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102. Maine 1822 House of Representatives, Cumberland County, Portland, Ballot 2
103. Maine 1822 House of Representatives, Cushing and Saint George
104. Maine 1822 House of Representatives, Cushing and Saint George, Ballot 2
105. Maine 1822 House of Representatives, Cushing and Saint George, Ballot 3
106. Maine 1822 House of Representatives, Cushing and Saint George, Ballot 4
107. Maine 1822 House of Representatives, Deer Isle
108. Maine 1822 House of Representatives, Harrison and Otisfield
109. Maine 1822 House of Representatives, Paris
110. Maine 1822 House of Representatives, Parsonsfield
111. Maine 1822 House of Representatives, Penobscot County, Bangor
112. Maine 1822 House of Representatives, Putnam and Union
113. Maine 1822 House of Representatives, Putnam and Union, Ballot 2
114. Maine 1822 House of Representatives, Washington County
115. Maine 1822 House of Representatives, Washington County, Ballot 2
116. Maine 1822 House of Representatives, Washington County, Ballot 3
117. Maine 1822 House of Representatives, Washington County, Eastport
118. Maine 1822 House of Representatives, Waterville
119. Maine 1822 Secretary of State
120. Maine 1822 Speaker of the House
121. Maine 1822 State Senate, Cumberland County
122. Maine 1822 State Senate, Cumberland County, Special
123. Maine 1822 State Senate, Hancock County
124. Maine 1822 State Senate, Kennebec County
125. Maine 1822 State Senate, Lincoln County
126. Maine 1822 State Senate, Oxford County
127. Maine 1822 State Senate, Penobscot County
128. Maine 1822 State Senate, Penobscot County, Special
129. Maine 1822 State Senate, Somerset County
130. Maine 1822 State Senate, Somerset County, Special
131. Maine 1822 State Senate, Washington County
132. Maine 1822 State Senate, York County
133. Maine 1822 State Senate, York County, Special
134. Maine 1822 Treasurer, Hancock County
135. Maine 1822 Treasurer, Lincoln County
136. Maine 1822 Treasurer, Penobscot County
137. Maine 1822 U.S. House of Representatives, District 2, Special
138. Maine 1823 Governor
139. Maine 1823 House of Representatives, Bangor, Orono, Sunkhaze Plantation and Plantation No. 3
140. Maine 1823 House of Representatives, Bangor, Orono, Sunkhaze Plantation and Plantation No. 3, Ballot 2
141. Maine 1823 House of Representatives, Bath
142. Maine 1823 House of Representatives, Cumberland County, Portland
143. Maine 1823 House of Representatives, Cumberland County, Portland, Ballot 2
144. Maine 1823 House of Representatives, Cushing and Saint George
145. Maine 1823 House of Representatives, Deer Isle
146. Maine 1823 House of Representatives, Dennysville District
147. Maine 1823 House of Representatives, Dresden and Palermo
148. Maine 1823 House of Representatives, Eastport
149. Maine 1823 House of Representatives, Eastport, Ballot 2
150. Maine 1823 House of Representatives, Harrison and Otisfield
151. Maine 1823 House of Representatives, Lewiston
152. Maine 1823 House of Representatives, Lubec District
153. Maine 1823 House of Representatives, Paris
154. Maine 1823 House of Representatives, Parsonsfield
155. Maine 1823 House of Representatives, Perry District
156. Maine 1823 House of Representatives, Union and Washington
157. Maine 1823 House of Representatives, Union and Washington, Ballot 2
158. Maine 1823 House of Representatives, Waterville
159. Maine 1823 State Senate, Cumberland County
160. Maine 1823 State Senate, Hancock County
161. Maine 1823 State Senate, Kennebec County
162. Maine 1823 State Senate, Lincoln County
163. Maine 1823 State Senate, Oxford County
164. Maine 1823 State Senate, Penobscot County
165. Maine 1823 State Senate, Somerset County
166. Maine 1823 State Senate, Washington County
167. Maine 1823 State Senate, York County
168. Maine 1823 Treasurer, Lincoln County
169. Maine 1823 Treasurer, Penobscot County
170. Maine 1823 U.S. House of Representatives, District 1
171. Maine 1823 U.S. House of Representatives, District 1, Ballot 2
172. Maine 1823 U.S. House of Representatives, District 1, Ballot 3
173. Maine 1823 U.S. House of Representatives, District 1, Ballot 4
174. Maine 1823 U.S. House of Representatives, District 2
175. Maine 1823 U.S. House of Representatives, District 3
176. Maine 1823 U.S. House of Representatives, District 3, Ballot 2
177. Maine 1823 U.S. House of Representatives, District 3, Ballot 3
178. Maine 1823 U.S. House of Representatives, District 4
179. Maine 1823 U.S. House of Representatives, District 4, Ballot 2
180. Maine 1823 U.S. House of Representatives, District 5
181. Maine 1823 U.S. House of Representatives, District 6
182. Maine 1823 U.S. House of Representatives, District 6, Ballot 2
183. Maine 1823 U.S. House of Representatives, District 6, Ballot 3
184. Maine 1823 U.S. House of Representatives, District 7
185. Maine 1824 Clerk of the House of Representatives
186. Maine 1824 Electoral College, At Large
187. Maine 1824 Electoral College, Cumberland County
188. Maine 1824 Electoral College, Hancock and Washington Counties
189. Maine 1824 Electoral College, Kennebec County
190. Maine 1824 Electoral College, Lincoln County
191. Maine 1824 Electoral College, Oxford County
192. Maine 1824 Electoral College, Penobscot and Somerset Counties
