Coburn's family were
Federalists and he cast his first vote for president in 1824 for
John Quincy Adams. He went on to join the
Whig Party and was an early member of the
Maine Republican Party. Coburn served three years in the Maine House of Representatives before being elected Governor in 1863. He called for prisoners at the
Maine State Prison to be leased to contractors instead of the State itself using them for manufacturing. He became prominent in Skowhegan society, serving as the president of Skowhegan Savings Bank and becoming president and director of the
Maine Central Railroad. He served as the Chair of the
Colby College Board of Trustees from 1874 until his death in 1885. He was the uncle of the writer
Louise Helen Coburn. Many of his historical items can be seen in a museum she began, the
Skowhegan History House. Upon his death in 1885, Coburn left to the town of Skowhegan land for a public park. Coburn Park opened in 1907. Abner Coburn's life and achievements as governor were honored with the naming of a
sailing ship. ==References==