The name Monhegan is a corruption of
Monchiggon, the
Abenaki language term for "out-to-sea island" used by
Samoset, an
Abenaki sagamore and the first
Native American to make contact with the
Pilgrims of
Plymouth Colony, in his early contacts with the English. European explorers
Martin Pring visited in 1603,
Samuel de Champlain in 1604,
George Weymouth in 1605 and
Captain John Smith in 1614. The island got its start as a British fishing camp prior to settlement of the Plymouth Colony.
Cod was harvested from the rich fishing grounds of the
Gulf of Maine, then dried on
fish flakes before shipment to Europe. A
trading post was built to conduct business with the
Indians, particularly in the lucrative
fur trade. It was Monhegan traders who taught English to Samoset, the chieftain who in 1621 startled the Pilgrims by boldly walking into their new village at Plymouth and saying: "Welcome, Englishmen." On 28 January 1623 the
Council for New England issued a commission for seizing the "Island of Mannahigan". Settlement by William Vengham and William Pomfret in 1623 caused
William Bradford to include Monhegan among places that experienced "scattered beginnings" that year. On April 29, 1717, Monhegan was visited by the
Anne, a small square-rigged
snow crewed by
pirates. She had originally been captured off the
Virginia Capes in April by the pirate
Samuel Bellamy in the
Whydah, which wrecked in a storm on the night of April 26, 1717, off Cape Cod. The
Anne made it through the storm with another captured vessel, the
Fisher (which was soon abandoned and the pirates aboard her transferred to the
Anne). The pirates, led by
Richard Noland, arrived at Monhegan on April 29, and waited for the
Whydah, for the pirates had not seen or heard about the
Whydah wrecking in the storm of the night of April 26. The pirates eventually realized the
Whydah was lost, and proceeded to attack vessels at
Matinicus Island and
Pemaquid (now Bristol). They outfitted for their own uses a small 25-ton
sloop belonging to Colonel Stephen Minot they had captured off Matinicus. They abandoned all the other captured vessels (including the
Anne) and most of their prisoners at Matinicus on or about May 9, 1717, on Minot's sloop. Despite success as a fishing and trade center, Monhegan would be caught in the conflict between
New England and
New France for control of the region. During
King Philip's War (1675-1678), dispossessed English settlers from the mainland sought refuge on the island before being relocated elsewhere along the coast. During
King William's War (1688-1697), the island was captured for the
Kingdom of France in 1689 by
Baron de Saint-Castin. He destroyed the fishing fleet and burned the buildings, with many inhabitants escaping to
Massachusetts. But even during periods when Monhegan was abandoned, its convenient offshore harbor remained a stopover destination for ships. The end of the
French and Indian War in 1763 brought peace to the area, and on September 4, 1839, Mohegan—again under English Colonial control—was incorporated as an island plantation. From October 1 through June, fishermen harvest
lobsters from the only lobster
conservation area in the state of Maine. Henry Trefethen was one of the original purchasers of Monhegan Island. The Trefethen House, the oldest house on Monhegan Island, served as a hotel for island visitors, and remains standing today.
Artist colony The beginnings of the
art colony on Monhegan date to the mid-19th century; by 1890, it was firmly established. Two of the early artists in residence from the 1890s, William Henry Singer (1868–1943) and Martin Borgord (1869–1935), left Monhegan to study at the
Académie Julian in 1901. Among many early members who found inspiration on the island were summer visitors from the
New York School of Art and the
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, such as
Robert Henri,
Frederick Judd Waugh,
George Bellows,
Edward Hopper and
Rockwell Kent. Later members of the artist colony have included
Jay Hall Connaway,
Abraham Bogdanove,
Andrew Winter,
Joseph De Martini,
Reuben Tam,
Frances Kornbluth,
Elena Jahn,
Lynne Drexler,
Edward Betts, and
Jamie Wyeth. The 150-foot (50 m) northside cliffs at Blackhead have drawn the interest of Monhegan artists, including Kent, Hopper, and Kornbluth. The Monhegan Museum celebrated more the continuing draw of the island for artists in a 2014 exhibit entitled, "The Famous and the Forgotten: Revisiting Monhegan's Celebrated 1914 Art Exhibition." File:Gallagher (in white hat) painting on Monhegan Island, Maine.jpg|Artist painting fisherman
en plein air at Fish Beach. Photo by Warner Taylor. File:George Bellows - The Gulls, Monhegan.jpg|
The Gulls, Monhegan by George Bellows File:Broadway, Monhegan.jpg|1940s view of the main track in town by Sears Gallagher File:N. Roerich - Monhegan. Maine - Google Art Project.jpg|
Monhegan. Maine (1922) by
Nicholas Roerich (
Google Art Project) ==Geography==