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==History== The area now known as Waterville was once inhabited by the [[Canibas]] tribe of the [[Abenaki]] people. Called "Taconnet" after Chief Taconnet, the main village was located on the east bank of the Kennebec River at its confluence with the [[Sebasticook River]] at what is now [[Winslow, Maine|Winslow]]. Known as "Ticonic" by [[British colonization of the Americas|English settlers]], it was burned in 1692 during [[King William's War]], after which the Canibas tribe abandoned the area. [[Fort Halifax (Maine)|Fort Halifax]] was built by General [[John Winslow (British Army officer)|John Winslow]] in 1754, and the last skirmish with indigenous peoples occurred on May 18, 1757.<ref name="Events in Waterville History">{{cite web|url=http://www.watervillemaine.net/history/history.html|title=History in Waterville, Maine -|website=Watervillemaine.net|access-date=4 July 2018}}</ref> The township would be organized as Kingfield Plantation, then incorporated as [[Winslow, Maine|Winslow]] in 1771. When residents on the west side of the Kennebec found themselves unable to cross the river to attend [[town meeting]]s, Waterville was founded from the western parts of Winslow and incorporated on June 23, 1802. In 1824 a bridge was built joining the communities. Early industries included [[fishing]], [[lumbering]], [[agriculture]] and [[ship building]], with larger boats launched in spring during [[freshet]]s. By the early 1900s, there were five shipyards in the community.<ref name=Coolidge>{{Cite book| last = Coolidge| first = Austin J.| author2=John B. Mansfield| title = A History and Description of New England| year = 1859| location = Boston, Massachusetts| pages = 344β345| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=OcoMAAAAYAAJ&q=A%20History%20and%20Description%20of%20New%20England%20Coolidge%20Mansfield&pg=PA344}}</ref> Ticonic Falls blocked navigation farther upriver, so Waterville developed as the terminus for trade and shipping. The Kennebec River and Messalonskee Stream provided [[water power]] for mills, including several [[sawmill]]s, a [[gristmill]], a [[window sash|sash]] and [[window shutter|blind]] factory, a furniture factory, and a shovel handle factory. There was also a carriage and sleigh factory, boot shop, [[brickmaking|brickyard]], and [[Tanning (leather)|tannery]]. On September 27, 1849, the [[Androscoggin and Kennebec Railroad]] opened to Waterville. It would become part of the [[Maine Central Railroad]], which in 1870 established [[locomotive]] and car repair shops in the thriving [[mill town]]. West Waterville (renamed [[Oakland, Maine|Oakland]]) was set off as a town in 1873. Waterville was incorporated as a city on January 12, 1888.<ref>{{Citation | last = Varney | first = George J. | title = Gazetteer of the state of Maine. Waterville | place = Boston | publisher = Russell | year = 1886 | url = http://history.rays-place.com/me/waterville-me.htm }} </ref> The Ticonic Water Power & Manufacturing Company was formed in 1866 and soon built a dam across the Kennebec. After a change of ownership in 1873, the company began construction on what would become the Lockwood Manufacturing Company, a [[cotton]] textile plant. A second mill was added, and by 1900 the firm dominated the riverfront and employed 1,300 workers. Lockwood Mills survived until the mid-1950s. The iron [[Two Cent Bridge|Waterville-Winslow Footbridge]] opened in 1901, as a means for Waterville residents to commute to Winslow for work in the [[Hollingsworth & Whitney Company|Hollingsworth & Whitney Co.]] and Wyandotte Worsted Co. mills, but in less than a year was carried away by the highest river level since 1832. Rebuilt in 1903, it would be called the Two Cent Bridge because of its [[toll road|toll]].<ref name="Plocher"/> In 1902, the [[Beaux-Arts architecture|Beaux-Arts]] style City Hall and Opera House designed by George Gilman Adams was dedicated. In 2002, the [[C.F. Hathaway Company]], one of the last remaining factories in the United States producing high-end [[dress shirt]]s, was purchased by Warren Buffett's [[Berkshire Hathaway]] company and was closed after over 160 years of operation in the city.<ref name="Plocher">{{cite web|url=http://www.waterville-me.gov/content/1233260491webhistory.pdf|author=Stephen Plocher|title="A Short History of Waterville, Maine" (2007)|website=Waterville-me.gov|access-date=18 March 2018}}</ref> Waterville also developed as an educational center. In 1813, the [[Maine Literary and Theological Institution]] was established. It would be renamed Waterville College in 1821, then [[Colby College]] in 1867. [[Thomas College]] was established in 1894. The Latin School was founded in 1820 to prepare students to attend Colby and other colleges, and was subsequently named Waterville Academy, Waterville Classical Institute, and Coburn Classical Institute; the Institute merged with the Oak Grove School in [[Vassalboro, Maine|Vassalboro]] in 1970, and remained open until 1989. The first public high school was built in 1877, while the current Waterville Senior High School was built in 1961.<ref name="Events in Waterville History"/>
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