The productive years in the life of Dr.
Nathaniel Tuckerman True (1812-1887) were a propitious time for
antiquarian efforts. Indeed, the ground work of what we know
today of Bethel's beginnings is in large part the result of a
thirty-year period (from about 1850 to 1884) when Dr. True's awareness
of the importance of local history spawned several major contributions
to the historiography of western Maine.
Two papers worthy of mention—a manuscript letter on Bethel history
written by James Grover for William Williamson's
History of Maine (1832) and the
Nathaniel Segar narrative of the 1781 Indian Raid on Bethel and
surrounding towns, published in 1825 and allegedly arranged by the
Reverend Daniel Gould—were the only visible antecedents of Dr. True's
first major literary work, the "History of Bethel," printed in serial
form in the
Bethel Courier
newspaper between 1859 and 1861. [This "History" was published in
book form, with editorial revisions by Randall H. Bennett, in
1994.] True shared with other "patrician" historians, mainly
professional people who viewed their literary achievements as an
avocation, a concern for thorough research, meticulous transcription,
and fair and accurate reporting. On the local level, he readily
exchanged ideas with such notables as William Willis and Edward Elwell
of Portland, Thomas Moulton of Porter, David Noyes of Norway, Israel
Washburn, Jr., of Livermore, and George Whitefield Chapman of
Gilead. On a broader basis, his writing appears to indicate
admiration and emulation of the works of Francis Parkman and Henry
Adams.
A Pownal, Maine, native born in 1812, True trained at Bowdoin College
for a medical career, but soon became absorbed with "matters foreign to
the sick room," and in balancing an interest in research and writing
with that of medicine, chose teaching as a profession. Still,
during his term as principal of the Academy at Monmouth, Maine
(1837-1846), and at Gould Academy at Bethel (1848-1861), one finds
frequent mention of his labors in botany, mineralogy, geology, and
chemistry, as well as his dedication to agricultural societies (he
helped found Maine's first "Farmer's Club" at Bethel in 1853).
Joseph Williamson's voluminous
Bibliography
of the State of Maine (1896) provides an indication of the range
of Dr. True's writings, but the list is anything but exhaustive.
His promotion and eventual documentation of the "
antiquarian suppers" at
Bethel in 1855, 1856, and 1857 resulted in some of his first published
articles.
Thereafter, such pieces appeared frequently in the
Oxford Democrat, the
Portland Transcript, the
Lewiston Journal, and, later, the
Bethel Courier.
Beyond the newspaper essays, Dr. True's pen produced innumerable
articles for scholarly journals. Some, such as his "Grooved
Boulders in Bethel, Me." (1862) and "New Localities of Minerals in
Maine" (1863), both printed in the
Proceedings
of the Portland Society of Natural History, combined scientific
inquiry with historical investigation. True's mention of the
extensive "Cabinet of Minerals" at Gould and the inclusion of several
highly descriptive passages on area geography undoubtedly succeeded in
promoting Bethel and the Academy.
As an active member of the Maine Historical Society and a corresponding
member of the Wisconsin Historical Society, Dr. True had access to a
wealth of archival material, as well as published records relating to
other towns and states. Thus, it comes as no surprise that some
dozen manuscripts by True between 1877 and 1884 when he was head of
schools at Bethel and Litchfield, Maine, and Gorham and Milan, New
Hampshire, found their way into the recently reprinted series
Old Times in North Yarmouth, Maine.
Besides giving us some clues as to his genealogical background, the
Doctor recalled his school days at North Yarmouth Academy in the 1830s,
describing himself as "a raw, country lad, dressed in homespun."
On a more humorous note, his comments on boarding-house life provide
certain insights: "We cooked food when compelled to do so from sheer
hunger, and washed the dishes from pure necessity, the safe rule being
to do so when we could not well decide what was in them last." At
around the same time, True's defense over his dismissal from Gould
Academy in 1861 (brought on mainly from a lack of discipline at the
school) surfaced in another article he wrote: "To secure position in
society, there were certain prescribed grooves in which a man must
walk, or he was ostracized." True's biographical sketch of
Ezekiel Holmes (he succeeded Holmes as Editor of the
Maine Farmer newspaper from 1865 to
1869) and his "History of the Press of Oxford County" in Griffin's
The Press of Maine (1871) shed
further light on his outlook and unique personality.
