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Correspondence from Charles E. Banks to Fannie Hardy Eckstorm ca. 1915-1930, Part 3

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[Upper right hand] Oct. 15.
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Dear Mrs. Eckstrom
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I am deeply grateful for your painful struggle with the name of the river which flowed past the home of my immigrant ancestor.  It is certain that your results are perhaps grammatically sound, but it is equally certain you have saied up the wrong "river".  What you refer to as an expansion of the river -- Lake Agamenticus - Cape Neddick Pond -- Now Chase's(!) Pond -- has nothing to do with The River of Agamenticus of the Indians.  That is a really truly fresh water stream, dammed to from the lake and flowing into the sea at Cape Neddick, three miles East of the real Agamenticus tidal stream.  My copy of Sewalls map is in storage just now, but I am familiar with it.  The tidal stream of Agamenticus is near the Kittery line and runs up a straight and can ___ the North bounds of Kittery and York (or Berwick then).  As you have Sewalls' map, its mouth is York Harbor and no name is attached to it.

Revision as of Jan 24, 2020, 7:28:23 PM

[Upper right hand] Oct. 15.

Dear Mrs. Eckstrom

I am deeply grateful for your painful struggle with the name of the river which flowed past the home of my immigrant ancestor. It is certain that your results are perhaps grammatically sound, but it is equally certain you have saied up the wrong "river". What you refer to as an expansion of the river -- Lake Agamenticus - Cape Neddick Pond -- Now Chase's(!) Pond -- has nothing to do with The River of Agamenticus of the Indians. That is a really truly fresh water stream, dammed to from the lake and flowing into the sea at Cape Neddick, three miles East of the real Agamenticus tidal stream. My copy of Sewalls map is in storage just now, but I am familiar with it. The tidal stream of Agamenticus is near the Kittery line and runs up a straight and can ___ the North bounds of Kittery and York (or Berwick then). As you have Sewalls' map, its mouth is York Harbor and no name is attached to it.