| The
Pork and Beans War That Wasn’t
When two neighbors are as close as Canada
and the U.S., there’s bound to be a little pushing and shoving over the
lines in between. Especially when those lines are a bit blurry.
In the winter of 1838-39, the Aroostook
or Pork and Beans war, “erupted” between the state of Maine, then part
of Massachusetts, and the British territory of New Brunswick, a province
of Canada.
It seems the 1789 Treaty of Paris, failed
to firmly define the boundary between the two. And when Maine became its
own state in 1820, and started granting land in the Aroostook valley, which
the British considered theirs, tempers flared and panic buttons were pushed.
The United States Congress authorized a
force of 50,000 men, and set aside $10 million dollars for the anticipated
long haul. Maine itself contributed between three and ten thousand troops,
which likely gave the entire episode it’s gustatory name, for the pork
and beans eaten by the idle soldiers.
Because not a shot was fired. Everybody
hung around, arguing about how best to settle the whole thing. The matter
was referred to a boundary commission in 1842, which utilized a map with
a red line on it, drawn up in Paris in 1782, reportedly by Benjamin Franklin,
to prove where the intended boundary was to have been.
There is only one known casualty of the
war, and it was not combat-related. While others died of illness, the cause
of death for Pvt. Hiram T. Smith, a Maine soldier, went unrecorded. He
is buried on the side of the “Military Road” (U.S. Highway 2), in the middle
of the Haynesville Wood
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