meats, 1/2 cup flour. Spread thin in buttered pans. Bake in moderate oven, and cut before cold.

The 1907 Lowney's Cook Book, published by the Walter Lowney Chocolate Co., contained two chocolate brownie recipes. The one with extra chocolate, and baked in a pan, it also called "Bangor Brownies". The use of the term in printed recipes continued into the 1950s.

The Appledore Cookbook of 1872 included a recipe for "Bangor Cake", repeated in the Woman's Suffragette Cookbook of 1886, and others as late as 1916.

Two varieties of plum
Plum

A plum or gage is a drupe tree in the genus Prunus, subgenus Prunus. The subgenus is distinguished from other subgenera in the shoots having a terminal bud and the side buds solitary , the flowers being grouped 1-5 together on short stems, and the fruit having a groove running down one side, and a smooth stone....
, the "Mclaughlin" and the "Penobscot", were first identified in the garden of John Mclaughlin of Bangor in 1846, and publicized the same year in A. J. Downing's The Horticulturalist. The Mclaughlin had become the most prominent American-cultivated plum by the 1850s, surpassing all others in its "rich and luscious flavor" according to the Magazine of Horticulture. Both continue to be grown throughout North America and Europe.

Ships

The first ocean-going iron-hulled steamship in the U.S. was named The Bangor. She was built by the Harlan and Hollingsworth
Harlan and Hollingsworth

Harlan & Hollingsworth was a Wilmington, Delaware, firm that constructed ships and railroad cars during the 19th century and into the 20th century....
 firm of Wilmington, Delaware
Wilmington, Delaware

Wilmington is the largest city in the state of Delaware, United States and is located at the confluence of the Christina River and Brandywine Creek , near where the Christina flows into the Delaware River....
 in 1844, and was intended to take passengers between Bangor and Boston. On her second voyage, however, in 1845, she burned to the waterline off Castine
Castine, Maine

Castine is a New England town in Hancock County, Maine, Maine, United States. The population was 1,343 at the 2000 United States Census. Castine is the home of Maine Maritime Academy, a four-year institution that graduates officers and engineers for the United States Merchant Marine and marine related industries....
. She was rebuilt at Bath
Bath, Maine

Bath is a city in Sagadahoc County, Maine, Maine, in the United States. As of the United States Census, 2000, the city population was 9,266. It is the county seat of Sagadahoc County....
, returned briefly to her earlier route, but was soon purchased by the U.S. government for use in the Mexican-American War..

An earlier steamship named Bangor had been built in 1833 for the Boston & Bangor Steamship Co. by Bell & Brown of New York. She was in service till 1842, when she was bought by a Turkish company, renamed the "Sudaver", and used as a ferry in Istanbul (then Constantinople).

A four-masted schooner named The Bangor was also built in Eureka, California
Eureka, California

Eureka is the county seat and principal city in Humboldt County, California, California, United States. Located adjacent to Humboldt Bay , the city is situated near extensive preserves of the world's tallest trees - the Sequoia....
, in 1891. The City of Bangor was an Eastern Steamship Co. steamer, built 1894 in East Boston, that connected Bangor and Boston on a daily run in the early twentieth century. The Tacoma class frigate
Tacoma class frigate

The Tacoma class of frigates served in the United States Navy during World War II. Named for Tacoma, Washington, the Tacoma class design was based on the British River class frigates, primarily distinguished by the pole foremast and lighter main guns ....
 USS Bangor (PF-16), launched in 1943, escorted North Atlantic convoys during World War II.

