The town of Harpswell consists of a narrow peninsula (the "neck") extending from Brunswick 10 miles South into Casco Bay and of a collection of over 200 islands, the three largest - Great Island (Sebascodegan), Orr's Island and Bailey Island joined together and to the mainland by bridges.

Harpswell was originally called "Merriconeag" which is the Indian name for "Quick Carrying Place". Near the town line between Brunswick and Harpswell the peninsula is so narrow the spot was used by the Indians as a carrying place from one bay to the other in their canoe expeditions.

Harpswell "neck" along with Sebascodegan Island was purchased from he Indians in 1659 by Colonel Shapleigh of Kittery. By 1714 there were only two settlers on the neck the rest having been driven off by the Indians. By 1731 many settlers had returned and Harpswell was incorporated as a town in 1758 - a distinction it has enjoyed to the present under the Massachusetts Bay Colony, the State of Massachusetts and the State of Maine.

The 150 mile diversified coastline of jagged rocky bluffs, deep coves, tiny inlets, sandy beached and majestic evergreens which offer unparalleled panoramas of seascape has made his a coastal jewel of uncommon beauty.

Harpswell is a community full of history, legend, fishing tradition, wonderful old farmhouses and sea captain's homes. The tall ships, sloops and schooners built here during the 1800's were famous world wide and just the mention of names like Stover, Skolfield, Curtis and Estes bring to mind those bustling shipyards of yesteryear. It has long been a mecca for summer vacationers in tune with nature; its rockledged, wooded and marshy terrain make it an ideal nesting place and summer resort for many species of birds.

Many well known American writers have called Harpswell home at some point in their lives. Harriet Beecher Stowe of "Uncle Tom's Cabin" fame also wrote "The Pearl of Orr's Island" when she spent the summer on that island. Ragged Island was the summer home of Maine poet, Edna St. Vincent Millay. Elijah Kellogg, the eloquent pastor of the present day Congregational church which bears his name, wrote 30 books for boys among them his Elm Island and Pleasant Cove series back in the 1840's. Robert P. Tristram Coffin who spent his childhood on Pond Island based his book "Lost Paradise" on his recollections of island life there. Harpswell continues to be home to many present day authors and artists.

Admiral Peary the Arctic explorer owned a home on Eagle Island. It is now run by the State of Maine and is accessible by boat to summer visitors who tour the house and picnic on the grounds. Admirals Peary and Macmillan both attended nearby Bowdoin College along with Nathaniel Hawthorne, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow and Franklin Pierce among other notables.

Historical sites and places of interest abound in Harpswell but two of these deserve special mention here because of their unusual qualities. The Cribstone (or honeycomb) bridge… "the bridge that divided a town is unique in all the world a caused one of the longest and bitterest fights in New England" history. Built in 1928 of huge granite blocks using no mortar or cement it connects Bailey and Orr's islands. The blocks are laid crib fashion - first lengthwise, then crosswise to accommodate swift tides and battering winter ice.

The old Meeting House in Harpswell Center is the oldest building still standing in the Brunswick area and perhaps the oldest meeting house in Maine. It stands exactly as it did in 1759 - older than the United States of America and built when Maine was just one part of the far flung Massachusetts Bay Colony. The structure is so valued by the National Association of Architects that 12 blueprints are filed in the National Archives in Washington, DC so that the building may be recreated if the original were ever destroyed. It is a National Historic Landmark and several unusual architectural features, such as the "shipknees", the 10 foot high pulpit and sounding board and the pumpkin pine pews , make it invaluable.

The cemetery behind the meeting hall brings to mind the many legends passed down by tradition such as the "witch of Harpswell" who was buried there, the reputation Pond Island has for being haunted and the spooky ghost ship last "seen" in the 1880's. the ship was always sighted just before he death of a Harpswell resident and John Greenleaf Whittier tells the tale in his poem, "The Ghost Ship of Harpswell".

You can read about Harpswell and her history in the many books and poems written by her resident authors and you can appreciate her beauty through the paintings and photographs of artists who have fallen under the spell of her unsurpassed beauty. There is no substitute, however, for a visit to this unique, midcoast town.