Always meant to be together

"He is dead, and yet he speaks," said Oren Cheney, president of Bates College, in eulogizing Benjamin Bates, the Lewiston college's benefactor and namesake, in 1878. "How do the dead, the blessed dead, speak to us? Certainly, through their lives."

Recently, Cheney's printed eulogy from the 1878 edition of The Bates Student zapped into our e-mail inbox. The president's loving remembrance of Bates is a time capsule for local history, richly describing the relationship between Lewiston and its still-most-recognizable surname.

It takes vision to do what Bates did in the realms of industry, education and philanthropy. So how did Bates ultimately see the community he helped build? According to Cheney, he, like so many others have over the years, viewed the area as an undivided whole. 

"By Lewiston, I mean Lewiston Falls — both sides of our beautiful Androscoggin — what ought to be and what Mr. Bates desired should be, one city as we are one people," Cheney said.

Now, this doesn't likely mean Benjamin Bates supported joint municipal services or consolidation of departments, or any of the modern names we've given to this notion. Instead, he seemingly realized something that we should remember: The communities on the river are not insulated from each other.

They rise and fall on the fortunes of each other; one cannot prosper while the other falters.

Which brings us to another historical footnote, a brief editorial from the Oct. 24, 1857, edition of the Lewiston Falls Journal, on the occasion of nascent discussions between the leaders of the towns of Lewiston, Auburn and Danville about securing their future successes.

The Falls Journal said:

"Although no steps have been taken to accomplish the desirable project of uniting the three villages into which our whole village is divided, yet we doubt not that before many years it will be done. Where natural position, private and public interests, and the general welfare, demand such a course, and where no single tenable reason can be adduced against such a union, it must eventually be brought about.

"Whenever the time shall come to organize a city government, there ought to be entire [unanimity] in consolidating our different municipal organizations.

"It will lessen the expenses of our municipal governments, it will give us better schools, it will place in us a position to make needed improvements, it will increase the importance of our village and give us greater influence, and we shall command greater respect from abroad. It will enlarge our business, and increase the value of all kinds of property."

These two history lessons show the notion that L and A are a single community and should be managed like a single community is much older than any polarizing forces that prevent these cities from working together today. It often seems more energy is spent trying to keep the cities apart.

Why, when from the beginning it seems they were meant to be together?

editorialboard@sunjournal.com

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Displaying comments, from newest to oldest

Jay Bee's picture

Hear hear, LewistonNative!

Hear hear, LewistonNative! It sounds good to me!

LewistonNative...'s picture
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I have always thought

I have always thought Lewiston and Auburn should become one city, but IF they become one city then they should keep the name Lewiston-Auburn. Don't give it some goofy name like Great Falls or something. No council and no mayor is going to agree on becoming one city because in doing so they will more then likely lose their jobs on the council as the lines for each Ward would be newly drawn and we would no longer need two mayors. I find it remarkable that 150+ years have gone by and all this talk about becoming one city is still at a stand still. It's time that both sides of the river swallow their pride and do what's right for each other and communities.

BobStone's picture
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We live in a representative

We live in a representative democracy. Voters elect representatives at every level of government in the United States. I believe in that system.

I take the good with the bad and accept the fact that people get the government they deserve. I may not think that Barack Obama is, and will be, a positive leader for the United States, but he is the duly elected President and we shall see how he does. People that dissent from his practices have every right to do so and should not be called names such as "angry mobs", "nazi's" and "un-American."

Our Congressional delegation from Maine is precisely what the voters of Maine want to represent us in D.C. I don't agree with them but accept it as the will of the voters. Pingree is a liberal Democrat, ran as such, and is what she is. Michaud is a liberal Democrat, ran as a "Blue Dog", and isn't what he says he is. He is, however, clearly in the back pocket of the unions.

Snowe and Collins are "Republicans". They can be counted on to support the Democrats and aren't what they say they are. They are pragmatists, and understand how they have to vote to win re-election to represent the most liberal state in the nation, Maine.

At the state level, we have a long history of sending spenders to Augusta. After decades of overwhelming Democrat representation in Augusta, I'll leave it up to the reader to decide how they've helped bring prosperity to one of the poorest states in the nation. Maine is old and poor, statistically, and our young people are voting with their feet.

That brings us to Lewiston and Auburn. I am not in favor of referendums. I am not in favor of special commissions. I am in favor of demanding that our elected representatives decide whether or not to merge the two communities. If they decide that it is something we should have (a merger), then so be it.

We voters should ask the people running for Mayor and council(s) if they would vote to support a merger. It is our responsibilty as voting citizens. Then, we should vote according to our own wishes as to whom we want to represent them.

tron's picture

Let each Council place a non

Let each Council place a non binding referendum in November's election asking the citizens of each city if they wish to pursue this. If so have an election next June to have an independent board to investigate. Not just investigate, but have concrete ideas laid out for a vote next November. Time has come to move on this, despite what individual councilors want.

Jay Bee's picture

Agreed, SJ! It's well past

Agreed, SJ! It's well past time for this to happen. Also, it would give us a chance to start over with our City Councils, so it's win-win as far as I can see it!

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