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Maine Highlands

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The Maine Highlands is now a term used in the Maine tourism industry for a centrally located region that constitutes a large portion of the state of Maine. The Highlands are constituted by Piscataquis and Penobscot counties. Formerly known as the Penquis region, the Maine Highlands name was adopted in the late 1990s to better describe the area as a tourism region.

From the late 1800s through the early 1900s the term was used to refer to the portion of the Appalachian Mountain range located within Maine.[1] In the late 1700s and early 1800s, this was one of the areas of disputed boundary between the United States and Canada.[2] The lack of a clear boundary in this area and further east in Maine, led to the Aroostook War, which was the only war ever declared by a U.S. state on a foreign country.[3] This use as a shorthand for that portion of the international boundary located in the mountains continued through at least 1916.[4]

See also:

References

  1. ^ "Google Book Search Beta". Google Book Search Beta. Retrieved 2006-05-04., showing page 122 of Bevan, G. Phillips (1882). A Handbook of the Industries of the British Isles and the United States.
  2. ^ "Google Book Search Beta". Google Book Search Beta. Retrieved 2006-05-04., showing page 176 of Winsor, Justin (1884). Narrative and Critical History of America.
  3. ^ "Aroostook War". Global Security.org. Retrieved 2006-05-04.
  4. ^ "Google Book Search Beta". Google Book Search Beta. Retrieved 2006-05-04., showing page 33 of United States Congress (1916). Hearings Before the Committee on Foreign Affairs of the House of Representatives.