Castine "44:22.97N 68:47.16W"

VulcanSpirit
Richard & Alison Brunstrom
Tue 26 Jul 2011 11:52
We are now at the northernmost point that we're goig to reach (having finally abandoned any hope of getting to Canada). Castine is at the head of Penobscot Bay near the mouth of the Penobscot River which leads to Bangor. It is probably the most fought-over place in America having been occupied several times by each of the French, British, Dutch and Americans. It is the oldest European settlement in New England, the French having arrived in 1611 and thus pre-dating the Plymouth colony by eight years.
For the French this was their southernmost site in Acadia. After much to-ing and fro-ing the area was ceded to France by the Treaty of Breda in 1667 which ended (temporarily) the war between France and England. Castine was captured briefly by the Dutch twice in 1674 & 1676, but French recaputure led to the collapse of New Holland and the Dutch withdrawal from North America. Thereafter the town see-sawed between France and Britain until the middle of the eighteenth century when British victory in North America became final. But Castine continued to be fought over. It was occupied by the British in 1779 during the War of Independence and successfully withheld a siege by Revolutionary troops. What followed became arguably the worst ever defeat of the US Navy. The American fleet was trapped by British reinforcements arriving from Halifax and the whole lot was beached and burnt - 18 armed vessels and 24 transports. The disaster cost the United States $8m, an enormous sum. The naval Commodore was court-martialled and dismissed the service. Interestingly Paul Revere, he of Revere's Ride (avid students of contemporary American politics may have noticed Sarah Palin's gaffe recently) was the US Artillery commander. He was also court-martialled and exonerated, but his reputation never recovered. Castine was the very last British outpost in the USA, returned to the US in 1783.  But that was not the end of the story; Castine was re-occupied by the British in 1814 after a brief skirmish, returning to the USA in 1815 when the Treaty of Paris unexpectedly set the border between Canada and the USA along the St Croix River instead of the Penobscot.
Castine is full of beautiful old buildings like the one below which dates from 1830, with streets lined by lovely old elms (foliage visible to right of picture) planted in Colonial times
 
 
 
Castine also has the oldest continually used Post Office in the US (1814) but unfortunately we didn't know that when Alison used it today so no photograph. There are almost no pre-independence buildings left here - amazingly because the Loyalists chose to relocate across the new Canadian border and took their houses with them, towing them on rafts about 100 miles up the coast to found the new town of St Andrews New Brunswick where apparently several of them can still be seen today.