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Tuesday, September 15, 2020

The Lougees’ Story Continues

 Note:  Unless other noted, all inserts are from Madge Baker’s book, Woven Together in York County, Maine – 1865-1990.

 Circumstances on the Lougee farm were changing.  In 1897 Myra, as Almira Fogg Lougee was known to everyone, divorced David Gilman Lougee.  She moved with their second son, Arthur Fogg Lougee (age 8), to her home town of Limerick leaving their firstborn, David Gilman Lougee Jr. (age 9) with his father.  Fortunately Myra’s farmer father had been successful enough to leave her a legacy when he died in 1885 which she used to purchase a small house where she made a home with her son, Arthur, her mother and intermittently her other son David Jr.


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:

In 1997 Laura Barr Lougee died, joined in death by her husband Arthur T. Lougee eight years later in 2005. Their youngest son Arthur James “Jim” Lougee, who had made his home in Parsonsfield as well, died in 2017.   Their final resting place is with those Lougees who had gone before.  For now the farmstead first established in Parsonsfield, later lost and regained, remains in the Lougee family held in trust by Arthur T. and Laura’s surviving son and daughter.   

Photos from Find a Grave.

The family cemetery is listed in the Cemetery Records, Parsonsfield, Maine reproduced by Ancient Landmarks Society of Parsonsfield, 1991 as the Lougee-Foss-Mudgett Cemetery.  The book states that it “is on the north side of North Road 2.4 miles northwest of East Parsonsfield at the Cornish line and just east of the stone house shown in the background.  It is surrounded by a stone and iron fence with an inscription on the stone under the iron gate:  Deacon G. Lougee killed by this stone September 1788’ ”.




Tuesday, September 1, 2020

PRESENT AT STATEHOOD Parsonsfield – Part 3 The Lougees

 The 1820 Federal Census for Parsonsfield enumerates the following for Gilman Lougee (listed second on the page):

Actually Gilman Lougee Jr, he was the son of Gilman and Joanna Smith Lougee who settled in Parsonsfield from Gilmanton, NH as early as 1779 along with Gilman’s two brothers, John and Samuel – before Parsonsfield was even incorporated as a town.  In her book, Woven Together in York County, Maine – A History 1865 – 1990, Madge Baker writes of the Lougee’s move,






Unfortunately, Gilman Sr. did not live long enough to enjoy the fruits of his labors.  The History of Parsonsfield written in 1888 relates the story that Gilman was killed by a falling stone while at work in a clay pit on September 29, 1788 at the age of 35, leaving his widow with four young children to raise alone.

Susanna, born 1781; Gilman, born 1783;                                                                      Hugh Bartis, born 1785; and Joanna, born 1788.

As the eldest son Gilman Jr, age 5, became the “man of the house”.  It cannot have been easy.  

In 1808 Gilman Jr. built the house (photo below taken about 1885) to which he would bring a bride two years later when he married Mary Buzzell in 1810.












 The map below shows the location of the homestead (marked in red) on the north side of what is now known as North Road (Route 160) just before the intersection with what is now called Elm Street.


By the time of the 1820 Census Gilman Jr. and Mary had four children and the census counted the family as below.   The information shown in blue has been added as only the head of household’s name was given in the census itself.

Free White Persons – Males – Under 10:  1   Gillman III, born 1817

Free White Persons – Males – 26 thru 44: 1   Gilman Jr, age 37, head of household

Free White Persons – Females Under 10:  3 Ann, born 1815; Joanna, born 1813, and Mary, born 1811

 Free White Persons – Females – 26 thru 44: 1   Mary, age 30, wife

 Total All Persons – White, Slaves, Colored, Other:   6

To their family they would add four more children:                                                          Susan, born 1821;  Julia, born 1823;                                                                         Albion K., born 1827; and Clarinda, born 1829

Then history repeated itself when Gilman Jr. died in 1832.  He was but 49 leaving his widow and the next generation in the hands of his eldest son, Gilman the 3rd, who was 15 years old.   

Madge Baker relates the following in Woven Together in York County:


Built about 1857 the house is located at the end of Elm Street where it joins North Road.  Albion lived there from 1859 to 1864 when he sold it to his brother’s daughter and her husband to pay off accumulated debts.


Tall Gil married Almira Richardson and they had 7 children, another generation replete with females.  From The History of Parsonsfield we get this picture and information:


And from Woven Together in York County, Maine we learn…


…and later,











In 1886 David Gilman “Big Dave” married Myra Fogg and she moved onto the farm helping to care for her mother-in-law who was failing in health.  She bore two sons, David Gilman Jr. (born 1888) and Arthur Fogg (born 1889). 

In 1896 Almira died, then in 1902 Hugh Bartes fell, injured his spine and broke his arm badly.  Gilman feared that Hugh would not be able to care for his family as an invalid and urged them to return to Parsonsfield where others in the family could help out.  But Bartes died in March and Gilman died later that year, leaving his share of the farm to his neighbor's daughter, Louisa “Lide”.  He had lived a long, industrious life and the farm was intact and productive.  

That is for now. 

To Be Continued…