Business

Two businesses listed on the New York Stock Exchange
New York Stock Exchange

New York Stock Exchange is a stock exchange based in New York City, New York. It is the largest stock exchange in the world by United States dollar market capitalization of its listed companies' Security ....
 have used 'Bangor' in their names. The Bangor and Aroostook Railroad
Bangor and Aroostook Railroad

The Bangor and Aroostook Railroad is a defunct United States railroad company, that brought rail service to Aroostook County, Maine. Brightly painted BAR boxcar attracted national attention in the 1950s....
, which operated between 1891 and 2003 was founded by local capitalists and originally had its offices in Bangor. In 1964 it merged with the Boston-owned but Cuba-based Punta Alegre Sugar Corp., forming Bangor Punta Alegre Sugar or after 1967 just Bangor Punta. On the advice of BP Director and former president of the B&A Curtis Hutchins, the railroad was sold in 1969, but Bangor Punta, managed by Hungarian-American financier Nicolas Salgo (who also built the Watergate complex in Washington), and with Bangorean Hutchins still on the board, became a classic 1960s conglomerate
Conglomerate (company)

A conglomerate is a company that consists of multiple distinct and often unrelated businesses. Conglomerates are often large and can be formed by merging more than three businesses together....
, accumulating such diverse holdings as the arms-maker Smith and Wesson, Piper Aircraft, and a number of yacht-makers. It was on the Fortune 500
Fortune 500

The Fortune 500 is an annual list compiled and published by Fortune magazine that ranks the top 500 United States public corporations as measured by their gross revenue, although Fortune makes adjustments to the revenue for a number of companies, particularly to exclude the impact of excise taxes companies collect....
 List for most of its existence. Salgo was bought out in 1974 and the corporation dissolved in 1984.

Accidents and natural disasters

The Great Fire of 1911
Great Fire of 1911

The Great Fire of 1911 took place in .It started in the afternoon of April 30, 1911 on Broad Street. High winds had spread it to a shed on Exchange Street and the Universalist Church on Center Street by 4:10 PM, from where it spread into the residential neighborhood on Center Street Hill....
 was Bangor’s most spectacular catastrophe, but other natural disasters and accidents have occurred there, often with greater loss of life (only two were killed in the Great Fire). The most recurrent problem, besides fire, was the formation of ice dams causing spring floods on the Penobscot River
Penobscot River

The Penobscot River is 350 mi long, making it the second longest river in the U.S. state of Maine and the longest river entirely in Maine. Its drainage basin contains ....
, a situation that's resolved itself with warmer winters. The only destructive flood since the 1930s (in 1976) was caused by a storm at sea. Notable incidents include:

1832: A cholera
Cholera

Cholera, sometimes known as Asiatic or epidemic cholera, is an infectious gastroenteritis caused by enterotoxin-producing strains of the bacterium Vibrio cholerae....
 epidemic in St. John, New Brunswick (part of the Second cholera pandemic
Second cholera pandemic

The second cholera pandemic also known as the Asiatic Cholera Pandemic was a Cholera pandemic from 1829-1851 reached Europe, London and Paris in 1832....
) sent as many as 800 poor Irish immigrants walking to Bangor. This was the beginning of Maine's first substantial Irish-Catholic community. Competition with yankees for jobs would cause a riot and resulting fire in 1833.

1846: The “Great Freshet”, or spring flood, was the most destructive of the 19th century, carrying away the Penobscot River covered bridge, two bridges over the Kenduskeag Stream, and inundating a hundred shops and many houses. Its cause was the sudden release of a massive, 4-mile-long ice dam. There were no casualties.

1849-50: The Second cholera pandemic
Second cholera pandemic

The second cholera pandemic also known as the Asiatic Cholera Pandemic was a Cholera pandemic from 1829-1851 reached Europe, London and Paris in 1832....
 reached Bangor itself, killing 20-30 within the first week.

1854: The schooner Manhattan of Bangor was lost in a gale off New Jersey
New Jersey

New Jersey is a state in the Mid-Atlantic States and Northeastern United States regions of the United States. It is bordered on the north by New York, on the east by the Hudson River and the Atlantic Ocean, on the southwest by Delaware, and on the west by Pennsylvania....
. There was a single survivor.

