Your Maine Corporation- From the Woods to the Ocean
Ninety percent of Maine is still wooded, making it the “Pine State”. Wood products, and paper pulp industry is still important in the state. The Appalachian Trail begins in Maine, and it is the center of much hiking and outdoor sports for the hardy. Maine has a large summer tourist industry, and there are a large number of seasonal residents who have summer homes in the state, when the temperature averages 70 degrees Fahrenheit. There are also several large whitewater rivers, that are dammed controlled and have lots of flow throughout the spring and summer. They are the Penobscot River, near Mt. Katahdin, the state’s highest mountain, and the Kennebec and the Dead River, that meet at the Forks, a village three hours from Boston.
A recent report which tracked 10 million American businesses in the late nineties, ranked Maine the 10th in the nation for business retention. The March 2004 issue of Inc. Magazine includes Portland, Maine in its listing of the top 25 cities for doing business in America.
The capital of Maine is Augusta. The state’s largest port, which is only 106 miles from Boston, is Portland, which is the state’s economic center. Twenty percent of the state’s population resides in the greater Portland area. is large port for foreign inbound tonnage in the United States and has become a larger port than Boston, Massachusetts. It is also the largest oil port on the U. S. East Coast. An oil pipeline extends from Portland to Montreal.
Maine has historically been the center of shipbuilding and played a critical role in the nation’s naval production and defense. The Portsmouth Naval Shipyard, in Kittery Maine, is one of four remaining shipyards in the United States. It 50 miles from Boston, and is contiguous to New Hampshire. The shipyard employs 3900 civilians and has recruitment and training programs for engineers.
The other major military base in the state is the Brunswick Naval Air Station in Brunswick, Maine, also the home of Bowdoin College. And Bath Iron Works.
Maine’s agricultural sector includes production of 98% of the nation's low bush blueberries. It is one of the nation’s main producers of potatoes, and is famous for its maple syrup. 90% of the nation's lobsters are caught in the waters off of the Maine coast. Maine has a large French speaking population, which is an overflow from the French speaking province of Quebec. This is concentrated in the Lewiston area of the state.