Great Falls of Lewiston/Auburn
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| Sun Journal
File Photo |
| The Great Falls are most active during the Spring
thaw where melting snow from the mountains rushes into the Androscoggin
River. |
One landmark that is synonymous with the Lewiston/Auburn area is
the Great Falls. The Androscoggin River is dotted with waterfalls
along its 170-mile journey to the sea. These falls run the gamut
in size from simple ledge drops to the massive Rumford Falls. While
not nearly as large as the cascading Rumford Falls, our Great Falls
are still quite impressive.
Watching these falls from either side of the river is a study in
contrasts. When the river is at its most docile, the falls stand
as silent sentinels guarding the upper reaches of the Androscoggin.
However, when the winter’s snows begin to melt and the spring’s
rains begin to fall, the Great Falls are transformed. No longer are
they silent, instead, they become part of a raging torrent of water.
Each spring, millions of gallons of water roar over the falls often
times hiding the falls entirely.
More than just a geological feature, the falls have been a part
of the history of this area. From the oral histories of the Native
Americans to the written history of the settlers, the Great Falls
have figured prominently.
Native American historians relate many oral histories of the Androscoggin
including one story of a curse placed on the falls by a local chief.
The story has many variations but they all include one common factor:
the placing of torches on or near the river and their subsequent
removal or movement.
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| Jose Leiva/Sun
Journal |
| Pink and blue searchlights illuminate
the Great Falls of the Androscoggin Rive. The
lighting of the falls was part of an effort by Central Maine
Medical Center and the March of Dimes to focus greater public
awareness on the problem of infant prematurity. |
In most of the versions, the torches were placed above the falls
by the natives to warn others of the falls’ proximity. As the
story tellers relate, the torches were moved by a local farmer working
in his field and replaced incorrectly. This caused natives on the
river to misjudge the closeness of the falls and resulted in the
canoe going over the falls.
Another version related by native historians has the torches being
placed by advance scouts for a neighboring tribe. These scouts were
sent in advance of a raiding party to mark the location of the falls.
The local natives, observing this, moved the torches causing the
main raiding party to be swept over the falls. Whatever the actual
events were, the area is rich in the history of both cultures.
The first settlers to the area were quick to harness the power of
the falls. In fact, the falls became the focal point of the settlement
of Lewiston Falls Village. The first settler to the area, Paul Hildreth,
built his cabin near the falls in 1770. His first cabin burned to
the ground but he was undaunted returning the following spring to
rebuild. He went on to operate a ferry about a half mile below the
falls.
As the area grew in population, the falls became an important source
of power. Settler Michael Little built a building complex that held
a sawmill and a gristmill. He would later build a woolen mill near
the falls in 1839. The Little family would go on to found The Great
Androscoggin Falls, Dam, Lock, and Canal Company. The company’s
purpose was to develop the river for commercial use.
One unique idea was the construction of a canal that would reach
from the falls to Freeport. In 1836, a man by the name of Solomon
Dennison proposed that a boat canal be constructed from Great Falls
to the tidewaters in Freeport. The plan was never carried out. The
size and number of waterfalls along the way made the canal impossible
to build. The falls were harnessed for another type of canal, however.
A stone dam was constructed behind the falls to divert the flow of
the Androscoggin into the canal system of Lewiston in the mid 1800’s.
These canals powered the textile industry that flourished here in
the Lewiston/Auburn area.
The mills may have fallen silent, the textile industry may have
moved away, but the Great Falls remain as a link to our past. Today
we do not look upon the falls as a source of power; instead, they
link us to the people who built these towns.
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