WHITEFIELD
Whitefield gets its name from the celebrated British evangelist, George Whitefield, who
inspired the colonists before the town was settled in 1770. They remembered him when
incorporation came in 1809.
The earliest organized settlement was centered within the bucolic parish of Saint Denis,
located on a hill in the Irish Section of town. The area was so reminiscent of the countryside of
Ireland that it became home to many from the old country, whose headstones tell of origins in
the Emerald Isle.
Our fertile and wooded river valley has provided sustenance and energy to woodsmen,
farmers, millers, sawyers and their families for decades. All who plied their trade and practiced
their craft were thankful for the power and beauty of the Sheepscot River. The variety of
"privileges" has supported over twelve mills through times past. The water sheels that helped
produce shingles, beams, boards, barrels, flour, meal, cider and woolens are quiet now. What
remains today are the cool rocked walls that still guide the river currents into pools where
Atlantic Salmon and Brook Trout rise to feed in the shadows.
The three villages of this quiet pastoral community: King's Mills, Whitefield and Coopers Mills
are linked by the graceful Sheepscot River that meanders down the towns very middle. There
have been no fewer than eight bridges spanning the river - carrying sheep, hay wagons,
narrow gauge trains, logging trucks and parades.
Today, Whitefield's population is a cooperative mix of farmers, artists, woodsmen and
professionals, all with the independent spirit that gave our town its start. Even now the Grand
Army Civil War Veterans Hall, grange halls, churches, volunteer fire departments, health
center, townhouse and school are alive with public suppers, dances, plays, ball games, civic
events and celebrations.
As it has been for 200 years, Whitefield is active, vital yet private and respectful of the individual's character that makes Maine unique.