Atwell's Creek
Atwell's Creek is a former watercourse in Yarmouth, Maine, United States.[1] It is named for John Atwell, who married Elizabeth Felt, daughter of Joshua.[2]
Atwell's Creek Folly Creek | |
---|---|
Location | |
Country | United States |
State | Maine |
Town | Yarmouth |
Physical characteristics | |
Mouth | Royal River |
• location | Yarmouth, Maine, U.S. |
• coordinates | 43.79573317°N 70.177190°W |
Flowing into the southern edge of Yarmouth harbor, it was used from the early 18th century to power various mills, the first being Massachusetts native Gilbert Winslow's sawmill in 1720.[3] The creek received its nickname of Folly's Creek at this time, because Winslow's venture was expected by many people to fail, but it proved to be "a profitable concern."[4] The creek was "a considerable watercourse then";[5] now, though, it is nothing more than a tidal inlet.
References
- Corliss, Augustus W. (1877). Old Times in North Yarmouth, Maine. Augustus W. Corliss. p. 684.
- Felt, Dorr Eugene (1921). A Register of the Ancestors of Dorr Eugene Felt and Agnes (McNulty) Felt. D. E. Felt. p. 4.
- Lowell, Mary Chandler (1911). Chandler-Parsons: Edmund Chaundeler, Geoffrey Parsons and Allied Families. T. R. Marvin & Son. p. 69.
- Collections of the Maine Historical Society: Volume 2. Maine Historical Society. 1847. p. 181.
- Ancient North Yarmouth and Yarmouth, Maine 1636-1936: A History, William Hutchinson Rowe (1937)
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