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Cities Near Norway, ME

$78,500 View on Map
PJJ9184
1056 Gore Rd
Norway, ME (in city)
2 Bed, 2 Bath Home
980 sq.ft.
$209,000 View on Map
DDP8902
39 Salinitas Dr
Norway, ME (in city)
4 Bed, 2+ Bath Home
2240 sq.ft.
$550,000 View on Map
GGT8517
213 Yagger Rd
Norway, ME (in city)
4 Bed, 2 Bath Farm or Ranch
2700 sq.ft.
$175,000 View on Map
MJT7299
16 Reservoir Rd
South Paris, ME (5.9 miles)
3 Bed, 1 Bath Home
1500 sq.ft.
$130,000 View on Map
APD9218 10 Photos
476 Main St
Oxford, ME (6.5 miles)
1+ Bath Commercial
4000 sq.ft.
$79,000 View on Map
PPJ9469
186 Streaked Mountain Road
Buckfield, ME (8.4 miles)
3 Bed, 1 Bath Home
1500 sq.ft.

Owner Financing Available

$85,000 View on Map
WTW6265 17 Photos
87 Turner St
Buckfield, ME (10.2 miles)
4 Bed, 1+ Bath Home
2000 sq.ft.
A Spacious 4 Bedroom Rent to Own home with 3 bedrooms upstairs and 1 bedroom …more»
$120,000 View on Map
PDT6441
Off Route 35
Harrison, ME (11.1 miles)
Vacant Lot or Land
 

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Local city information for Norway, ME

Norway is a town in Oxford County, Maine, United States. The population was 4,611 at the 2000 census. It is home to Lake Pennesseewassee, a recreation area.


The town was first called Rustfield after Henry Rust of Salem, Massachusetts, a large landowner. It was cleared and settled after 1786 by Joseph Stevens, followed by George Leslie, Amos Hobbs, Jeremiah Hobbs, Jonas Stevens and Nathaniel Stevens, together with their families from Gray. Many who moved here had been soldiers in the Revolutionary War, including Phineas Whitney, who fought at the Battle of Bunker Hill. A sawmill and gristmill were established in 1789, and in 1796 the first road was built. Rustfield Plantation was incorporated on March 9, 1797 as Norway. The town had petitioned the Massachusetts General Court to be named Norage, although what the word signified, and why it was changed, is unknown -- fire destroyed the town records in 1843. During the Civil War, Norway and other municipalities in Oxford County provided a militia company to the 1st Maine Volunteer Infantry Regiment under the command of George Lafayette Beal, who would later rise to the rank of major general and serve as state treasurer from 1888 to 1894.

The town had fertile soil for cultivation. The Pennesseewassee Stream, which drains Lake Pennesseewassee into the Little Androscoggin River, provided water power for industry. At the falls were established 2 grain mills, a cloth and carding mill, furniture factory, box factory and a shovel handle factory. There was a tannery, with other businesses making harness and trunks. A shoe manufactory was established in 1872. The busy stage route from Paris, the county seat, to Fryeburg passed through Norway. By 1878, there were 32 stores in the town, which for a number of years had the fastest growing population of any similar town in the state. On December 30, 1879, the Norway Branch Railroad opened, running from Norway village on a line 1.45 miles long to connect with the Atlantic and St. Lawrence Railroad (later Grand Trunk Railroad) at South Paris. But the Great Norway Fire of May 9, 1894 would destroy a substantial portion of the business district. It started in the C. B. Cummings & Sons mill, and was spread by a strong wind down Main Street. The opera house, tannery, Congregational Church, and 80 homes and other buildings were lost. Much of Norway was rebuilt the same year, with several structures in brick.

Norway was once called the "Snowshoe Capital of the World" because of the many snowshoes manufactured here. In 1906, Walter Tubbs established the Tubbs Snowshoe Company to produce ash snowshoes, skis, sleds and furniture. The firm made 70% of the snowshoes ordered by the U.S. government during World War II, and also supplied the polar expeditions of Byrd and Peary. In the 1940s, the Tubbs Company moved to Vermont, and in 2004, it was bought by K2 Sports. The snowshoes are now made at a factory in Guangzhou, China. In 1997, the New Balance Shoe Company built a new manufacturing facility at Norway. The C. B. Cummings & Son Company, founded in 1860 to make dowels and other wood products, closed and auctioned its downtown plant in 2001 because of competition from China. In addition, the business had lost customers when furniture factories in the Carolinas shut down.

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