MONTICELLO STATION

Backwoods Blog;

in the woods and on the road…

Monticello Station in the early 20th century 

The thermometer hit minus 1 overnight, our first sub-zero temp of the winter. Overall, it’s been relatively mild thus far, nothing much to brag about. I did happen to come across an old journal entry that noted more typical temperatures for this time of year. This entry is from twenty years ago, just as the new millennium rolled in and it was a cold day in the middle of January. I’ve included a map that shows the areas mentioned in the entry and it marks the 50 acre Hutchinson property. The blue stick-pin indicates where the cabin is located on the Meduxnekeag River. Photographs of Monticello Station and the Great Northern lumber operation appeared in the Monticello Sesquicentennial booklet from 1996 with additional photos by Wendell Harvey. Keep warm everyone!

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Journal Entry

January 20, 2000


I am sitting in the cabin on this mid-January morning and winter has finally arrived here in the north woods, a bit delayed perhaps, but now here full strength at minus 24 degrees where you think twice about jumping out of bed to start a fire. In fact, you think twice about almost everything on days like this – funny how contemplative a person can get in January. All in all, I’m in a much better mood now that the road to the cabin has closed for the season, forcing solitude upon my location and the snow is…deep enough.

Standing on the front porch with a cup of strong coffee in hand I can hear the snow machines in the distance coming through Monticello Station on I-83, the main link of the interstate snowmobile trail system connecting Houlton to points north. A hundred years ago this was a busy place. The railroad opened this portion of Northern Maine to markets in Boston and New York for passenger, freight and a mythic regional output of potatoes that sustained the livelihood and reputations of my ancestors and this town for more than a century. The quiet stream by my cabin was, at that time, an industrial water-route driving logs to the downtown mills, and in the thirties Great Northern Paper Company built a dam upstream by the railroad trestle for their lumbering operation complete with boarding house.

My earliest memories are of standing in our open field watching the trains make their way across the back hills in the distance and going along with my Dad to the potato houses of old Monticello Station; the smell of kerosene-soaked offices, dusty potato bins and men smoking cigars. In my teenage years, the B&A (Bangor and Aroostook) abandoned the railroad and pulled the tracks. The woods behind our farm grew quiet and traffic on US Route 1 in front of it began to increase as I went away to college. Upon my return I was surprised to find that local snowmobile and sportsman’s clubs had organized, funded and purchased grooming equipment and established a regional trail network for snow machines; the king-pin being the old B&A Railroad bed “rail to trail” recreation system. This is a busy place once again for tourism and new sport; from my cabin porch headlights winding through the night woods, high performance engines howling like the coyote in winter and grooming machines coming through Monticello Station like the trains of yesteryear. What will the new century bring? We are still a rural area for now, but for how long? Boston is getting closer all the time. Only the days to come will tell…as I sit at the table by the window in the cabin on this mid-January day in the new year 2000.

In the woods,

Dave

January 12, 2023

Monticello Station in the early 1970s
Map of Monticello including Monticello Station and Hutchinson property
Great Northern damn on the Meduxnekeag River
Great Northern boarding house 
The trestle at Great Northern on the Meduxnekeag River
Up the tracks from Monticello Station (baby moose on board)

4 thoughts on “Backwoods Blog .115

  1. Thanks once again Dave.
    Winters are no longer what I remember them to be.
    As a small child at my grandparent’s (the Lowry’s) house in Monticello I remember the snow banks drifting almost to the second story windows of the house. I remember the men in the house seemed restless by being snowed in. The women just carried on with their usual work.

    posted by Paula S.

  2. Thank you for posting this blog about things past. My dad worked for the B&A railroad, and so I have a soft spot for anything related to them. We also lived in East Millinocket, where he was extension agent during the glory days of GNP. Your post brought back some memories.

    posted by Lora S.

  3. Great blog, Dave, I really enjoyed the old photos. I didn’t realize that Great northern had a boarding house there on the river. My dad and I found an old ice wagon up in the woods beyond Harvey siding one fall when we were hunting there, it’s a fond memory. If you enjoy logging history you might like- Aroostook, A century of logging in northern Maine by Richard Judd. Also great pictures of the old station, hauled a lot of taters up that way.

  4. Enjoyed the pictures and the history, especially the baby moose on the hand car. I’ve never been upstream on your branch of the Meduxnekeag, so I wonder if there are remnants of the dam? On the subject of temperature, Martha moved to Houlton upon graduation in 1970 from Orono to start the speech therapy program in the Houlton schools. I came up for a visit, in February 1971, I think. The temperature the night of my arrival got to 40 below. The temperature the next day hit 30 above with some melting. Never saw such a disparity since. In fact, we don’t hit 40 below anymore, do we?

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