Turner, Maine

Turner is a town in Androscoggin County, Maine, United States.

First called Sylvester-Canada, the township was granted by the Massachusetts General Court on June 20, 1768, to Major James Warren and others, survivors of Captain Joseph Sylvester's company for their services in the 1690 Battle of Quebec.

It replaced a 1735 grant of the same name located at what is now Richmond, New Hampshire, but which was ruled invalid in 1741 because of prior claims from the heirs of John Mason.

Reverend Charles Turner of Scituate, Massachusetts, acted as an agent for the dispossessed grantees, and would become the first minister of their new town.

[4] Nearly all the early settlers came from towns which had sprung up around Plymouth, Massachusetts, including the Leavitt family,[5] descendants of Deacon John Leavitt of Old Ship Church in Hingham, Massachusetts, and the Bradford family, descendants of Governor William Bradford of the Plymouth Colony.

[6] Following the Revolutionary War, settlement began to pick up, and by 1784 the expanding village had 30 families.

It was primarily a farming town producing corn and apples, but with exceptional water power sites on the Nezinscot River.

Here, Samuel Blake built in 1775 the first mill, both a sawmill and gristmill, although it was destroyed by the great freshet of 1785.

There were 5 sawmills and 3 gristmills in the community when a fire destroyed those at Turner Village in 1856.

It borders the towns of Hartford, Buckfield and Hebron to the west, Livermore to the north, and Minot and Auburn to the south, and Greene and Leeds to the east.

Flooding on the Androscoggin River , Turner, 1896
The 1831 Turner Town House , one of the oldest town halls in the state
Androscoggin County map