Mast Road, the VERY first Road in Cumberland County.

The Most difficult aspect of the Masting trade was getting the ten ton logs to the nearest large river thru what was often ten miles of hilly wilderness. Hills killed so many oxen, spares were stationed along the route. The crushed animals were just cut out of the harness and quickly replaced and the work went on. Logs were moved during the winter and great preparation of ice tracks were an important preparation. What moves Duck Pond to the front of the line with just a cursory examination of the location can be seen today driving on Route 302 from the power line (below Hawkes Plaza) to the Dunkin Donut shop (and look left down the power line). You travel a short, remarkably flat, gentle downward slope all the way to the River. Duck Pond Masts would almost deliver themselves to the Presumpscott with a push. It would be a quicker trip requiring far fewer Oxen, Men, and Supplies transported across the Atlantic, and very few replacement Oxen too.

"Ship of the Line" masts were the nuclear bombs of their day. They decided National Power Balances. Great Pines suitable as masts for ships of the line were far and few between*, let alone easily accessible ones. Masting began in Maine in 1634. Just 20 years after Plymouth Rock, “Masting” became New England’s first major industry (1640). By 1700, the easiest masts were 20 miles from a river in Northern Maine. Surveys for Masts would have spotted this site well before 1650. So when the fate of the British Empire hung in the balance on the supply of ship masts in Naval Mast crisis of 1652, it would have been THE most logical place for Lord Prides highly skilled, and experienced lumberjacks, fresh out of the now denuded Nonesuch Forest to go.

In the early 1650's when Mast road would have gotten its start, there were 13 Familys in Portland, and 7 at Presumpscott Falls. This very clearly indicates that Mast Road was one of the first roads ever created in Maine, and definately the first in Cumberland County.

ARRIVING MAY 8th Lord Prides Duck Pond work orders may still exist in Navy Board Records

*Forests and Seapower - Robert Albion P 241

Tall Trees Tough Men - Robert Pike P 49

Maritime History of Maine - William Hutchinson. ROWE P 34

New England masts and the King's Broad Arrow - Samuel F Manning P 28

Joseph Pride