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PublishedAugust 4, 2021
Video: Fort Knox Civil War weekend brings history to life
3rd Maine Infantry Company A event July 17-18 includes 1861-1865 life in and around the fort, from medical care to marches to writing — and, of course, plenty of firing of muskets and cannons.
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PublishedMay 18, 2021
Does anyone recognize people in the photo?
This newspaper clipping from the early 1960s includes a photograph from the files of the late Mary Dyer of Owls Head. The family wants to know if anyone can identify the people in this photo from The Courier-Gazette.
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PublishedMarch 18, 2021
Pandemic sports safety starts behind scenes
Everyone has heard or used the phrase: "Logistical nightmare." Those words have added meaning in the high school sports world as many people, despite countless logistical nightmares, worked tirelessly and successfully behind the scenes the past three months to provide a safe, memorable winter experience for student-athletes during COVID-19. It was a nearly impossible task that these unsung, mostly unseen, sports ...
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PublishedFebruary 21, 2021
Say goodbye to tacky wallpaper
Wet and scrape, wet and scrape. That was the way my grandpa, a professional painter and paperhanger taught me. As a youth, I was grandpa's assistant and one of my jobs was to — with a pail of warm water and a wide paintbrush — saturate old wallpaper in order to loosen it before attempting to scrape it off. This was a miserable job and not one I would recommend to anyone. Also, the heavy saturation meant that the ...
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PublishedAugust 6, 2020
Why don't they prosecute?
Thursday July 30, 2020: Knox County Closed Cases Arthur M. Andrews, 34, Camden, domestic violence assault, dismissed. Joey Hopkins, 43, domestic violence terrorizing on June 24 in Warren, dismissed. When people ask me what they can do to stop domestic violence, I always tell them: Read the “Cops and Courts” section of your local newspaper. See how much of the crime in your community is domestic violence. And then ...
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PublishedJuly 8, 2020
Camden Herald Editorial
More will vote on town budgets July 14 A historic shift from attending town meetings in person to voting by paper ballot (at the polls and by absentee ballot) seems to be going smoothly so far. The shift to voting by paper ballot is one of the many changes Midcoast residents have seen since mid-March, when the COVID-19 pandemic changed life as we know it, at least for the present. The deadline is July 9 for ...
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PublishedJuly 2, 2020
How can we all be in this together, when we can't be together?
All across Maine's 16 counties, a state executive order that limits public gatherings to 50 people has led to changes or cancellations of the time-honored annual traditions of town meetings, parades, festivals and fireworks. One time-honored tradition happens only once in a lifetime for the individuals involved, namely high school graduation. This year, high school seniors from Camden to Skowhegan graduated in ...
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PublishedOctober 17, 2019
The power of money
Americans pride ourselves on having the best quality of life, the best political and economic system, the best future for our children. But does that mean our union is perfect? Now more than ever in my baby-boomer lifetime, it seems urgent to ask ourselves some tough questions. Why is it that many basic goods like electric power are provided by private, profit-making companies? Why are essential services like ...
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PublishedJuly 23, 2019
In invitation to learn about the local fish ecosystem
I have been truly inspired and excited by all the messages I've been receiving from community members who want to talk about fish in Camden Harbor and Megunticook Lake and River. After living most of my life in Camden, I'm embarrassed to say how little I paid attention to the world just below the surface, but it has been wonderful to start tapping into so much knowledge that exists within the community. We have ...
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PublishedDecember 6, 2018
Extraordinary and ornery
In the latter half of the 1990s and into the 21st century, I rode the ferry to North Haven several times a year to watch plays presented by North Haven Community School students, their numbers often increased by community members. In the early years, I'd walk up to the island's gym, where bleachers and canvas created a theater on the basketball courts. Later, the shows took place at Waterman's Community Center, ...
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