Note: Unless other noted, all inserts are from Madge Baker’s book, Woven Together in York County, Maine – 1865-1990.
Arthur graduated high school in Limerick in 1906 and though
he had dreams of going to college and of being a professional baseball player,
like so many young men before him, he assumed the role of head of the household
and went to work at the Limerick Mill.
In Parsonsfield Big
Dave, his father Gilman, his son David Jr., and Florence Tarbox, a local woman
hired to do the housekeeping and nursing were on the farm together in
1900. After Gilman died in 1902, Big
Dave and Florence married. The household
expanded by one when their daughter, Hazel, was born in 1904.
We are told that:
Although Little Dave loved his life, it was to be a short
one. In 1909, after spending more than a
month in Portland in the hospital, he died from an intestinal blockage. He was only 21 when he was sadly laid to rest
beside his antecedents in the farm cemetery.
In 1911 Arthur F. married a Limerick classmate, Berniece Townsend, and moved in with her and her widowed mother in the living quarters above the E.F. Townsend & Co. store which they owned and ran. To their family they added a son, Arthur Townsend (born 1913) and a daughter, Alice Jane (born 1925).
After their son, Arthur T., went away to school at Phillips
Andover Academy in Andover, Massachusetts Madge Baker’s book tells us that he
said “he knew he had no interest in being either a farmer living on the edge
of survival, or a small town shopkeeper.
So there was nothing to go home for.” He never returned again to reside in
Limerick. He studied at the Museum of
Fine Arts School in Boston where he met Laura Barr whom he married in 1937. From time to time they would visit his
parents in Limerick but only on holidays and weekends.
This photo of David Gilman “Big Dave”
Lougee is undated.
After Big Dave’s death there was no one to tend the farming
enterprise which previous generations had built. Florence began selling off the farm in
pieces. When her and Dave’s only child,
Hazel, died in childbirth in 1933 she sold all but one bit and moved away.
1933 was a significant year in the life of Big Dave’s son,
Arthur Fogg Lougee, as well. After
working at the Limerick Mill since high school Arthur was out of job together
with all the other employees when the mill went into receivership after the
national banking crisis early in 1933.
It was time for a career change.
When the new Casco Bank and Trust Company opened a bank in Limerick he
was elected one of the founding directors, becoming branch manager in 1935.
The photograph shows Arthur Fogg Lougee with
his mother, Myra, and his daughter, Alice Jane at age 11. The occasion was the celebration of the 300th
anniversary of York County, Maine. Myra
had donned her wedding dress for the occasion and the others had on family
heirlooms.
But the Lougee story in Parsonsfield was not yet over. Madge Baker tells us that, after serving in
the navy during World War II, Arthur
Townsend Lougee looked for a place to settle and support his family but did not
consider either Parsonsfield or Limerick as options. He was hired by the Ford Motor Co. as Art
Director of Ford Publications and the family moved to Detriot, Michigan. Her book goes on to tell us:
Berniece died shortly thereafter but Arthur F. continued the
search for potential sellers of the Gilman Lougee farm property. When he saw the opportunity to purchase the
old stone house which had been built by Gilman’s stone mason brother Albion K.
P. Lougee, he negotiated the sale for his son in 1949. Once they had the stone house, the
Detroit-based family started returning to the farm every summer and Arthur T.’s
father continued to assist his son in reacquiring Gilman’s farm until his death
in 1960. Madge Baker’s book tells us: