Francis Small

Francis Small

Sebascodegan Island, Maine
Born (1625-10-06)October 6, 1625
Died 1714
Nationality British
Occupation Trader and landowner
Known for Made the first recorded land purchase in what is now Maine

Francis Small (October 6, 1625 - ca. 1714) was an enterprising trader and landowner residing primarily in Kittery, Maine. He made the first recorded land purchase in what is now Maine, and proceeded to amass so much that he was called "the great landholder." He possessed the largest number of acres of anyone who ever lived in Maine.[1][2]

Life and business

Small was the only child of Edward Small and Elizabeth Shurtt of Bideford, Devonshire, England who is known to have remained in America.[3][4] There is no record of the other five children ever coming to the American Colonies. Francis is believed to have arrived in New England with his father about 1632.[5] In 1648, he was residing in Dover, New Hampshire, and married Elizabeth Leighton of Kittery about 1650. While living in Casco (now Portland) in 1657, he bought from Scitterygusset, a local sagamore, about 200 acres (80.94 hectares) located on the northern side of Capisic Brook. In 1659, Small established a trading camp on Sebascodegan Island, now part of Harpswell.[6] By 1668, he resided in Kittery, with a trading post (as a squatter) near the confluence of the Ossipee River and Saco River at what is now Cornish. Here major Indian trails converged—the Sokokis Trail (now Route 5), the Ossipee Trail (now Route 25), and the Pequawket Trail (now Route 113) -- a location conducive towards lucrative fur trade with Indians, but also with risks of living isolated in the wilderness.[7]

Plot on his life

Indeed, Chief Wesumbe (or Captain Sandy), the sagamore of the Newichewannock Abenaki tribe, warned Small of a planned attempt on his life by renegade tribesmen. They were indebted to the trader, having purchased goods in the spring on credit, to be paid in the fall with furs. Instead, they decided to erase the debt by killing him at early dawn on a certain day, setting fire to his house and shooting him when he ran out the door. At first Small thought the warning a trick to frighten him away and avoid payment. Just to be on the safe side, however, he took refuge on a nearby hill, from which he could peer through the pines and observe what might transpire. Sure enough, at first light his trading post went up in flames, illuminating the dark forest. Small began running and didn't stop until he reached Kittery.[1]

The Ossipee Tract

As compensation for his losses, Chief Wesumbe sold to Small on November 28, 1668, twenty miles square of land, in all 256,000 acres (103,600 hectares), between the Ossipee River, Little Ossipee River, and Newichewannock River (now Salmon Falls River). The price was two large Indian blankets, two gallons of rum, two pounds of powder, four pounds of musket balls and twenty strings of Indian beads. The purchase comprised what is called the Ossipee Tract -- Limington, Limerick, Cornish (formerly named Francisborough after its early proprietor), Newfield, Parsonsfield and Shapleigh (part of which was later set off as Acton).[8] Small thereupon sold a half interest in the Ossipee Tract to Major Nicholas Shapleigh, who lived at what is now Eliot, and was then the richest man in the Piscataqua River region.[9]

But Indian unrest flared in 1675-1676 with King Philip's War. English settlements up the coast were attacked and burned until the revolt was quashed. About 1684, Small operated a trading post on Cape Small (which takes its name from him) at the extremity of what is today Phippsburg.[10] During King William's War, however, English settlements in the region were destroyed again in 1689 by Abenaki warriors allied with the forces of New France, which resented encroachment into territory it considered part of Acadia. The area was deserted.[11] Small took part in the Ossipee Excursion in this war.[12]

About 1700, Small moved from Kittery to Truro, Massachusetts to live with his son, Daniel. Major Nicholas Shapleigh died in 1682, followed 32 years later by Small. Then in 1770, the original unrecorded deed from Wesumbe to Francis Small was found by Small's heirs. Together with the heirs of Shapleigh, in 1772 they appointed a committee to recover the land. Accompanied by a surveyor and chairman, the committee marked what became the towns' boundaries. Represented by attorney James Sullivan, Small's heirs took possession of Cornish, Limington, Newfield and half of Limerick, while Shapleigh's heirs took possession of Parsonsfield, Shapleigh and the remainder of Limerick, the latter town presented by both sets of heirs to Sullivan as his fee.[9]

Wesumbe deed

References

  1. 1 2 Descendants of Edward Small
  2. Sullivan, Gov. James, The History of the District of Maine, I. Thomas and E. T. Andrews, Publishers, Boston, MA, 1795.
  3. Descendants of Edward and Elizabeth Small
  4. Palmer, Ansell W., ed. Piscataqua Pioneers: Selected Biographies of Early Settlers in Northern New England, p. 398, Piscataqua Pioneers, Portsmouth, New Hampshire, 2000. ISBN 0-9676579-0-3.
  5. Maine Historical Society (1919). Maine: A History, Volume 4. New York. p. 107.
  6. Underhill, Lora A. W. (1910). Descendants of Edward Small of New England, Volume 3. Cambridge, Massachusetts. p. 1578.
  7. History of Cornish, Maine
  8. "Who were Captain Sandy and Francis Small?" -- Francis Small Heritage Trust
  9. 1 2 History of Shapleigh, Maine
  10. History of Cape Small
  11. Coolidge, Austin J.; John B. Mansfield (1859). A History and Description of New England. Boston, Massachusetts. pp. 259–260.
  12. General Society of Colonial Wars, An Index of Ancestors and Roll of Members of the Society of Colonial Wars, p. 432, New York, NY, 1922, (https://books.google.com/books?id=fpUvAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA432&lpg=PA432&dq=%22ossipee+excursion%22+%22king+philip%27s+war%22&source=bl&ots=ah6iEfjav_&sig=T45Fi6t_SMMYdNM1zcW_AkzHSms&hl=en&ei=FiRPTeLcNYnTgQfQ5YA_&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=1&ved=0CBYQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=%22ossipee%20excursion%22%20%22king%20philip%27s%20war%22&f=false) Retrieved 6 Feb. 2011.

External links

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