[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 121 (Wednesday, July 30, 2014)]
[Senate]
[Page S5124]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
MONHEGAN, MAINE QUADRICENTENNIAL
Ms. COLLINS. Mr. President, in 1614, 6 years before the Pilgrims
landed at Plymouth, Captain John Smith--explorer, soldier, navigator,
and adventurer--landed at Monhegan Island off the coast of Maine. I
wish to commemorate the 400th anniversary of that discovery and to
congratulate the people of a truly remarkable community as they
celebrate their quadricentennial.
In the very first sentence of his remarkable journal of that voyage,
Captain Smith names the ``Isle of Monhegan,'' the Wabanaki Indian word
for ``island of the ocean.'' In reference to the shared latitude with
his home country, he coined the term ``New England.''
As the Wabanaki had known for centuries, the fish were plentiful. In
addition, Captain Smith used the stands of timber to make small boats
to explore the inlets and rivers on the mainland coast. So, Monhegan
can rightly claim to be the birthplace of three industries that built
the State of Maine--fishing, boatbuilding, and logging.
Certainly, there were disappointments. The whales proved elusive, and
the gold Captain Smith sought was nonexistent. But the potential was
everywhere.
In addressing the question of what it would take to settle the
untamed region, the captain's log contains these lines that define
Monhegan today. It would take, Captain Smith wrote, ``the best parts of
art, judgment, courage, honesty, constancy, diligence, and industry.''
Maine's island communities are an essential part of our State's
identity. They survive and thrive because of the qualities Captain
Smith so wonderfully described.
The island's lobster industry is a shining example. More than 90
years ago, long before conservation was a watchword, Monhegan's
lobstermen voluntarily established their own ban on harvesting small
lobsters. To the list of Monhegan's firsts--fishing, boatbuilding, and
logging--we can add lobster management.
By mutual agreement, rather than government edict, Monhegan
lobstermen set trap limits to prevent overfishing. They established
their own management zone to ensure that this generations-old fishery
will sustain the generations to come. Most remarkable of all is the
tradition of Trap Day, now October 1, when all boats, captains, and
crews wait for each other and head to their fishing grounds together at
the crack of dawn. The ethic that ``no one goes until everyone goes''
is the very definition of community.
For more than a century, Monhegan also has been a magnet for artists.
In 1902, Samuel Triscott became the first artist to live there year-
round, and he found the subject matter enticing enough to stay the rest
of his life, nearly one-quarter century. From Rockwell Kent to Andrew
and Jamie Wyeth, this singular place has inspired some of the best
artists to create their greatest work.
There is no question that the magnificent scenery is part of the
attraction. But as we look at the powerful works of art the island has
inspired, it is clear that the people of Monhegan, their judgment,
courage, honesty, constancy, diligence, and industry, enhance the
natural beauty of the island so that it represents something more
profound than crashing surf on rocky shores.
Captain Smith concluded his journal of that voyage four centuries ago
with these words: ``We are not born for ourselves, but each to help the
other. Let us imitate the virtues of our predecessors to be worthily
their successors.'' Those words are fitting for a celebration of the
past that looks with confidence to the future, and I congratulate the
people of Monhegan, Maine, on this landmark anniversary.
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