Originally part
of Kittery, the area later comprised by Berwick
was settled about 1631 and called Kittery Commons or Kittery North Parish. It
was later called Unity after the ship that transported Scots prisoners of war from the Battle of Dunbar in 1650 to the colonies. (These Scots
had been force-marched to Durham Cathedral in Durham, England, then tried for treason for supporting Charles II rather than Oliver Cromwell, Lord Protector. Many settled near Berwick in an area
near the northern Eliot-York border, which came to be known – and still
is – as Scotland Bridge.)
Landing in Massachusetts, the royalist soldiers were sold as indentured
servants, many of whom went to work at the Great Works sawmill, located on the Great Works River, until they were able to pay for their
own freedom. (George Gray, formerly of Lanark, Scotland, was an example of the 150
prisoners who endured this ordeal. In 1675, he defended his family and lands
when the community was attacked during King Philip's War, and died in Unity in
1693. His descendants would populate other areas of Maine, notably Deer Isle and Stonington, Maine).
The raid by Indians in 1675 was the first of several
during what was known as King Philip's War. In 1690–1691 during King William's War, the village was burned and abandoned
in the Raid on Salmon Falls. It was resettled in 1703 and called
Newichawannock, its old Abenaki name. In 1713, it was incorporated by
the Massachusetts General Court as Berwick, after Berwick-upon-Tweed, England. The first schoolhouse in the
state was built here in 1719. The town was raided numerous times during Father Rale's War. Berwick was once considerably larger
in size, but South Berwick was set off in 1814, followed by North Berwick in 1831. Lumbering was a principal early industry. The
first lumber exported from the American colonies was clapboards and barrel staves loaded aboard Pied Cowe
at South Berwick in 1634. Beginning in the 19th century, Berwick
had a symbiotic economic relationship with Somersworth, New Hampshire, the mill town to which it is connected by bridge.
First stop was the old High School:Also saw and submitted a new Confederate/War marker located in front of town hall:
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