- Do tell
- The founders of the (1866) Saco Museum, Maine’s third-oldest museum, pledged that none of them should die in possession of an uncommunicated historical fact. (sacomuseum.org)
- $260,000 plus
- Amount the downtown Mary’s Walk/Kerrymen 5K, in honor of Mary Kerry Libby and benefiting the Maine Cancer Foundation, raised on its 20th anniversary, March 13.
- Born in the ‘60s
- Today’s Funtown Splashtown USA marked its first season in 1967. It grew on the site of the Marvel Drive In restaurant, which opened in 1960.
- ‘…e-p-p-e-r-r-e-l-l…’
- In 1805 the town dropped the cumbersome “Pepperrellborough,” after Sir William Pepperrell, in favor of the ancient “Saco.” (sacomaine.org)
- S-a-c-o
- The name goes back to Portuguese explorer Estêvão Gomes’ map designating Bahio de Saco, which means “Bay of the Sack.” (wikipedia)
- ‘Ha-cha-cha-cha’
- “Forbidden Music,” starring Jimmy Durante, was on screen when the Saco Drive-In (now the nation’s second-oldest) opened on July 15, 1939.
- Tupelo, honey
- Ferry Beach State Park measures 117 acres, with a splendid beach, trails, and tupelo trees.
- Est. 1844
- Laurel Hill Cemetery on Beach Street was one of the nation’s first to follow the rural cemetery movement, which began with Mount Auburn Cemetery in Cambridge, Mass. (sacomuseum.org)
- The ‘Dummy Railroad’
- The 3.24-mile line, whose nickname’s origin is uncertain, operated between Saco’s Camp Ellis and Old Orchard Beach from 1880 to 1923. (Stan Quinlan, harmonmuseum.org)
- Distinguished links
- Biddeford-Saco Country Club, which has an 18-hole, Donald Ross-designed golf course, was founded in the early 1920s.
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