STRATTON — Each year the Dead River Area Historical Society celebrates the Founders of Stratton. On Sunday, Aug.18, the society will honor the founders of Eustis: the Stevens Family.
The event will be hosted by direct descendant Caleb and Lisa Stevens of Dryden. Caleb grew up in Stratton and his friends are invited to drop in and say hello.
Caleb Stevens (1776-1855) journeyed, with his wife Sally Thomas Stevens and nine children, from Kingfield to the intersection of Stratton Brook and the Dead River in the fall of 1818.
They walked as far as Carrabassett the first day and arrived at their destination on the second day. This was not Caleb’s first trip. His first trip in August 1818 was to scope out the new enterprise, build a cabin and barn, then return in the fall to get his family.
Those interested may read the history of the family in the early wilderness of Maine as written by a family member in the Franklin Chronicle in the late 1800s
Route 27, between Kingfield and Stratton, is now The Caleb Dalton Stevens Memorial Highway.
The Dead River Area Historical Society is open from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. every weekend throughout July and August. Displays include a collection of old carpentry and logging tools, china, glass, church organ, furniture from native families, a complete schoolroom, a memorial room to the “lost” towns of Flagstaff and Dead River, the lineage of several native families, and a host of memorabilia from native homesteads.
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