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Kittery, Maine
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Kittery, Maine : ウィキペディア英語版
Kittery, Maine

Kittery is a town in York County, Maine, United States. Home to the Portsmouth Naval Shipyard on Seavey's Island, Kittery includes Badger's Island, the seaside district of Kittery Point, and part of the Isles of Shoals. The town is a tourist destination known for its many outlet stores.
Kittery is part of the PortlandSouth PortlandBiddeford, Maine metropolitan statistical area. The town's population was 9,490 at the 2010 census.
==History==
English settlement around the natural harbor of the Piscataqua River estuary began about 1623. By 1632 it was protected by Fort William and Mary on today's New Hampshire side of the river; in 1689 defensive works that later became Fort McClary in Kittery Point were added on today's Maine side to the north.
Kittery was incorporated in 1647, staking a claim as the "oldest incorporated town in Maine." It was named after the birthplace of a founder, Alexander Shapleigh, from his manor of Kittery Court at Kingswear in Devon, England. Shapleigh arrived in 1635 aboard the ship ''Benediction'', which he co-owned with another prominent settler, Captain Francis Champernowne,〔The Champernownes were a prominent shipping family from Devon in England's West Country, having been a fixture in mercantile and social scene there for generations. Kat Ashley, née Champernowne, was a close friend and governess to Queen Elizabeth I. Her niece Catherine Champernowne was the mother of Sir Walter Raleigh and Sir Humphrey Gilbert. At the heart of the family dynastic influence lay Sir Arthur Champernowne, who served as Vice-Admiral of the West, while residing at Dartington Hall in Devon.〕 a cousin of Sir Ferdinando Gorges, lord proprietor of Maine.〔(Sir Ferdinando Gorges and his Province of Maine, James Phinney Baxter, The Prince Society, Boston, 1890 )〕 Together with the Pepperrell family, they established fisheries offshore at the Isles of Shoals, where fish were caught, salted, and exported back to Europe. Other pioneers were hunters, trappers, and workers of the region's abundant timber. The settlement at the mouth of the Piscataqua River was protected by Fort McClary.
Thomas Spencer, Esquire, immigrant from Gloucestershire, England, is also a notable settler of Kittery with his wife Patience Chadbourne. Their story is included in, "The Maine Spencers : a history and genealogy, with mention of many associated families."
Kittery originally extended from the Atlantic Ocean inland up the Salmon Falls River, including the present-day towns of Eliot, South Berwick, Berwick and North Berwick. Located opposite Portsmouth, New Hampshire, the town developed into a center for trade and shipbuilding. After the death of Gorges, Maine in 1652 became part of the Massachusetts Bay Colony. Francis Small was a pioneer resident of Kittery, and operated a trading post near the confluence of the Ossipee River and Saco River. Here major Indian trails converged—the Sokokis Trail (now Route 5), the Ossipee Trail (now Route 25), and the Pequawket Trail (now Route 113) -- a location conducive towards lucrative fur trade with Indians, but also with risks of living isolated in the wilderness.〔(History of Cornish, Maine )〕 Small became the largest property owner in the history of Maine, and became known as "the great landowner."〔(Descendants of Edward Small )〕〔Sullivan, Gov. James, ''The History of the District of Maine,'' I. Thomas and E. T. Andrews, Publishers, Boston, MA, 1795.〕
In 1663, John Josselyn would write: "Towns there are, are not many in this province. Kittery, situated not far from Passacataway (Portsmouth), is the most populous." 〔

In 1705, during Queen Anne's War tribes of the Wabanaki Confederacy raided the town killing six citizens and taking five prisoners.〔https://archive.org/stream/borderwarsnew00drakrich#page/215/mode/1up〕
During the Revolution, the first vessels of the U.S. Navy were constructed on Badger's Island, including the 1777 USS ''Ranger'' commanded by John Paul Jones. The Portsmouth Naval Shipyard, the nation's first federal navy yard, was established in 1800 on Fernald's Island. It connects to the mainland by two bridges. The facility rebuilt the USS ''Constitution'', and built the Civil War USS ''Kearsarge''. Seavey's Island was annexed and became site of the now defunct Portsmouth Naval Prison.〔(History of the Portsmouth Naval Shipyard )〕
Kittery has some fine early architecture, including the Sir William Pepperrell House, built in 1733, and the Lady Pepperrell House, built in 1760. The John Bray House, built in 1662, is believed to be the oldest surviving house in Maine. Located at the John Paul Jones State Historic Site on U.S. 1 is the Maine Sailors' and Soldiers' Memorial by Bashka Paeff. Further northeast up the road, the town has developed factory outlet shopping, very popular with tourists. Kittery Point is home to Seapoint Beach and Fort Foster Park, originally a harbor defense. In 1905, The Treaty of Portsmouth formerly ending the Russo-Japanese war, was signed at the shipyard. In 1996, the movie ''Thinner'', based on the 1984 Stephen King-penned novel ''Thinner'', was filmed in Kittery. The Saturday morning cartoon ''DinoSquad'' is based in Kittery/Kittery Point.

File:Sir William Pepperrell House.jpg|Pepperrell House c. 1905
File:Government Street, Kittery, ME.jpg|Government St. c. 1910
File:Navy Yard Bridge, Kittery, ME.jpg|Navy Yard Bridge c. 1908
File:Dry Dock, Portsmouth Navy Yard, Kittery, ME.jpg|Shipyard dry dock c. 1908


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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