- Cushing Island, Maine
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Cushing Island, or Cushing's Island, is a privately owned island in Casco Bay in the U.S. state of Maine. Part of the city of Portland, Maine, roughly 45 families live there seasonally.
In 1623-24 English explorer Christopher Levett built a blockhouse on the island, part of 6,000 acres (24 km2) granted him by the English King. Levett left behind a group of settlers to carry on after he returned to England. But the naval captain and adventurer never returned, and the fate of the men is unknown. After Levett's occupation the island was known as Andrews Island. Levett's early settlement earned him the sobriquet "the pioneer colonist in Casco Bay" from eminent Maine historian James Phinney Baxter.[1]
After a host of owners, in September of 1734, Nathaniel Jones conveyed the island to Joshua Bangs. The island was then known as 'Bangs Island'. The name 'Bangs Island' will be found on maps from the period. In the late 1750s Ezekiel Cushing obtained the island from Bangs. In 1760, Bangs regained the island. The island was later conveyed to Jedediah Preble, Joshua Bangs' son-in-law after Bangs' death. Simeon Skillings, a relation of Preble's later lived on the island and purchased small parts of the land. Lemuel Cushing, a fourth cousin of Ezekiel Cushing purchased most of the island in 1859. Cushing then consolidated the holdings of the Preble's and the Skilling's, becoming the sole owner of the island.[2] Born in Quebec, Canada to Massachusetts emigrants, Lemuel Cushing planned to turn the island into a summer resort and built the Ottawa House hotel[3]. Lemuel's son Francis Cushing formed the Cushing's Island Company in 1883 and hired Frederick Law Olmsted the same year to develop the island as a planned 'summer colony'. Olmsted designed the landscape of the island, along with architect John Calvin Stevens.[4]
The first Ottawa House was destroyed by fire and rebuilt in 1888. The second Ottawa House burned down in 1917 and was not rebuilt.
The United States Army began acquiring land on the island in the 1890s to build Fort Levett, named for explorer Christopher Levett, the English explorer and first settler of what is now Portland, which eventually grew to 200 acres (0.8 km²). (The island was initially known as Levett's Island, after the first English settler of Maine. Levett has been described by the eminent Maine historian James Phinney Baxter as "the first owner of the soil of Portland.") It was last used during World War II for coastal defense. That land was purchased by island residents in 1970. The island is now privately owned.
Ferry service is provided by the St Croix, which departs from Long Wharf in Portland and lands at the summer dock. Access to island is for private/owners use only.
See also
- List of islands of Maine
References
- ^ Christopher Levett, of York, the Pioneer Colonist in Casco Bay, James Phinney Baxter, Christopher Levett, The Gorges Society, Portland, Me., 1893
- ^ Sargent, William M. "An Historical Sketch, Guide Book, and Prospectus of Cushing's Island" (1886)
- ^ *Désilets, Andrée (1972). "Lemuel Cushing". Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online. http://www.biographi.ca/009004-119.01-e.php?&id_nbr=4926. Retrieved 2009-02-25.
- ^ Plan of Cushing Island, ca. 1888, John Calvin Stevens, Maine Historical Society, Maine Memory Network, mainememory.net
Casco Bay Major Islands Peaks Island • Long Island • Cliff Island • Chebeague Island • Cushing Island • Great Diamond Island • Little Diamond Island • House IslandThe City of Portland, Maine General Geography Bramhall Hill · Cliff Island · Cow Island · Cushing Island · East End Beach · Fore River · Fore River Sanctuary · Great Diamond Island · Jewell Island · Little Diamond Island · Mackworth Island · Munjoy Hill · Peaks IslandNeighborhoods Arts District · Back Cove · East Bayside · Deering Center · Munjoy Hill · Old Port · Portland Financial District · West EndStreets and Squares Commercial Street · Congress Street · Eastern Promenade · Exchange Street · Franklin Street · Longfellow Square · Monument Square · Western PromenadeSports teams Current: Maine Red Claws · Portland Phoenix FC · Portland Pirates · Portland Sea Dogs Former: Maine Mariners · Portland Blue Sox · Portland Pilots · Portland WaveMetropolitan area Greater PortlandEducation University of Southern Maine · Maine College of Art · University of New England · Portland, Maine schools · Casco Bay HS · Catherine McAuley HS · Cheverus HS · Deering HS · Portland HS · Waynflete School
Coordinates: 43°38′28″N 70°12′28″W / 43.64111°N 70.20778°WCategories:- Islands of Portland, Maine
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