Mailing Address:
Town of Casco
PO Box 60
Casco, ME 04015
Street Address:
Casco Town Office
635 Meadow Rd.
Casco, ME 04015
Tel: (207) 627-4515
Fax: (207) 627-4180
| Hours: |
| Monday |
9am to 4:30pm |
| Tuesday |
9am to 7pm |
| Wednesay |
9am to 4:30pm |
| Thurday |
9am to 4:30pm |
| Friday |
9am to 4:30 pm |
| Most Saturdays 9am to Noon |
| Closed All Legal Holidays |
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History of Casco
THE BEGINNING History by Melissa Kluge rewritten by Jen Morton and Georgette Burgess
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Maine began as a province of Massachusetts. At the time when our American independence was declared, northern Massachusetts was sparsely settled. The wild inhabitants-Indians and bears-and a lack of transportation both contributed greatly to preventing the settling of the province of Maine.
In the middle half of the eighteenth century, it became popular for the State of Massachusetts to pay off debts for military and other services by granting large lots of wild land.
It was voted that Capt. William Raymont and the company of men who had been under him in the failed expedition of 1690 to destroy the French citadel of Quebec, should be granted land. The expedition had been futile, but the result was the granting of a township to survivors or decedents of the men who had gone on this expedition.
The first attempt to grant land did not work out: it would have been what is today the area of Weare, NH, and the second attempt did not come until 25 years later. The original soldiers were long gone but their heirs were still eligible and land in Maine was plentiful.
On January 30, 1767 a suitable grant was settled upon and "a township of land 6 miles and 3/4's of a mile square was granted to Capt. William Raymont and others who served in the expedition against Canada in 1690, their legal Representatives or assigns and by them laid out in the County of Cumberland adjoining to Great Sebago Pond, and adjoining to New Marblehead..." This grant of land included all that is now Raymond and Casco, plus part of Naples, and was called Raymondtown, in honor of Capt. William Raymont.
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 Obadiah Gould home, first settler of Quaker Ridge
On June 20, 1803, Raymondtown became incorporated within Massachusetts as the Town of Raymond, with its own local government, and in 1820, Maine became a State. We were not to become "Casco" until 1841 and it took two petitions to the Maine Legislature to secure the separation from Raymond.
Casco was officially incorporated on March 18, 1841. Casco was the last town incorporated in Cumberland County and is the smallest consisting of 32 square miles of land and 6 square miles of water.
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 Casco High School 1848 |
Webb's Mills School
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