Rumford

Maine, United States
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Also known as: New Penacook Plantation

Rumford, town, Oxford county, western Maine, U.S., in the Oxford Hills where the Ellis, Swift, and Concord rivers enter the Androscoggin River to form spectacular Pennacook Falls, 75 miles (121 km) north-northwest of Portland. The town includes the communities of Rumford, Rumford Center, and Rumford Point. Settled in the 1770s, it was chartered in 1800 as New Penacook Plantation and was renamed for Count von Rumford (Sir Benjamin Thompson), one of the proprietors. It was organized as a town in 1892. Industrial activity is limited almost exclusively to papermaking, and Rumford’s Mead Paper Company mill (originally the Oxford Paper Company’s mill; 1899), one of the country’s largest, is powered by the falls. The area is noted for winter sports; Webb Lake and Mount Blue State Park are nearby. Area 69 square miles (178 square km). Pop. (2000) 6,472; (2010) 5,841.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Amy Tikkanen.
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