Riceville, Maine Explained
45.0525°N -68.3078°WRiceville (also known as Hancock Tannery, Thirty-Nine Tannery, #39 Tannery, Riceville Plantation) is a ghost town in East Hancock, Maine, specifically in Township 39 Middle Division.[1] It was once home to a bark extract works owned by F. Shaw and Brothers Company, which owned many tanneries in the state of Maine.[2] Later, the extract works was bought by James Rice and transferred to his company, Buzzell and Rice Tanning, which converted the plant into a tannery and began manufacturing sole leather from buffalo hides for shoemaking out of the township.[3] Eventually Buzzell and Rice transferred the land back to Rice as an individual and he formed a new company, Hancock Leather, after which he began manufacturing sole leather once again.[4] [5] [6] The community which sprang up around the tannery was home to 136 residents in 1890, eventually declining to 75 residents in 1900.[7] [8]
Notes and References
- News: Bangor Ghost Hunters probe site of former tannery town. Gagnon. Dawn. 30 Oct 2009. Bangor Daily News. 11 Dec 2014.
- Deed of Sale from George Nixon Black to F. Shaw and Brothers, 11 November 1879, Hancock County, Maine, Book 167, page 393. Hancock County Registry of Deeds, Ellsworth, Maine.
- Maine Bureau of Industrial and Labor Statistics. Annual Report of the Bureau of Industrial and Labor Statistics. N.p.: n.p., 1896, n.d. Print.
- Deed of Sale from James Rice to Buzzell and Rice Tanning Company, 30 November 1898, Hancock County, Maine, Book 330, page 284. Hancock County Registry of Deeds, Ellsworth, Maine.
- Deed of Sale from Buzzell & Rice Tanning Company to James Rice, 4 October 1900, Hancock County, Maine, Book 356, page 43. Hancock County Registry of Deeds, Ellsworth, Maine.
- Deed of Sale from James Rice and wife to Hancock Leather Company, 16 August 1902, Hancock County, Maine, Book 381, page 117. Hancock County Registry of Deeds, Ellsworth, Maine.
- Maine Bureau of Industrial and Labor Statistics. "Populations by Cities, Towns, Plantations and Unorganized Places in the State of Maine; Hancock County; Township 39." Annual Report of the Bureau of Industrial and Labor Statistics. N.p.: n.p., 1910, n.d. 148. Print.
- Web site: A Chronicle of Riceville. Prescott. Ryan. Abandonment of Maine.
- News: Tannery Burned; Plant of Hancock Leather Co. Destroyed at Riceville.. 1 January 1906. Bangor Daily Commercial.
- Book: Dow, Sterling. Maine Postal History And Postmarks. Severn-Wylie-Jewett Co.. 1943. Portland, Maine.
- Book: Fourteenth Census of the United States Taken in the Year 1920. Govt. Print. Off.. 1921. Washington. "Population of Counties by Minor Civil Divisions: 1920, 1910, and 1900.".
- Web site: Riceville | Township 39|date = 29 Oct 2014|access-date = 10 Dec 2014|website = Century Maine}} The Riceville school had an enrollment of 21 pupils in 1900.[8] In 1905, the tannery burned down and the town was abandoned shortly after.[9] A post office existed from 1898 to 1906.[10] There was nobody living in the township in 1910 and 1920.[11]
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