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The State of
Maine is a state in the
New England region of the
northeastern
United States of America. The territory that is
now Maine was part of
Massachusetts until 1820. Maine is the
northernmost portion of New England and is the
easternmost state in the United States. It is known
for its scenery — its jagged, mostly rocky
coastline; its low, rolling mountains; and its
heavily forested interior — as well as for its
seafood cuisine, especially
lobsters and
clams.
The original
inhabitants of the territory that is now Maine were
Algonquian-speaking
peoples. The first European settlement in Maine was
in 1604 by a French party. The first English
settlement in Maine, the short-lived
Popham Colony, was
established by the
Plymouth Company in 1607. A number of English
settlements were established along the coast of
Maine in the 1620s, although the rugged climate,
deprivations, and Indian attacks wiped out many of
them over the years. As Maine entered the 18th
century, only a half dozen settlements still
survived. American and British forces contended for
Maine's territory during the
American Revolution
and the War of 1812.
Because it was physically separated from the rest of
Massachusetts (properly speaking, the Department
of Maine was an
exclave
of Massachusetts) and because it was growing in
population at a rapid rate, Maine became the 23rd
state on March 15,
1820, as a component of the
Missouri Compromise.
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