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Kennebec River

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Kennebec River

River flowing mainly south from Moosehead Lake in west-central Maine to the Atlantic Ocean; length 242 km/150 mi. In the 18th century, the banks of the Kennebec became an important source of timber, providing in particular mast pines for the Royal Navy.

About 40 km/25 mi below Augusta, the Kennebec receives the Androscoggin River to form Merrymeeting Bay, then flows past Bath to Popham Beach and the Gulf of Maine. The river has hydroelectric plants at Bingham, Skowhegan, Waterville, Augusta, and Gardiner, but its industrial role is today much reduced. Samuel de Champlain was the first European to explore the Kennebec in 1606. In 1775, Benedict Arnold journeyed up the river in an ill-fated attempt to capture Québec from the British.



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These are the Androscoggin and Kennebec rivers in Maine, the Merrimack River that runs through Massachusetts and New Hampshire, the Adirondack Mountains in New York, and central Nova Scotia.
The Littlest Tugboat is a cheerful children's book about a family of tugboats that works hard to guide ships up and down the Kennebec River.
In early 1754, claiming he had intelligence reports of French encroachments along Ohio's Kennebec River, Shirley recruited an expeditionary force to repel what he described as a threat to the "security of [British] colonies of New England.
 
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