1856: The brig William H. Safford of Bangor was cut through by ice while anchored in the East River
East River

The East River is a tidal strait in New York City. It connects Upper New York Bay on its south end to Long Island Sound on its north end. It separates Long Island from the island of Manhattan and the Bronx on the North American mainland....
 at New York, and 8 of 10 aboard drown, including the captain, his wife, and 2 children.

1858: The floor of an auction store in Bangor gave way, sending 200 men, women, and children into the building's cellar. Many were injured but none killed.

1860: The brig Mary Pierce, sailing with lumber from Bangor to New Haven, was lost in a storm off Cape Cod
Cape Cod

Cape Cod, often referred to as simply the Cape, is a peninsula in the easternmost portion of the state of Massachusetts, in the Northeastern United States....
 with 6 crew and a child. One sailor survived.

1860: The brig H.N. Jenkins of Bangor, bound for Havana, Cuba, was demasted in a storm and the captain the 3 crew killed. 2 were rescued by a passing whaler.

1869: The West Market Square fire, from which arose The Phoenix Block (the present Charles Inn)

1869: The Black Island Railroad Bridge north of Old Town, Maine
Old Town, Maine

Old Town is a city in Penobscot County, Maine, Maine, United States. The population was 8,130 at the 2000 United States Census. The city's developed area is chiefly located on a relatively large island, though its boundaries extend beyond that....
 collapsed under the weight of a Bangor and Piscataquis Railroad train, killing 3 crew and injuring 7-8 others.

1869: The schooners Susan Duncan and Susan Hicks of Bangor, both carrying lumber, were lost with all hands in a storm off Cape Cod
Cape Cod

Cape Cod, often referred to as simply the Cape, is a peninsula in the easternmost portion of the state of Massachusetts, in the Northeastern United States....
.

1871: A bridge in Hampden collapsed under the weight of a Maine Central Railroad
Maine Central Railroad

The Maine Central Railroad was a railroad in central and southern Maine. It was chartered in 1856 and began operations in 1862. It operated between South Portland, Maine, east to the International Boundary with New Brunswick, west to Vermont and north to Quebec....
 train approaching Bangor, killing 2 and injuring 50.

1872: Another large downtown fire, on Main St., killed 1 and injured 7. The Adams-Pickering Block
Adams-Pickering Block

The Adams-Pickering Block is a Second Empire-style commercial block on Main St. in Bangor, Maine. Designed by architect George W. Orff, it is individually listed on the National Register of Historic Places, based on architectural significance....
 (architect George W. Orff) replaced the burned section.

1872: A smallpox
Smallpox

Smallpox is an infectious disease unique to humans, caused by either of two virus variants, Variola major and Variola minor. The disease is also known by the Latin names Variola or Variola vera, which is a derivative of the Latin varius, meaning spotted, or varus, meaning "pimple"....
 epidemic closed local schools.

1882: A tornado
Tornado

A tornado is a violent, rotating column of air which is in contact with both the surface of the earth and a cumulonimbus cloud or, in rare cases, the base of a cumulus cloud....
 blew the steeple off the Universalist Church, the roof off the County Courthouse, and sent hundreds of chimneys into the street.

1889: Forest fires in surrounding towns enveloped Bangor in smoke.

1892: Another tornado
Tornado

A tornado is a violent, rotating column of air which is in contact with both the surface of the earth and a cumulonimbus cloud or, in rare cases, the base of a cumulus cloud....
 overturned the launch Annie in the Penobscot River
Penobscot River

The Penobscot River is 350 mi long, making it the second longest river in the U.S. state of Maine and the longest river entirely in Maine. Its drainage basin contains ....
 drowning 8 passengers.

1895: Another Penobscot flood

1896: The barkentine Thomas J. Stewart of Bangor was lost at sea in a hurricane with all hands (11 men) somewhere between New York and Boston The ship was named after one of Bangor's principle entrepreneurs, the owner of a large fleet of ocean-going vessels.

