- Penobscot River
The Penobscot River is 350 mi (563 km) long, making it the second longest river in the
U.S. state ofMaine and the longest river entirely in Maine. Its drainage basin contains 8,610 square miles.It arises from four branches in several lakes in the central Maine, and flows generally east. After the uniting of the branches, it flows south, past the city of Bangor, where it becomes navigable. It empties into the
Atlantic Ocean inPenobscot Bay . It is home to thePenobscot people that live on Indian Island, Maine.The United States government maintains three river flow gages on the Penobscot river. The first is on the East Branch inGrindstone, Maine (coord|45|43|49|N|68|35|22|W|) where the rivershed is 1,086square mile s. Flow here has ranged from 37,000 to 77cubic feet per second. The second is inWest Enfield, Maine (coord|45|14|12|N|68|38|57|W|) where the rivershed is 6,671 square miles. Flow here has ranged from 153,000 to 1,630cubic feet per second. The third is inEddington, Maine (coord|45|14|12|N|68|38|57|W|), 0.4 miles downstream from the Veazie Dam where the rivershed is 7,764 square miles. [cite web | author=G.J. Stewart, J.P. Nielsen, J.M. Caldwell, A.R. Cloutier | year=2002| title=Water Resources Data - Maine, Water Year 2001 | format=PDF | work=Water Resources Data - Maine, Water Year 2001 | url=http://me.water.usgs.gov/Maine01adr.pdf | accessdate=2006-05-07]The river is heavily polluted by the nearby paper mills, which is disrtupting the Penobscot Tribe's way of life. They can no longer safely eat the fish from the water or rely on the river otherwise because the dioxin levels in the water are so high. In fact, the cancer rate on Indian Island is twice what it is in the rest of the state of Maine.Fact|date=October 2007
However, an effort is being made to restore the river's habitat for sea-run fish, while still maintaining its very important energy production. http://www.penobscotriver.org describes this ongoing effort, involving the removal of two very historic dams (the Great Works and Veazie dams), and the construction of a bypass ladder for the Howland Dam, started in 2004 in more detail.
History
The first European known to have explored the river was the Portuguese Estaban Gomez in 1524, followed by the Frenchman
Samuel de Champlain in 1605. A few years later French priests came among thePenobscot people as missionaries and converted them toCatholicism . The French settlement ofPentagouet , nowCastine was founded at the point where the river becomesPenobscot Bay , and the Penobscot people made a permanent settlement at Indian Old Town, on an island above the head of navigation, around the Catholic mission. Throughout the 16th and half of the 17th centuries, these were likely the only permanent settlements on the river, although the Penobscots considered the entire river and bay their hunting ground and maintained other seasonal villages along its banks.In 1669 the
Mohawk tribe made raids from the west that were very destructive to the Penobscot people. The English settlers inMassachusetts also sent periodic raiding parties to the Penobscot in this period but were not strong enough to wrest the area from French control until the 1750s. In a treaty of 1752, however, Massachusetts laid claim to the entire Penobscot watershed, and in 1759 thePownall Expedition , led by the Governor of Massachusetts, establishedFort Pownall onCape Jellison in what is nowStockton Springs . This signaled the beginning of English domination, and the incorporation of the Penobscot River valley intoNew England .The first permanent English settler on the river was
Joshua Treat (1726-1802) who was initially the armorer and translator at Ft. Pownall. His oldest sonJoshua Treat Jr. built a log house and sawmill atMarsh Bay in what is nowFrankfort, Maine , and other members of their extended family, joined by additional settlers from Massachusetts and New Hampshire, pushed ever further up-river, eventually restricting the Penobscot people to Indian Old Town, the presentPenobscot Indian Reservation .The river and bay were the site of battles in both the
American Revolution and theWar of 1812 . In both cases the British navy won, and in 1814 they sacked the town of Bangor. To prevent this from happening a third time, and because the nearby boundary between the U.S. and British Canada was still contested into the 1840s, the Federal government began constructing a huge granite fort, Fort Knox opposite the town ofBucksport, Maine , near the mouth of the river, in 1844. The fort never fired a shot in anger, but remains one of the Penobscot's major man-made landmarks.In the 19th century the river was converted into a conveyor belt for the transport of logs from the northern woods, to be sawn into lumber at mills around
Old Town and Orono, and transported on ships from Bangor, at the head of tide. A secondary economic use made of the river late in the century was as a source ofsawn ice for urban markets.In the 20th century, lumbering was largely supplanted by paper-making, in the form of large
wood pulp andpaper-mills located all along the river fromMillinocket andEast Millinocket in the north, toSouth Brewer andBucksport in the south. The development of cheaphydropower also attracted other types of light manufacturing, liketextiles andshoes .In the 21st century, with the sudden decline of the Maine paper industry, and the divestiture of its woodlands, the Penobscot watershed is becoming more and more associated with recreational use (fishing, hunting, boating, and tourism) and less with manufacture.
Angling the Penobscot River
Angling, especially
fly fishing has always been popular on the river. The West Branch is known as a world class landlocked salmon river while the East Branch is known for its smallmouth bass fisherycite book |last=Kreh |first=Lefty |coauthors=Middleton, Harry |title=Lefty's Favorite Fly Fishing Waters-Volume One-United States |year=1993 |publisher=Odysseus Editions |location=Birmingham, Alabama |pages=13-16] . In 2008, the Atlantic Salmon commission opened the main stem of the river tocatch and release fly fishing foratlantic salmon [ [http://mainegov-images.informe.org/dmr/searunfish/salmonregs.pdf Rules of the Atlantic Salmon Commission] ] .Popular Culture
Author
Stephen King placed his fictional town ofDerry, Maine on the Penobscot. It is also featured in the film adaptation of theTom Clancy novel,"The Hunt for Red October ."ee also
*
List of Maine rivers
*Waldo-Hancock Bridge
*Penobscot Narrows Bridge
*Fort Knox (Maine) External links
* Real-time river flow data at [http://waterdata.usgs.gov/usa/nwis/uv?site_no=01029500 Grindstone] , [http://waterdata.usgs.gov/usa/nwis/uv?site_no=01034500 West Enfield] , or [http://waterdata.usgs.gov/usa/nwis/uv?site_no=01036390 Eddington] (height only).
* [http://CPRR.org/Museum/BMLRR/Penobscot.html "The Ancient Penobscot, or Panawanskek." Historical Magazine, February, 1872.]
* [http://cprr.org/Museum/BMLRR/Joshua_Treat.pdf "Joshua Treat: The Pioneer Settler on Penobscot River." by Joseph Whitcomb Porter, 1889 (pdf)]
* [http://water.usgs.gov/GIS/huc_name.html USGS River Basin Info]
* [http://www.penobscotriver.org "The Penobscot River Restoration Project"]
*National Weather Service [http://newweb.erh.noaa.gov/ahps2/index.php?wfo=car forecast] of river levels and flow.
*Live [http://www.earthcam.com/client/mainedot/index.php WebCam] of the Penobscot Narrows Bridge across the Penobscot River.References
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