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Cities Near Richmond, ME

$149,000 View on Map
AGG6619
36 Kimball St
Richmond, ME (in city)
3 Bed, 1 Bath Home
1100 sq.ft.
$31,500 View on Map
JWJ8739
Delcourt Woods
Bowdoinham, ME (3.6 miles)
Vacant Lot or Land
$180,000 View on Map
DAG1199
240 Post Rd
Bowdoinham, ME (6.3 miles)
3 Bed, 1 Bath Home
1590 sq.ft.

The Way Life Should Be...Welcome Home!

$3,649,000 View on Map
AWG2563 10 Photos
53 Federal St
Wiscasset, ME (8.8 miles)
5 Bed, 5 Bath Home
3500 sq.ft.
Gracious Wiscasset  Federal home has 3 floors of living space, 3-5 bedrooms & 5 baths. An …more»
$1,595,000 View on Map
AAW0768
4 Jeremysquam Way
Westport Island, ME (9.0 miles)
4 Bed, 5 Bath Home
5300 sq.ft.
$125,000 View on Map
JTG7430
91 Whippoorwill Rd
Litchfield, ME (11.2 miles)
3 Bed, 2 Bath Mobile or Manufactured
1456 sq.ft.
$149,900 View on Map
PTJ4157 8 Photos
22 Old Arrowsic Road
Woolwich, ME (11.8 miles)
3 Bed, 1+ Bath Home
1332 sq.ft.
 

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Local city information for Richmond, ME

Richmond is a town in Sagadahoc County, Maine, United States. The population was 3,298 at the 2000 census. It is part of the Portland–South Portland–Biddeford, Maine Metropolitan Statistical Area.

Richmond is the departure point for state boat service to Swan Island, site of the Steve Powell Refuge and Wildlife Management Area.


The tract of land which comprises Richmond and Gardiner was purchased in 1649 from the Abenaki Indians by Christopher Lawson. In 1719, Fort Richmond was built by Massachusetts on the western bank of the Kennebec River at what is today Richmond village. Named for Ludovic Stewart, 1st Duke of Richmond, the fort included a blockhouse, trading post, chapel, officers' and soldiers' quarters, all surrounded by a palisade.

In 1722, Fort Richmond was attacked in a 3 hour siege by warriors from Norridgewock. Houses were burned and cattle slain, but the fort held. Brunswick and other settlements near the mouth of the Kennebec were destroyed. The defense was enlarged in 1723 during Dummer's War. On August 19, 1724, a militia of 208 soldiers departed Fort Richmond under command of captains Jeremiah Moulton and Johnson Harmon, traveled up the Kennebec in 17 whaleboats, and sacked Norridgewock. Fort Richmond would be rebuilt in 1740, attacked by another tribe in 1750, then dismantled in 1755 when forts Shirley (also called Frankfort), Western and Halifax were built upriver.

Settled in 1725, the community was part of Bowdoinham when it was incorporated in 1762 by the Massachusetts General Court. In 1790, Revolutionary War veteran John Plummer was awarded a land grant on Plummer Road, where his son built the surviving house about 1810. But President Thomas Jefferson's Embargo of 1807 crippled the port's economy, bankrupted merchants and created a recession which lingered through the War of 1812.

The town was set off and incorporated on February 10, 1823, taking its name from the old fort. Farms produced hay and potatoes. With the arrival of steamboats in the 1830s, Richmond boomed as a shipbuilding and trade center. A brass foundry was established. The community also produced shoes, sails and wood products. Its peak years were between 1835 and 1857, endowing the town with a wealth of fine Greek Revival architecture, which today makes the old riverport popular with tourists.

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