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CALAIS , a city and sub-See also: port of entry of See also: Washington county, Maine, U.S.A., on the See also: Saint Croix See also: river, 12 M. from its mouth, opposite Saint Stephens, New See also: Brunswick, with which it is connected by See also: bridges
.
Pop
.
(1890) 7290;.(1900),7655 (1908 being See also: foreign-See also: born ; (1910) 6116
.
It is served by the Washington County railway (102.5 M. to Washington Junction, where it connects with the Maine Central railway), and by steamboat lines to See also: Boston, See also: Portland and Saint Johns
.
In the city limits are the See also: post-offices of Calais, Milltown and Red See also: Beach
.
The city has a small public library
.
The valley here is wide and deep, the See also: banks of the river bold and picturesque, and the See also: tide rises and falls about 25 ft
.
The city has important interests in See also: lumber, besides foundries, machine shops, granite works—there are several granite (notably red granite) quarries in the vicinity—a tannery, and manufactories of shoes and calcined See also: plaster
.
Big See also: Island, now in the city of Calais, was visited in the winter of 1604–1605 by See also: Pierre du Guast, sieur de Monts
.
Calais was first settled in 1779, was incorporated as a See also: town in 1809, and was chartered as a city in 1851
.
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