Talk:Bangor, Maine/trivia

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Accidents, natural disasters and infamous incidents

The Bangor, the first U.S.-built ironhulled steamship
Main Street in c. 1920
  • 1889:
    Forest fires
    in surrounding towns enveloped Bangor in smoke.
  • 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 chauffeur-driven Pope Hartford which was running down State Street without its lights at dusk.[17]
  • 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.[18]
  • 1939: a truck carrying dynamite from Bangor through Holden, Maine was blown to bits, killing 6.[19]

History

The local chapter of the American Anti-Slavery Society had 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 other city in Maine.

In 1900, Bangor was still shipping wooden spools to England and wooden fruit boxes to Italy. An average of 2,000 vessels called at Bangor each year.

In 1909,

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

From 1960–64, Bangor was 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, and a deactivated BOMARC missile was briefly mounted, next to Paul Bunyan at Bass Park. Today the BOMARC site has been turned into an industrial park which is home to Hartt Trucking and Bean's Meats as well as a number of small businesses and organizations that occupy the former missile bunkers.[citation needed
]

In November 1944, two German spies - Erich Gimpel and William Colepaugh - landed on the Maine coast by U-boat and 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 (FBI) manhunt.[citation needed]

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".[20]

In 1915, the German agent

Werner Horn attempted to dynamite the international railroad bridge in Vanceboro 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.[21]

Famous people from Bangor

Bangor has produced nine

John McKernan, and John Baldacci. A number of others were born in or lived in suburban towns such as Brewer, Hampden
, and Orono.

Media

Bangor Metro, founded in 2005, is the area's glossy business, lifestyle, and opinion magazine.

Infrastructure

Five major airlines offer over 60 flights a day, giving the city non-stop service to Boston, Newark, Philadelphia, Detroit, Cincinnati, Atlanta, Orlando, and seasonal non-stop service to New York's LaGuardia Airport and Minneapolis. Most of the major car rental companies have desks at the airport.

Bangor in popular culture

Books and plays

Bangor or its alter ego Derry are the fictional settings for so many novels and stories by Stephen King that the city has become the capital of Transylmainia, a gothic horror-scape King invented largely by himself (with some help from the 1960s television show Dark Shadows). Bangor locations were featured most prominently in King's novel It.

Bangor is the home of the protagonist in John Guare's famous play Landscape of the Body. In Henry James' short story A Bundle of Letters, 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 Lev Grossman's 2004 novel Codex, and Sir Kevin Dean de Courtney MacNair in Hayford Peirce's time-travel novel Napoleon Disentimed. The character Teresa Bruckham is a horror novelist from Bangor in Lily Strange's novel Lost Beneath the Surface. The character Dr. Benjamin Northcote is Bangor's city coroner, and part of the crime-fighting team in Kathy Lynn Emerson's Diana Spaulding Mystery series.

Bangor is the setting for

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 short-story Sabbatha and Solitude. In Rudyard Kipling'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 delivered from home). Henry David Thoreau's The Maine Woods includes this passage 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's Travels with Charley, he learns an important lesson in a little restaurant just outside of Bangor.

Republic of Gilead
.

Marguerite Beaulieu's French-language story Bangor, Maine, USA was published in Horrifique 13 (1994)

Poems

Robert Lowell's Flying from Bangor to Rio 1957 was written at the poet's summer house in nearby Castine, Maine about the experience of seeing off his friend, the poet Elizabeth Bishop at the Bangor Airport.[22] The home of Junior in Everything Matters

Songs

Bangor, Maine is steeped in musical history. Reverend Seth Noble named Bangor in 1791 for the popular hymn tune of his day, written by William Tans'ur and first published in 1734 in London. Paul Revere and Josiah Flagg did an engraving and printed and published it in Boston in 1764; A COLLECTION OF THE BEST PSALM TUNES. This publication shows that the popularity of the BANGOR TUNE qualified it for an earlier Bostonian version of our current "Top 10 List" of popular songs. The BANGOR TUNE was also very popular in Scotland and has been mistakenly called a Scottish psalm tune. It was so popular that Robert Burns mentioned it in his famous poem, "The Ordination." It was also performed at the funeral service for President George Washington in 1799 in Newburyport, Massachusetts.[23]

Bangor is mentioned in

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"[28]

A fatal accident on the

Bangor and Piscataquis Railroad between Bangor and Old Town in 1848 is the subject of the earliest known railroad song, Henry Sawyer.[25]

Bangor is named in the North American version of

Lucky Starr. How 'bout them Cowgirls by George Strait
includes the line "I've crisscrossed down to Key Biscayne, and Chi-town via Bangor, Maine. George also mentions Bangor in his song "Brothers of the Highway" off of his Grammy award winning album Troubadour."

