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
Atwell's Creek is on the left in this 1864 north-facing view of Yarmouth's harbor
Location
CountryUnited States
StateMaine
TownYarmouth
Physical characteristics
MouthRoyal River
  location
Yarmouth, Maine, U.S.
  coordinates
43.79573317°N 70.177190°W / 43.79573317; -70.177190

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

  1. Corliss, Augustus W. (1877). Old Times in North Yarmouth, Maine. Augustus W. Corliss. p. 684.
  2. Felt, Dorr Eugene (1921). A Register of the Ancestors of Dorr Eugene Felt and Agnes (McNulty) Felt. D. E. Felt. p. 4.
  3. Lowell, Mary Chandler (1911). Chandler-Parsons: Edmund Chaundeler, Geoffrey Parsons and Allied Families. T. R. Marvin & Son. p. 69.
  4. Collections of the Maine Historical Society: Volume 2. Maine Historical Society. 1847. p. 181.
  5. Ancient North Yarmouth and Yarmouth, Maine 1636-1936: A History, William Hutchinson Rowe (1937)
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