Civil War Veterans memorial in Bowdoin Center in the town of Bowdoin
Location Map for Bowdoin

Location Map for Bowdoin

Year Population
1970 858
1980 1,629
1990 2,207
2000 2,727
2010 3,061
Geographic Data
N. Latitude 44:03:39
W. Longitude 69:58:04
Maine House District 55
Maine Senate District 23
Congress District 1
Area sq. mi. (total) 43.7
Area sq. mi. (land) 43.5
Population/sq.mi. (land) 70.4
County: Sagadahjoc

 

 

Total=land+water; Land=land only
Bowdoin Population Chart 1790-2010

Population Trend 1790-2010

Sign: Bowdoin Maine EST 1788 (2002)[BOWE-dun] is a town in Sagadahoc County, incorporated on March 21, 1788 from the early plantation of West Bowdoinham. In 1799 it ceded land to form Thompsonborough, whose name changed to Lisbon in 1802, and ceded additional territory to Lisbon in 1834.

Settled before the Revolutionary War, and once known as “Plantation of West Bowdoinham,” it was finally named for James Bowdoin II, an early governor of Massachusetts, whose son James III arranged for the establishment of Bowdoin College. As was typical of town at the time, Bowdoin had fifteen school houses in 1870; in 2010 it had one elementary school.

In 1907 Governor William T. Cobb stood by the monument at Bowdoin Center and dedicated it to the memory of all Bowdoin Civil War veterans. One hundred twenty-eight names were inscribed there. The cannon had been dismantled and brought up from Fort Popham.

Rocky Ridge Orchard (2010)

Rocky Ridge Orchard (2010)

Bowdoin has more than tripled in population since 1970, and increased nearly 24% between 1990 and 2000. Still rural, the town is becoming a commuter community with easy access to Interstate 95 and to the Lewiston-Auburn area. One of its attractions is Rocky Ridge Orchard, which offers home made food, pumpkins and apples.

In 1959 four small schools were closed and the Bowdoin Central School was opened.  By 2002 the forty plus year-old school was closed in favor of a new one by the same name.

The Old Bowdoin Town Office, now the Historical Society, was moved from its original location on the Litchfield Road to the current municipal/historical center.

Old Bowdoin Town Office now the Historical Society (2010)

Old Bowdoin Town Office now the Historical Society (2010) @

Bowdoin Town Office (2010)

Bowdoin Town Office
(2010) @

 

 

Mitchell and Savage Maple Products operation may be found on the West Burrough Road, if you are up for a short hike in the thick of mud season.

Mitchell & Savage Maple Products (2012)

Mitchell & Savage Maple Products (2012) @

Visitors on Maple Sunday (2012)

Visitors on Maple Sunday (2012)


Form of Government: Town Meeting-Select Board.

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Additional resources

Sagadahoc Grange in Bowdoin Center (2001)

Sagadahoc Grange in Bowdoin Center (2001)

Bowdoin Historical Society (Me.). Bowdoin Bicentennial, 1788-1988: Pictorial History of Bowdoin, Maine, 1788-1988. Collected and compiled by the Bowdoin Historical Society. [Bowdoin, Me. The Society. 1988] (Auburn, Me. Falcon Press)
http://old.link75.org/bcs/grade4/BowdoinHist/picthist.htm (accessed September 27, 2011)

Varney, George J. A Gazetteer of the State of Maine. 1881. p. 64.

National Register of Historic Places – Listings

First Baptist Church of Bowdoin and Coombs Cemetery

[off West side of US 201, .65 mi. north of junction with Maine Route 125 in Bowdoin Center.] Built in 1839, the Church is a small wooden frame building that exhibits transitional Federal/Greek Revival style characteristics. It was built to replace a much larger structure destroyed by fire several years earlier. Located adjacent to the church building is the Coombs Cemetery, a burial plot established at least two decades prior to the construction of the church, but whose later history is linked to it.

First Baptist Church of Bowdoin (1997)

First Baptist Church of Bowdoin (1997)

First Baptist Church of Bowdoin (1997)

First Baptist Church of Bowdoin (1997)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Church photos by Kirk F. Monhey for the Maine Historic Preservation Commission, which is the source of the information in the historical note above.

Additional notes: The church has been moved elsewhere in the town. (See below)

The church congregation was founded in 1788.The property was the first in the town to be the subject of active preservation efforts. It was listed on the National Register in 1997.

Located it is in the central eastern area of the town of Bowdoin, the church and the cemetery are accessed by a dirt road running west across an open field and into woods surrounding the church and cemetery. The main facade, facing east, has an elaborate entrance at the door. The interior opens into the sanctuary, with three sections of bench pews and a raised pulpit.

Viola Coombs gave Bowdoin College an endowment for the cemetery’s maintenance. The college has transferred the endowment and responsibility for the property’s care to the local Bowdoin Historical society. The Viola Coombs historic house is atop Main Street in Bowdoinham.

First Baptist June 2 May 2, 2022

 

The interior appears to be well kept. However, the Exterior is not as smooth as seen from a distance. Paint is chipped on all sides. 

 

 

 

2 Comments

  1. This little snippet of Bowdoin history is awesome, would love the hear more. .. this little church abuts our property as well as the cemetery what stories these sites could tell.

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