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 native

Grammy Award-nominated album Children Running Through
.

The song Band of Brothers by Dierks Bentley also mentions Bangor. The lyrics go "From the bars of San Diego to the county fair way up in Bangor, Maine".

The Bogeyman from Bangor, Maine is a cut on Norwegian rock band Titanic's 1992 Lower the Atlantic album.

The Mountain Goats recorded a song entitled "Going to Bangor" for an early cassette release (later included on 1999's Bitter Melon Farm compilation).

A music video, called "We Are Bangor", was created by local Bangoreans emphasizing on the correct pronunciation of Bangor. The video was formally shown at the annual Bangor Region Chamber of Commerce awards at the Cross Insurance Center in 2015. Important figures of the city make an appearance in the video such as Duck of Justice, Emily Cain and News Center's Steve McKay.[29][30][31]

Film and television

Several movie versions of

Dino de Laurentiis
in attendance.

The 1946 film The Strange Woman starring Hedy Lamarr, and based on the novel by Ben Ames Williams is set in early 19th century Bangor.

The fictional town of Collinsport, Maine, the setting for 1960s gothic TV soap opera Dark Shadows, 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, a series based on the Stephen King novel, takes place in a fictional suburb of Bangor called Cleaves Mills.

The title character in the 2004 television film, Celeste in the City was from Bangor.

In 1987 Late Night 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.

Julie "The Cat" Gaffney from

The Mighty Ducks (film series)
is from Bangor.

The Canadian television series Trailer Park Boys featured a train convention in Bangor on the season 7 episode "Friends of the Road".

A series of Saturday Night Live sketches, titled "Maine Justice", feature Bangor.

In episode 9, season 2 of the television comedy "Louie", Louie's estranged friend Eddie mentions travelling to Bangor.

Comic books

Crystal Ball's mother. The location of DC Comics
second Dial H for Hero series is a suburb of Bangor.

Food

Chocolate (Bangor) Brownies

The earliest documented recipe for

Boston Daily Globe
on April 2, 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.[32]

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.[33]

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

A. J. Downing's The Horticulturalist.[34] 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.[35]
Both continue to be grown throughout North America and Europe.

Business

Two businesses listed on the

Watergate complex in Washington), and with Bangorean Hutchins still on the board, the company became a classic 1960s conglomerate, accumulating such diverse holdings as the arms-maker Smith & Wesson, Piper Aircraft, and a number of yacht-makers. It was on the Fortune 500 List for most of its existence. Salgo was bought out in 1974 and the corporation dissolved in 1984.[36]

Sports

The Eastern Maine

football, ice hockey, baseball, and men's and women's basketball
.

Bangor High School's boys and girls swim teams have won more state championships than any other "class A" high school in the state. Its baseball and basketball teams have the highest total of first- or second-place finishes; its football team shares that record with South Portland
.

Bangor was home to two

minor league baseball teams affiliated with the 1995-98 Northeast League: the Bangor Blue Ox (1996–97) and the Bangor Lumberjacks (2003–04). Even earlier the Bangor Millionaires (1894–96) played in the New England League
.

A skillful competitor in the sport of

log-rolling
) has traditionally been known as a Bangor Tiger. This was the name given Penobscot river-drivers in the 19th century.

Bangor also hosts an annual

marathon (cancelled for 2017).