1898: A Maine Central Railroad
Maine Central Railroad

The Maine Central Railroad was a railroad in central and southern Maine. It was chartered in 1856 and began operations in 1862. It operated between South Portland, Maine, east to the International Boundary with New Brunswick, west to Vermont and north to Quebec....
 train crashed near Orono
Orono, Maine

Orono is a New England town in Penobscot County, Maine, Maine, United States. It was first settled in 1774 and named in honor of Chief Joseph Orono of the Penobscot....
 killing 2 and fatally injuring 4. The president of the railroad and his wife were also on board in a private car, but escaped injury.

1898: The steamer Pentagoet of the Manhattan Line was lost in a gale between New York City and Bangor with all 16 hands. In the same storm, two schooners sailing from Bangor to Fall River, Massachusetts
Fall River, Massachusetts

Fall River is a city in Bristol County, Massachusetts, Massachusetts, in the United States. It is located about south of Boston, Massachusetts, southeast of Providence, Rhode Island and west of New Bedford, Massachusetts....
 loaded with lumber, the William Slater and Oriole were similarly lost with no survivors.

1899: The collapse of a gangway between a train and a waiting ferry at Mount Desert sent 200 members of a Bangor excursion party into the water, drowning 20.

1900: The schooner Ada Herbert sailing from Gloucester, Massachusetts
Gloucester, Massachusetts

Gloucester is a city on Cape Ann in Essex County, Massachusetts, Massachusetts, in the United States. It is part of North Shore . As of the Census of 2003, the city population was 30,730....
 to Bangor was lost with all four crew.

1901: A powerful storm caused the Penobscot to flood, carrying 8,000 logs from Bangor into Penobscot Bay
Penobscot Bay

Penobscot Bay originates from the mouth of Maine's Penobscot River. There are many islands in this bay, and on them, some of the country's most well-known summer colony....
, where they menaced shipping.

1902: Another great spring flood, caused by an ice dam, detached the middle section of the Penobscot River
Penobscot River

The Penobscot River is 350 mi long, making it the second longest river in the U.S. state of Maine and the longest river entirely in Maine. Its drainage basin contains ....
 railroad bridge from its foundations and sent it crashing through the wooden covered pedestrian bridge down-stream, cutting all connections with Brewer
Brewer, Maine

Brewer is a city in Penobscot County, Maine, Maine, United States. It is part of the Bangor, Maine Metropolitan Statistical Area. The city is named after its first settler, Colonel John Brewer....
.

1903: The Bangor-based schooner Willie L. Newton turned turtle (upside down) in a storm off Connecticut
Connecticut

Connecticut is a U.S. state located in the New England region of the northeastern United States. The state borders New York to the west and south , Massachusetts to the north, and Rhode Island to the east....
, with loss of all hands (7 men).

1907: The sloop Ruth E. Cummack capsized in Penobscot Bay
Penobscot Bay

Penobscot Bay originates from the mouth of Maine's Penobscot River. There are many islands in this bay, and on them, some of the country's most well-known summer colony....
, drowning 6 young men, 5 of them from Bangor.

1908: Forest fires burned in surrounding towns. 1,000 men fought them within a 35-mile radius of Bangor.

1908: Bangor's first automobile accident claimed the life of 10-year-old Freddie O'Conner, who ran in front of a chauffer-driven Pope Hartford which was running down State Street without its lights at dusk.

1911: The Great Fire of 1911
Great Fire of 1911

The Great Fire of 1911 took place in .It started in the afternoon of April 30, 1911 on Broad Street. High winds had spread it to a shed on Exchange Street and the Universalist Church on Center Street by 4:10 PM, from where it spread into the residential neighborhood on Center Street Hill....


1911: A head-on collision of two trains north of Bangor, in Grindstone, killed 15, including 5 members of the Presque Isle
Presque Isle, Maine

Presque Isle is the commercial center and largest city in the sparsely populated Aroostook County, Maine, Maine, United States. The population was 9,511 at the 2000 United States Census....
 Brass Band.

