Maine Industry Primary Source Sets

Does technology change the way people work in Maine?

Source 1: Artifact

Weaver’s Kit

1905-1915
Maine State Museum 73.152.14


This is a weaver’s kit, which includes scissors, a pincushion, comb, tweezers, and finger guard. It was used by a woman who worked at the Worumbo Woolen Mill in Lisbon Falls, Maine.

Weaving kits included all the helpful tools that weavers needed to work in the mills. Even though the mills in this time period had huge, fast-working machines, weavers still needed hand tools and older skills to keep things running smoothly. Old-fashioned tools were still useful in a modern industry.

Cora Goddard (1887-1979) owned this kit. She worked at the Worumbo Mill from at least 1910 to 1915. She was in her mid-twenties, divorced and living with her parents. She remarried in 1915. She and her new husband were both weavers.

Source 2: Image

Women working in the Kennebec Manufacturing Company textile mill

1972
Maine Department of Economic Development - DED 53-R-354
Maine State Archives Collection


This photograph was taken by a photographer who worked for the Maine Department of Economic Development.    The Department was created in the 1930s to advertise Maine as a good place to do business.   It wanted to show that Maine had successful textile mills such as the Kennebec Manufacturing Company in Gardiner, Maine.   

Kennebec Manufacturing was a mill that made children’s pants.  In the photograph there are several women sewing fabric together by hand or simple sewing machines.  Kennebec and some other mills were allowed to pay new workers a “learner’s wage” which was less than the minimum hourly rate required by law.   Today, many companies use “sewing robots,” which can make clothing and other fabric items much faster than human hands.

Source 3: Artifact

Blueberry Winnower

1926
Maine State Museum 79.25.1


A blueberry winnower is a machine that cleans blueberries. The berries shuffle through the machine on belts while a fan blows away dirt, twigs, and leaves. They work through the machine and then fall into a collecting tray. 

Winnowing machines made it possible to clean the blueberries much faster than picking through them by hand. It is powered by cranking a handle.  

This machine was invented and built by Emil Rivers of Rockland, Maine. He started a company called Emil Rivers, Inc., and continued to sell winnowers until the 1970s.

Source 4: Image

Children winnowing blueberries

Circa 1957
Maine Department of Economic Development - DED-60-R-645
Maine State Archives Collection


Pictures can often be a powerful way to make a point, without using words. This photograph was taken by a photographer who worked for the Maine Department of Economic Development.    The Department was created in the 1930s to advertise Maine as a good place to do business.   It wanted to show that Maine had rich agricultural crops such as blueberries and potatoes.  

Wild blueberries can’t be planted and farmed like other food crops.  They grow from underground runners called rhizomes, and only like acidic, treeless, rocky soil and cold winters.   Harvesting was done by hand or with special rakes invented in 1910.  The first commercial harvest of wild blueberries happened in 1874, and it has grown to become one of Maine’s biggest industries.  More than 37,000 tons of berries are harvested each year, worth more than $250 million.   Some are canned, and some are sold fresh or frozen.

In this picture, the photographer focused on two children dumping hand-harvested blueberries into a winnowing machine, called a winnower.  The winnower separates the berries from twigs, leaves, and other debris.  Gathering blueberries happens in July and August, which are usually hot months in Maine.  It is tough, backbreaking work due to spending all day bent over to reach the berries.   Blueberries don’t like shade, so harvesting means many days in the open sun.  Children were paid just a few cents per pound of berries.

Source 5: Image

Immigrant workers at Hall Quarry, Mount Desert, Maine

1905
Maine Granite Industry Historical Society
Mount Desert, Maine


This picture shows men who worked at the Hall Quarry on Mount Desert Island in 1905. A quarry is a place where rock is harvested. 

There are both African American and white workers in this photo. You can see blocks of granite and the cranes and chains used to lift them. People from Scotland, Italy, Sweden, and different parts of America traveled to Mount Desert Island to work.  

Hall Quarry was very successful because of the high quality of the granite and easy access to deep ocean water nearby. Ships carried granite all over the eastern United States.

Hall Quarry had three company stores and several boarding houses that served as homes for these men. The boarding houses had small sleeping areas with stoves that heated only the main rooms downstairs. The area was called Quarrytown but had the nickname of Bed Bug Boulevard and Peanut Row.   

In 1905 when this picture was taken, the Arthur McMullen Granite Company ran the quarry operation.

Source 6: Document

First Annual Report on the Geology of the State of Maine

1930
Pages 5-6
University of Southern Maine Digital Commons, Maine Collection 11


This section of the Maine State Geologist’s 1930 report shows how new technologies and other issues had an impact on the profits and production of Maine’s granite quarries. 

Granite quarrying is an important industry in Maine.In 1901, the industry was at its peak and Maine granite was shipped all over the eastern United States. By 1930, the granite was not being used as much, and the industry was not making as much profit. 

This report talks about the different reasons the “value” or money made from the sale of granite is declining, or earning less profit. One reason is the increased use of “Portland’’ cement – a type of cement used in reinforced (with steel rods) concrete. Cement was lighter and easier to transport and cost less. Other reasons for the decline in profits were the use of different materials, a slowdown in building construction during World War I, and overproduction. 

In Maine, the governor appoints a state geologist. The geologist investigates the state’s mineral resources and how the minerals excavated or dug from the ground can be sold to make different products and profit for the company or quarry owners.

Maine Industry Primary Source Sets developed in collaboration between the Maine State Archives, Maine State Library, and Maine State Museum.

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