Rankings

Bangor has been ranked high on several "best places" lists published by national magazines and websites. Examples include:

  • Downeast Magazine' ranked Bangor as one of the Eight Best Places to Live in Maine in 2015 [37]
  • The American Lung Association's State of the Air Report (2014) declared Bangor the Cleanest City in the United States for ozone pollution and short-term particle pollution. Bangor was the 23rd Cleanest City for year-round particle pollution, and the second cleanest in the Northeast.[38]
  • Forbes Magazine', "25 Best Places to Retire in 2013". (Bangor was the only northeastern city on the list.)[39]
  • AARP Magazine', "2013 List of Best Places to Live the Good Life for Under $30K."[40]
  • Livability.com, "Top 10 Winter Cities", 2011 and 2012.[41]
  • RelocateAmerica.com, "America's Top 100 Places to Live", 2010.[41]
  • Children's Health Magazine', "Top 25 Places to Raise a Family", 2009.[41]
  • Money Magazine', "Top 25 Places to Retire", 2009.[41]

Gallery

  • Cascade Park on State Street in Bangor is located near the Eastern Maine Medical Center.]]
    Cascade Park on State Street in Bangor is located near the Eastern Maine Medical Center.]]
  • Kenduskeag Stream
  • Waterfront view
    Waterfront view
  • Closeup of the River Driver statue in Bangor by the sculptor Charles Tefft
    Closeup of the River Driver statue in Bangor by the sculptor Charles Tefft
  • Eastern Trust Building (1912) in Great Fire of 1911 Historic District
    Eastern Trust Building (1912) in Great Fire of 1911 Historic District
  • Lower Main Street
    Lower Main Street
  • State Street ~ 1908
    State Street ~ 1908
  • Downtown Bangor
    Downtown Bangor
  • With more than eighty stores, Bangor Mall off Interstate 95.
    With more than eighty stores, Bangor Mall off Interstate 95.
  • Bangor Public Library
    Bangor Public Library
  • Bangor Opera House
    Bangor Opera House
  • Library dome
    Library dome
  • Bangor Hose House No. 5 (now Fire Museum)
    Bangor Hose House No. 5 (now Fire Museum)
  • West Market Square
    West Market Square
  • Sculpture "Continuity of Community" (1969) in West Market Square
  • Downtown Bangor
    Downtown Bangor
  • St. John's Roman Catholic Church with Thomas Hill Standpipe in the distance
    St. John's
    Roman Catholic Church
    with Thomas Hill Standpipe in the distance
  • Artist Waldo Peirce (left), with brother and art-historian Hayford Peirce (right) and wives, before a night at the Bangor Opera in the 1930s.
    Artist Waldo Peirce (left), with brother and art-historian Hayford Peirce (right) and wives, before a night at the Bangor Opera in the 1930s.
  • Bangor Savings Bank at 99 Franklin Street
    Bangor Savings Bank at 99 Franklin Street
  • The Federal Building in Bangor
    The Federal Building in Bangor
  • Cascade Park on State Street in Bangor is located near the Eastern Maine Medical Center.
    Cascade Park on State Street in Bangor is located near the Eastern Maine Medical Center.
  • The Peirce Memorial, adjacent to the Bangor Public Library, commemorates the colorful log drivers on the Penobscot River.
    The Peirce Memorial, adjacent to the Bangor Public Library, commemorates the colorful log drivers on the Penobscot River.
  • The Paul Bunyan statue.
    The Paul Bunyan statue.
  • Log boom in 1910
    Log boom in 1910
  • Bangor in 1875
    Bangor in 1875
  • Old Post Office, now Bangor City Hall
    Old Post Office, now Bangor City Hall

Further reading

  • Bergquist, David H. Bangor in World War II: From the Homefront to the Embattled Skies (Arcadia Publishing, 2015)
  • History of Bangor, Maine (1886)
  • Lee, Maureen Elgersman. Black Bangor: African-Americans in a Maine Community, 1880–1950 (University Press of New England, 2005)
  • Scee, Trudy Irene. City on the Penobscot: A Comprehensive History of Bangor, Maine (History Press, 2010)
  • Shaw, Richard R., and Brian F. Swartz. Legendary Locals of Bangor (Arcadia Publishing, 2015)
  • City Directory. 1859; 1882.

