York

The plantation of
Agamenticus (or Acomenticus), now the town of York, was established
on March 25, 1636 and incorporated as a city on April 10, 1641. The
name is from the Abnaki meaning small river other side of island. A
Native American returning from the sea would find what is now the
York River as the
smaller one on the other side of an island from the larger
Piscataqua River. Sir Fernando Gorges in 1641 immodestly named the
capital city of his province Gorgeana. The town of York, was
incorporated on November 22, 1652 from a portion of that city and is
the second oldest town in Maine. The oldest is
Kittery incorporated only two days earlier. Most of the town's
inhabitants are located between U.S. Route 1 (inland) and U.S. Route
1A which runs along the coast. Its population has more than doubled
in the past thirty years, and grew by nearly 31 percent between 1990
and 2000.
Population: 12854
Population Density: 234
Average Property Value: $420,000
Area: 56.2 sq miles
Official Web site