Late in the spring of 1605, the English explorer George Waymouth moored the Archangel near the mouth of the St. George River. His mission was to assess the natural resources of this region and to determine whether or not the land was suitable for English settlement. An experimental garden was planted on Allen's Island - the first known attempt at agriculture by English people in North America.
The unsuccessful Popham colony at the mouth of the Kennebec (1607) resulted from Waymouth's voyage. Waymouth had called Monhegan St. Georges Island. The name St. Georges or St. George became attached to the river and to the town when it separated from Cushing in 1803.
The territory between Muscongus and the Penobscot was granted to Thomas Leverett and John Beauchamp in 1629. However, there was no known attempt at settlement and only two or three individuals or families are known to have lived on the river in the 1600's.
In 1736 Samuel Waldo of Boston, who had gained a controlling interest in the patent of 1629, brought Scotch-Irish families to the St. George River. For many years their log homes and small clearings marked the easternmost frontier of British settlement in North America. Waldo had agreed with the Indians that settlers were not to live on the east side of the river below the Creek in Thomaston. Therefore, St. George remained unsettled until after the French and Indian War in 1763.
Children and grandchildren of the Scotch-Irish in Cushing began settling in St. George in the late 1760s and 1770s. At the same time, persons of English descent from older settlements to the westward were building homes on the ocean side of the peninsula. A map made in 1776 shows 19 dwellings in what is now St. George.
Settlement seems to have stalled during the Revolution. Three settlers had their land confiscated because of their Loyalist sentiments and departed. The home of Samuel Watts at Wallston was raided by the British and Watts was held prisoner for some time at Castine. The local Committee of Safety stationed a guard at Tenants Harbor at one point during the war.
A virtual land rush occurred after the Revolution. Because they were Loyalists, the Waldos' property had been confiscated. It seems to have been assumed that lots not occupied before the Revolution were up for grabs. Dozens of men, many of them veterans. brought their families here in the 1780s. Those settlers later were obliged to buy their land from Lucy Knox, the only Waldo heir who had sided with the Patriots.
There were two engagements with the British during the War of 1812. British raiders rowed up the river in dense fog in June 1814 and captured the fort which had been erected by the U.S. government in 1809 to protect the growing commerce at Warren and Thomaston. The raiders retreated down the river. In August of 1813 the local militia turned out and repelled raiders from the Bream or Brim. Two vessels belonging to Hart and Watts were destroyed.
In 1789 St. George and Cushing were incorporated as the Town of Cushing. Even at that time, St. George's population exceeded that of Cushing. In 1790, St. George's population was 578; 886 in 1800; 1127 in 1810, 1325 in 1820 and then generally increased until the 1880s.
Fluctuations in population reflect the economic activities in the various decades. The earliest settlers derived most of their cash income from cutting cordwood and shipping it to Boston, where there was a constant demand for firewood. At least four tidal sawmills were operating around 1800 for sawing lumber and grinding grain. From the first, many men were engaged as sailors and captains. It appears that almost every family was engaged in some small-scale farming.
The population decline of the 1820s was reversed by the commencement of quarrying and expansion of shipbuilding.
Granite quarrying began in the 1830s and soon several large operations in Town provided employment for hundreds of men. Over sixty vessels were built in Town during the 1800's, and when both quarries and shipyards were operating, population peaked at near 3,000 in 1880.
The granite industry brought in immigrants who have given St. George a population mix quite different from that of neighboring towns. By the time of the Civil War, there were numerous Irish workers in the quarries. In the 1870's, skilled stonecutters and paving cutters came from Great Britain, the English settling mainly at Long Cove and the Scots at Clark's Island. Finnish quarry workers began arriving in the 1890's. They seem to have replaced the Irish, who, with few exceptions, moved elsewhere, probably during the labor troubles of the early 1890's. Large numbers of young Swedish paving cutters arrived between 1910 and 1930. Most of the Swedes moved away as the granite industry declined in the 1930's and 1940's. The last quarry to operate in town, Hocking Granite, at Clark's Island, ceased operations in the early 1960's
The fishing industry predates the settlement of the town. Probably some of the first settlers from the westward had been here earlier to catch and dry fish. Fish were a staple in the local diet, and fish were exported along with cordwood. According to the late Albert Smalley, a cannery was operating as early as 1859 at Port Clyde. Lobsters were canned, giving impetus to the lobstering industry which still survives. Clams were canned well into this century, and the sardine factory operated until it burned September 24, 1970. A facility for cleaning, grading and shipping mussels opened at Long Cove in 1982 and currently employs 70 people.
"Rusticators" - summer visitors - were here as early as the 1880's, and summer cottages appeared on some of the choice shorefront by 1900. Until about the 1960's there were but few people "from away" who lived in town year round. Since then, prosperity throughout the nation has enabled retirees to move here to enjoy the relative tranquility the town affords. Newly arrived younger people with families, often professionals or skilled workers, reside in St. George and find employment in Rockland. This influx of well educated, politically active and, compared with older residents, more economically aggressive individuals, has brought marked change to the town.
The First Baptist Church was gathered in 1784 and organized in 1789, making it the oldest surviving religious group in the county. From it sprang the Ridge Church (1817), the Tenants Harbor Church (1842) and a Baptist Church at Clark's Island, now extinct. The Port Clyde Baptist Church separated officially from the Ridge Church in the 1940's, although the church building dates from 1897. The Port Clyde Advent Church was gathered prior to 1900 and organized early in this century. The Community Church at Spruce Head dates from the last decades of the 1800's, and St. George's Episcopal Chapel at Long Cove, open during the summer, built in 1901, is a reminder of the English granite workers who lived at "Englishtown," as that locality was called.
There are precious few structures in St. George that predate 1800, for even at that date, most homes were built of logs. Perhaps the oldest building in town is that owned by the Clarks in Wallston, the home of Captain Samuel Watts. This house might date from the 1770's.
According to tradition related by the late Roy Meservey, the first school in town was kept for the children of Samuel Watts. That must have been in the 1780's. In 1792, four school districts were laid out. The number of districts increased as the town's population grew, so that by the late 1800's, there were eighteen or twenty schools in town. Gradually, the districts were consolidated, and in 1957, albeit with much opposition, the remaining district schools at St. George, Clark's Island, and Port Clyde were closed. Since then, all elementary students have attended school at Tenants Harbor.
A high school was begun in 1894 in the sail loft over Long's store. The High School building was erected in 1900. The first class graduated in 1901, the last in 1962. Since 1963, high school students have attended Georges Valley High School in Thomaston. Grammar school students were housed in the old building for a few years. The high school was torn down and the new town office built on the site.
written by James G. Skoglund
for the
St George Comprehensive Plan