1911: In Bangor's first automobile accident fatal to the driver, artist Emma Webb was killed and her two passengers injured in a collision with an electric street-railroad car.

1918: The Spanish flu
Spanish flu

The 1918 flu pandemic was an influenza pandemic that spread to nearly every part of the world. It was caused by an unusually severe and deadly Influenza A virus Strain of subtype H1N1....
 pandemic of 1918, which was global in scope, struck over a thousand Bangoreans and killed more than a hundred. This was the worst 'natural disaster' in the city's history.

1923: The Penobscot flooded again.

1928: Tiger-tamer Mabel Stark
Mabel Stark

Mabel Stark, whose real name was Mary Haynie was the world's premier tiger trainer of the 1920s and she was referred to as the world's first woman tiger trainer/tamer....
 while performing in the John Robinson Circus in Bangor, was attacked by two of her tigers and severely mauled in front of a large crowd. She survived, and went on to survive 17 more tiger attacks, though none as bad as the one in Bangor.

1936: For the last time, an ice dam on the Penobscot caused serious flooding in Bangor.

1939: A truck carrying dynamite from Bangor through Holden, Maine
Holden, Maine

Holden is a town in Penobscot County, Maine, Maine, United States. The population was 2,827 at the 2000 United States Census....
 was blown to bits, killing 6.

1941: First fatal crash of a military aircraft in Maine, when a B-18 Bolo
B-18 Bolo

The Douglas B-18 Bolo was a United States Army Air Corps and Royal Canadian Air Force bomber of the late 1930s and early 1940s. The Bolo was built by Douglas Aircraft Company and based on its Douglas DC-2....
 Bomber stationed at Bangor Army Airfield went down in nearby Springfield, Maine
Springfield, Maine

Springfield is a town in Penobscot County, Maine, Maine, United States. The population was 379 at the 2000 United States Census.Geography...
, killing all 4 crew. Between 1941 and 1971, there would be 14 additional fatal crashes of military aircraft based in Bangor, 3 within city limits and the rest in small towns or wilderness areas between the north woods and the coast.

1976: A coastal Northeaster, known as The Groundhog Day gale of 1976
Groundhog Day gale of 1976

The Groundhog Day gale was a severe winter storm which hit the northeastern United States and southeastern Canada on February 2 , 1976....
 caused a surge up the Penobscot River
Penobscot River

The Penobscot River is 350 mi long, making it the second longest river in the U.S. state of Maine and the longest river entirely in Maine. Its drainage basin contains ....
, resulting in a flash flood downtown which covered 200 cars and closed both bridges to Brewer. No one was injured but it caused $2 million in property damage.

1984: The 740 ft. tall WVII TV antenna and 550 ft. tall WABI-TV
WABI-TV

WABI-TV, channel 5, is the CBS-affiliated television station for Bangor, Maine. Its transmitter is located on Peaked Mountain in Dixmont, Maine....
 antenna both collapsed under ice, knocking seven TV and radio stations off the air.

1998: The North American Ice Storm of 1998. Bangor was among a few metropolitan areas in the United States affected by this freakish storm, which was a major natural disaster for Canada
Canada

Canada is a country occupying most of northern North America, extending from the Atlantic Ocean in the east to the Pacific Ocean in the west and northward into the Arctic Ocean....
. Electricity was knocked out for more than a week in some areas as all trees, utility poles, and other objects were coated with a glistening layer of ice.

Neighborhoods


Broadway
Broadway Historic District (Bangor, Maine)

The Broadway Historic District in Bangor, Maine is one of the residential neighborhoods most favored by the city's lumber barons in the early to late 19th century....


West Broadway / Whitney Park

Fairmount

Judson Heights

Bangor Gardens

Little City

Chapin Park (Tree Streets)

Capehart

Old Capehart

Suburbs


Old Town

Hampden

Orono

Veazie

Hermon

Glenburn

Milford

Brewer

Eddington

Bradley

Holden

East Corinth

External links

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