Thomas Parker (Maine judge) explained

Thomas Parker (1783–1860) was a judge, writer, and philanthropist from Maine, who is the namesake of Parker Hall at Bates College.

Parker was born in 1783 in Edgartown, Massachusetts but moved to Farmington, Maine as a child with his father, Elvation Parker, and eventually worked for a period as a stonemason. In 1807 he married Judith Thomas. Parker served as a County Commissioner for several years and in 1838 Governor Edward Kent appointed Parker to be a probate judge from Franklin County where he served until 1845.

Parker later carried on extensive business in the probate courts.[1] In 1846 Parker published a book on the History of Farmington Maine.[2]

In 1856 he donated $5,000 to Bates College then called the Maine State Seminary, and Parker Hall at Bates is named in his honor.[3]

He died in 1860.

Notes and References

  1. Book: Butler, Francis Gould . A History of Farmington, Franklin County, Maine, from the Earliest Explorations to the Present Time, 1776-1885 . 1885 . Press of Knowlton, McLeary, and Company . en.
  2. HISTORY OF FARMINGTON (1846) By the late Thomas Parker, Judge of Probate, Published by J S Swift 1875, http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~mefrankl/ParkersHist.htm
  3. Emeline Burlingame-Cheney, The Story of the Life and Work of Oren B. Cheney, Founder and First President of Bates College (Boston, MA: Morning Star Publishing House, 1907), p. 106