Boston Herald

Virus zaps Maine’s 200th birthday

Party postponed due to pandemic

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AUGUSTA, Maine — Mainers have a special bond with Massachuse­tts that’s friendly for the most part. What Mainer doesn’t love the Boston Red Sox, after all?

But it wasn’t always so. Maine became a state by splitting from Massachuse­tts, gaining independen­ce 200 years ago at a time when residents were smarting over Massachuse­tts’ decision not to defend the Maine territory in the War of 1812.

The state marked the bicentenni­al of Maine’s liberation from Massachuse­tts on March 15, 1820 — but without a birthday party.

The coronaviru­s pandemic forced the state’s bicentenni­al committee to postpone Sunday’s celebratio­n in Augusta that was supposed to kick off activities that will continue through the year, including plans for a big parade in May and the arrival of tall ships in late June.

But Gov. Janet Mills didn’t let the milestone go unnoticed. “Maine has a proud and storied history. As we celebrate ‘statehood day’ during our bicentenni­al year, let us reflect on that history and recommit ourselves to the values that shape us as a state and as a people,” the governor said.

The state was a territory of Massachuse­tts until 1820. Maine voters rejected statehood three times before the War of 1812, which left many Mainers incensed.

British troops remained in some locations of Maine until a year before the fourth, successful vote in 1819. But statehood wasn’t ratified by Congress until the Missouri Compromise, which aimed to maintain the balance of power between free and slave states.

For the two states, it’s been a complicate­d relationsh­ip.

There’s a shared love of the Red Sox, Bruins and Patriots. But Mainers like to poke fun at their citified, well-to-do cousins who treat the vast state like their playground when they arrive with fancy snowmobile­s, big boats, fat wallets — and an attitude.

“It’s the classic love-hate relationsh­ip,” joked Earle G. Shettlewor­th Jr., Maine state historian.

Like their forebears who set up farming communitie­s and summer colonies, Massachuse­tts vacationer­s and others “from away” often set up roots in Maine with vacation homes on plum real estate.

Maine humorist Tim Sample said there’s a famous joke about Maine’s statehood and wealthy Massachuse­tts visitors: “Maine broke away from Massachuse­tts 200 years ago — and they’ve been trying to buy Maine back one house lot at a time ever since.”

 ?? AP ?? BYE BICENTENNI­AL: Steve Moody, director of nursing at Central Maine Medical Center, mops the floor of a tent on Friday outside the emergency entrance to the hospital where patients are tested for of the coronaviru­s, in Lewiston, Maine.
AP BYE BICENTENNI­AL: Steve Moody, director of nursing at Central Maine Medical Center, mops the floor of a tent on Friday outside the emergency entrance to the hospital where patients are tested for of the coronaviru­s, in Lewiston, Maine.

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