March 2024

Decorative image with the text "Museum Roundup/ News and Updates from the Maine State Museum"

The Latest...

Women's History Month Meets Basketball!

It’s March and time again for high school and college basketball tournaments! And what better time to look back on the early years of girls’ high school basketball, than with this photo of the 1915 Thomaston High School team.

1915 may have been the team’s first season, during a year when the Skowhegan girls’ team dominated the state. (The next year, the Skowhegan team, which included Margaret Chase Smith as “roving center,” won the state championship.) The photo shows Thomaston players and most likely, coaches. All are unidentified.


Celebrate girls’ high school basketball this month and contact us if you know the names of these proud Thomaston athletes!


Photo: MSM 2016.20.23

Flocking to Libraries

Participants build a nest at Lithgow Library in Augusta.

Maine State Museum educators took the All About Birds! program to Maine libraries during February school vacation week.


There were 214 attendees at the programs, which were held in Augusta, Richmond, Auburn, and Pittsfield.


The Maine State House has been the seat of Maine government for almost 200 years. A forum for debate, protest, and ultimately law and policy-making, it is a vibrant center of democracy. Are you curious to learn more about this historic building? There is now a new way of touring the State House, either in person or at home. The Maine State Museum staff has worked with the Office of the Clerk of the House of Representatives and the Legislative Council to create a self-guided tour that can be viewed on mobile phones, tablets, or computers. 

This tour will guide you through the building and highlight areas of historic, architectural, and civic interest. Viewers can click on the video camera icon for film clips that will provide a better understanding of the important work happening in offices, legislative chambers, and the Hall of Flags. Have fun and learn more when you click on the “Did You Know?” and “Can You Find It?” icons - you might be surprised at what you discover!


We invite you to try out the new tour and give us your feedback. After you complete the tour, please fill out this brief survey.

 

If you want to explore in person, the State House is free and open to the public year-round on weekdays from 8:00 AM to 5:00 PM. The mobile tour of the Maine State House was funded by a grant from the Maine State Bicentennial Commission.

An Office Sign and the Birthplace of the Republican Party

Wooden sign reading "P.M. Stubbs' Office."

The Maine State Museum recently acquired a sign that hung on the building where the Maine Republican Party was formed in 1854. The sign reads “P.M. STUBBS' OFFICE.” It hung outside the office of Judge Philip M. Stubbs (1805-1876) of Strong, Maine.


Judge Stubbs’s office was the site where members of three political parties joined forces to form the Maine Republican party on August 7, 1854.


Representatives of the three existing parties met in the office to negotiate a political platform for a new party. The parties included the abolitionist wing of the Whig Party, the Free Soil Party, which advocated that all future states would be free states, and a group of Democrats who were in favor of the Maine law that restricted alcohol consumption. The men returned to their separate political party conventions and approved the new platform. 


The three parties then came together under a tent in the Strong town common to hold the first convention of the

 

MSM 2024.7


Republican Party in Maine. They nominated candidates for a full Franklin County Republican ticket.


In August 1884, Judge P.M. Stubbs guided a committee of Franklin County Republicans to organize a 30th anniversary celebration of the Strong convention. Sixteen trains brought over 5,000 people to Strong to hear leading Maine Republicans speak, including Presidential nominee James Blaine and former Vice President Hannibal Hamlin.


While the August 1854 Strong convention represents the birth of the Maine Republican Party, debate began in 1904 over whether it was the first site of the national Republican Party’s formation. Today, the Republican Party recognizes Ripon, Wisconsin, which held a Republican convention in March 1854, as the party’s official birthplace.


The museum purchased the sign from P.M. Stubbs’s great grandson, Robert G. Stubbs Jr. of Hallowell.

Did you miss last month's Roundup? You can always read back issues here.

MAINE STATE MUSEUM  www.mainestatemuseum.org

Support the Maine State Museum

Facebook  Instagram  YouTube