Like some of his Maine contemporaries, Dr. True was probably less an
interpreter of history than a recorder of it. The massive bulk of
his 102 chapter "History of Bethel" (misnumbered as 97 chapters) is
somewhat sketchy and reads poorly as a narrative, but nonetheless
furnishes important information on land grants, the Androscoggin River
(it was Dr. True who advocated a steamer between Rumford Falls and
Bethel in the 1860s), town meetings, church history, and
biography. In the "Preface," True makes special mention of Dr.
Moses Mason's early efforts in collecting data (Mason's "Historical
Notes" were recently given to the Society), regarding him as a
"co-laborer." True included a chapter on political history by
Mason in his "History," and then followed it with twelve chapters about
Dr. John Locke, obviously one of his favorite citizens. Readers
familiar with Dr. True's "History" and Dr. William B. Lapham's 1891
History of Bethel will find that
the latter work contains liberal extracts from True's writings, most
often without specific citations.
Perhaps the largest area of Dr. True's interest and one on which he was
most widely known in his day, was the history of Indians in northern
New England. In fact, the first thirty-five chapters of his
"History of Bethel" were devoted to accounts of the Ossipees,
Pequawkets, and Anasagunticooks, with special emphasis on the Indian
language and its English translation. Among his contributions on
the these subjects for periodicals were "Names and Location of Tribes
on the Androscoggin" (
Historical
Magazine, 1863), "Collation of Geographical Names in the
Algonkin Language" (
Essex Institute
Historical Collections, 1866), and "The Indians" (
Old Times, 1879). Although
some of True's statements, based on the best information he had at
hand, may have since proved false, his comments about the Native
American past in this region retain value for those studying the times
during which he wrote. The story is told that his great
collection of unpublished Indian manuscripts was sold to an archives
after his death.
Commemorative motives prompted Dr. True to accept the role of orator at
a number of historical celebrations, mostly in Oxford County. On
August 20, 1863, he spoke at the Fryeburg Centenary. In 1867 he
was present and delivered an address at the marking of Molly Ockett's
grave, helping to set the gravestone in place at Andover's Woodlawn
Cemetery. When the 1874 Bethel Centenary occurred, centered
around his Broad Street home, he prepared a lengthy speech which
subsequently appeared in printed form. One year later, he
participated at the Waterford Centennial celebration. During the
1881 Indian Raid Centenary, he gave a moving oration before a large
gathering of people in Kimball Park. If the municipalities failed
to publish his protracted lectures, Dr. True usually saw to it that
local newspapers did.
Second only to the "History of Bethel" in volume was True's 1882
"History of Gorham, N.H.," which was published in successive issues of
the
Gorham Mountaineer
newspaper. [This material was issued in
book form, with editorial revisions by Randall H. Bennett, in
1998.] True's remarks encouraged further comment on the subject,
and letters he received were quickly inserted into the text. His
weekly columns about Gorham, where he was then teaching a high school,
were later utilized in the
History
of Coos County, N.H. (1888).
Throughout his life, Dr. True's concern with history was always to
commemorate, to preserve, to collect, and to record. The
destruction by fire of his Bethel home and its contents in 1896 will
forever leave a dark void over parts of his life. However, after
finishing his newspaper work on the Bethel "History," he deposited in
1862 a collection of original documents and pamphlets at the Maine
Historical Society in Portland. Today, the "scrapbook" preserves
some choice bits of the town's past: a plantation record of 1782,
Eleazer Twitchell's account book (1785) and that of Jonathan Clark
(1793-1802), Rev. Charles Frost's sketch of the Indian Raid, reports of
the Bethel Farmer's Club and the "Maternal Association," a geological
report on Puzzle Mountain in Newry dated 1859, a map of the West Parish
in 1800, and a copy of a paper printed on a cheese press by Charles and
Henry L. Chapman. These items are carelessly placed, with some
pasted to pages and others simply laid between the leaves.
Through overuse, a number of "scraps" noted on page margins have gone
missing.
Speaking at a special "Reunion" of his Gould Academy students in 1884,
Dr. True noted, "For fifty-two years . . . I have never known what it
was to have a well-rested brain." If he faltered somewhat along
the way, it was probably in his effort to cover too much ground, ample
cause for his recurring financial problems. Nevertheless, Dr.
True's wide-ranging interests resulted in published works that remain
as invaluable sources of information on northern New England's varied
and colorful past.