193. Maine 1824 Electoral College, York County
194. Maine 1824 Governor
195. Maine 1824 Governor's Council
196. Maine 1824 House of Representatives, Cumberland County, Portland
197. Maine 1824 House of Representatives, Cumberland County, Portland, Ballot 2
198. Maine 1824 House of Representatives, Cushing and Saint George
199. Maine 1824 House of Representatives, Deer Isle
200. Maine 1824 House of Representatives, Dennysville District
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The pursuit of statehood dominated Maine politics between 1787 and 1820, when it finally achieved statehood separate from Massachusetts. Until 1820, the District of Maine simply comprised the eastern counties of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts and thus shared all its political characteristics (see Massachusetts entry). There were significant efforts at statehood in 1788–1789, 1792, 1803, 1816, but the district's populous coastal communities proved unwilling to sever their connections with the Commonwealth.
After 1803 the statehood issue increasingly became identified with Jeffersonianism. Backcountry residents became increasingly restive, in no small part because of antipathy to absentee proprietors who owned vast swathes of Maine's undeveloped hinterland. The situation remained volatile until the issue became politicized by Jeffersonian leaders who saw a chance to land a major blow against the Boston-based Federalist elite. The dominant figure in the struggle for statehood was William King, a wealthy merchant who based his political career on the grievances of squatters and religious dissenters such as himself. In a timely defection, in 1803 he became a Republican, portending the district's conversion; in 1805 the District of Maine voted for a Jeffersonian gubernatorial candidate, and a majority of its voters never supported Federalism thereafter.
The War of 1812 proved a catalyst for statehood. Militarily abandoned by Massachusetts, Mainers increasingly realized that only statehood would endow them with a political voice. Yet an 1816 statehood effort failed. Stung by the defeat, King realized that Maine's coastal communities would not break with old Massachusetts as a consequence of a peculiarity in federal navigation laws. Utilizing his political connections in Washington, King helped refashion national maritime policies in such a way that separation did not threaten the shipping trades so essential to Maine's coastal communities. With this obstacle removed, in July 1819 an election based on separation passed in all nine Maine counties; by October, representatives held a constitutional convention.
Maine's constitution departed significantly from that of Massachusetts and can be seen as a triumph of Jeffersonian principles. It guaranteed freedom of both speech and press; absolute freedom of religion; and universal male suffrage for those over twenty-one, with no property qualifications whatever and no racial restrictions. Maine's legislature was bicameral, featuring a House of Representatives and a Senate, with November elections every two years for both houses. Unlike Massachusetts, which, to ensure the dominance of Suffolk County, based the number of senators on each county’s wealth, Maine apportioned senators on the basis of population.
The new state's executive powers were somewhat altered from those of old Massachusetts, which arguably had the strongest governorship in the nation, but they nonetheless remained strong. Governors were not required to be Christians, and they served a four-year term. There was no lieutenant governor; the president of the Senate was designated the successor to any governor incapacitated. The combined Senate and House elected a seven-member council to assist the governor.
Congress approved Maine's statehood in 1820 as part of the "Missouri Compromise." Given his prominence in the statehood movement, it is appropriate that King became Maine's first governor.
Bibliography
- Banks, Ronald F.
Maine Becomes a State: The Movement to Separate Maine from Massachusetts, 1785–1820. Middletown, CT: Published for the Maine Historical Society by Wesleyan University Press, 1970. - Formisano, Ronald P.
The Transformation of Political Culture: Massachusetts Parties, 1790s–1840s. New York: Oxford University Press, 1983. - Goodman, Paul.
The Democratic-Republicans of Massachusetts; Politics in a Young Republic. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1964. - Leamon, James S.
Revolution Downeast: The War for American Independence in Maine. Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press, 1993. - Marini, Stephen A.
Radical Sects of Revolutionary New England. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1982. - Taylor, Alan.
Liberty Men and Great Proprietors: The Revolutionary Settlement on the Maine Frontier, 1760–1820. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1990. Published for the Institute of Early American History and Culture, Williamsburg, Virginia. - Williamson, William D.
The History of the State of Maine: From Its First Discovery, A.D. 1602, to the Separation, A.D. 1820, Inclusive. Hallowell, ME: Glazier, Masters and Co., 1832.