The area was once traversed by
Abenaki Indians, who left behind 2,500-year-old
oyster shell
middens along the banks of the Damariscotta River. The
Whaleback Shell Midden is now a state historic site. The land became part of the Pemaquid Patent, granted by the
Plymouth Council in 1631 to Robert Aldsworth and Gyles Elbridge, merchants from
Bristol, England. At Pemaquid (now
Bristol), they built a fort and
trading post. Some colonists moved upriver from the village at Pemaquid about 1640 to settle what is today Damariscotta. But the settlements were attacked in 1676 during
King Philip's War, with the inhabitants either driven off or massacred. Attempts to rebuild alternated with further attacks during the
French and Indian Wars. The
Province of Massachusetts Bay constructed
Fort William Henry at Pemaquid in 1692, but it was destroyed in 1696. The last battle of
King William's War was on September 9, the Battle of Damariscotta, in which Captain
John March killed 25 native men. Fort Frederick, in 1729, successfully resisted the region's final two attacks, and was pulled down at the time of the Revolution so that the British could not occupy it. With peace at last, Damariscotta grew as a trade center. It was incorporated as a separate town on March 15, 1848, set off from parts of Bristol and
Nobleboro. The name Damariscotta is an extreme corruption of the
Algonquian word "Madamescontee", meaning "place of an abundance of
alewives", which are small, salty fish that
spawn in Damariscotta Lake. The main village is located at the lower
falls and
head of navigation on the Damariscotta River. Early industries included two
sawmills, a
match factory and a
tannery. Along the river were established several
brickyards, which supplied much of the brick used to build
Boston's Back Bay neighborhood.
Shipbuilding in particular brought Damariscotta wealth in the 1800s, when
clipper ships were launched at the town's
shipyards. During that time, many fine examples of
Federal,
Greek Revival and
Italianate style architecture were erected, giving the old
seaport a considerable charm which each summer attracts throngs of tourists. Damariscotta is home of the
Skidompha Public Library, whose name is an acronym formed from the first letter of several founders'
surnames. The terminus of the Damariscotta River is the Great Salt Bay, a mating area for
horseshoe crabs in
North America, and the state's first marine protected area. The river is home to 80% of the farmed oysters produced in Maine. File:Damariscotta River Steamboat Co.'s Fleet.jpg|Steamboat fleet in 1906 File:Looking East from Bridge, Damariscotta, ME.jpg|Main Street in 1910 File:Fiske House, Damariscotta, ME.jpg|The Fiske House in 1914 ==Geography==