External links

References

  1. ^ The New York Times, April 20, 1854, p. 1
  2. ^ New York Times, Feb. 5, 1856, p. 4
  3. ^ New York Times, May 9, 1860
  4. ^ Barnstable (Mass.) Patriot, May 25, 1869
  5. ^ New York Times, Sept. 26, 1896; Ibid Oct. 14, 1896
  6. ^ New York Times, Nov. 30, 1898
  7. ^ New York Times, Dec. 4, 1898, p. 2
  8. ^ Boston Daily Globe, Sept. 3, 1900
  9. ^ New York Times, July 10, 1907
  10. ^ New York Times, Mar. 29, 1858
  11. ^ Storms of Great Severity; A Tornado at BangorNew York Times, Aug, 16, 1882, p. 1
  12. ^ Eight Persons Drown: A Steam Launch Upset by the Wind at BangorNew York Times June 15, 1892, p. 1
  13. ^ Nile, LeRoy A. (9 October 1966). "Fleeing the Withering Gunfire, Brady's Time Ran Out". The Greenville News. Greenville, SC. Associated Press correspondent. p. 3, Section 4.
  14. ^ Lewiston Evening Journal, Aug. 22, 1938, p. 2
  15. ^ The Ice Storm of 1998 Retrieved June 20, 2008
  16. ^ Fisher, Carol B. Smith, Rev. Seth Noble, A Revolutionary War Soldier's Promise of America and The Founding of Bangor, Maine and Columbus, Ohio, Heritage Books, Inc., 2010, Westminster, MD, pp. 105–113
  17. ^ Wayne Reilly, "Bangor's First Auto Fatality Claimed Life of Boy, 10", Bangor Daily News, June 2, 2008
  18. ^ New York Times, Sept. 4, 19ii
  19. ^ New York Times, Aug. 27, 1939
  20. Federal Writer's Project
    , Maine: A Guide Downeast (1937), p. 136
  21. ^ "First Shipment of English Gold due here today". New York Times. August 10, 1915. {{cite news}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  22. ^ Jeffrey Gray, "Fear of Flying: Robert Lowell and Travel" in Papers on Language and :) (Winter 2005)
  23. ^ Heritage Books, Inc. Westminster, Maryland, 2010, Fisher, Carol B, Smith, Rev. Seth Noble A Revolutionary War Soldier's Promise of America and The Founding of Bangor, Maine and Columbus, Ohio, pp. 97–104
  24. ^ "Riding Down from Bangor". Retrieved 2008-03-04.
  25. ^ a b Norm Cohen, Long Steel Rail: The Railroad in American Folksongs (U. of Illinois Press, 2000) pp. 52–53; xxi
  26. ^ J. Peter Burkholder, All Made of Tunes: Charles Ives and the Uses of Musical Borrowing (J. Peter Burkholder, 1995) p. 372.
  27. ^ George Orwell, "Riding Down From Bangor" in Shooting an Elephant and Other Essays (Harcourt Brace, 1950)
  28. ^ "Bangor, Maine (song)". Retrieved 2008-11-03.
  29. ^ "We are Bangor, we are not Bang-er: video tunefully corrects mispronunciation | #Maine". Retrieved 2015-10-01.
  30. ^ ""We Are Bangor" explains city's pronunciation through song". Retrieved 2015-10-01.
  31. ^ How To Say Bangor, Maine | "We Are Bangor" (Video), Jan 21, 2015, retrieved 2015-10-01
  32. ^ The Big Apple (April 11, 2007). Retrieved May 20, 2008, gathers on one site various (and conflicting) quotations regarding the origin of the chocolate brownie. The recipe here, however, from the same website (and verified independently through the Google newspaper archive search engine) constitutes the earliest documented example
  33. ^ The last documented newspaper use of the term is in the Fitchburg (Mass.) Sentinel on Aug. 9, 1952
  34. ^ See The New England Farmer (1857), pp. 321, 357; The Horticulturalist (v. 1), 1846, pp. 195–96
  35. ^ [C.M. Hovey, The Fruits of America v. 2 (Boston: Hovey & Co., 1856), p. 47, reprint of article from Magazine of Horticulture, v. 15, 9. 456]
  36. ^ Bangor Punta Corporation, Retrieved January 28, 2008
  37. ^ http://downeast.com/bestplacesbangor/. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  38. ^ "Cleanest Cities - State of the Air 2014 - American Lung Association". State of the Air 2014.
  39. ^ William P. Barrett. "Bangor, Maine - In Photos: The 25 Best Places To Retire In 2013". Forbes.
  40. ^ "AARP-the-Magazine-Reveals-2013-List-of-Best-Places-to-Live-the-Good-Life-for-Under-30k". AARP.
  41. ^ a b c d Bangor Daily News, April 28, 2010.