the Town line...

I was curious enough to goggle and discovered the town called "Town Line" and the following article:

https://knowledgenuts.com/2015/02/10/the-confederate-town-in-new-york-that-held-out-until-1946/

Apparently they were not the only are to secede as these people from Maine tell the story:

"When gentle Abraham Lincoln announced that soldiers would be drafted, the men and boys of Loud's Island paid no heed, or as island lingo would put it, harked not. The boats went to sea, and no Loud's Islander visited the draft board over at Rockland port.

Then a navy boat came, and a sign was tacked to Loud's Island trees, saying a draft company of soldiers would come at stated time and at stated place to sign up the men and the penalties would be thus and so. The men of Loud's Island had been duly notified.

So on the appointed day, the big military boat came to Loud's Island and with the aid of two drummer boys safely landed the militia, and the search began.

There wasn't a man on the island. House by house, the soldiers followed the little path through the bayberries and sweet fern around the island, past the white chapel and the red school, and all they could flush were the women, the girls, and the small children, who came out willingly and stood with hands over their eyes against the bright sun and said nothing. Not a word.

The men, and every boy-child big enough to bait a trawl, were at sea. Somewhere betwixt the Isles of Shoals and Dingwall, no doubt. But not here.

About the middle of Loud's Island, then as now, stood the wee white chapel already alluded to, which in these days is connected with the Maine Seacoast Missionary Society and is active in the newer-day community life. Next door to the chapel, on that Civil War day, the soldiers found Granny Annie-Belle, a dame of advanced years whose hearing was impaired but was in good physical condition and liked to be left alone.

When the menfolks came in from sea, they held a meeting and voted to secede from the Union, and it has always been said that Father Abraham, already busy with a number of other secessions, decided to ignore this one and never did a thing about it."


https://www.csmonitor.com/1996/0419/19172.html
 
When the menfolks came in from sea, they held a meeting and voted to secede from the Union, and it has always been said that Father Abraham, already busy with a number of other secessions, decided to ignore this one and never did a thing about it."

https://www.csmonitor.com/1996/0419/19172.html
Like so many glossy re-renderings, the real story was a bit more complicated. It was a dispute with the town of Bristol over the fishing fleet, government and the vote. Not so glamorous.

However, Loud's Island (Muscongus Island or Bristol Mills) did come to an agreement with Father Abraham: the island paid to have its men released from obligation (I've read that several did, in fact, serve but--if so--they used residency in Bristol). The island also settled with the state and continued with tax payments directly to the state; it is today governed as an unorganized territory. But it never settled with the town of Bristol (the true culprit in this dispute). Ironically, the inhabitants of Loud's Island are all gone and the island's only population consists of summer people; however the owners all have Bristol addresses!
 
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The Republic of Town Line:
1667409370312.png

{Buffalo Morning News, Feb. 21, 1861}
Reminds me of the Republic of Indian Stream, which seceded from New Hampshire in the 1820s.

 
There are, today, scores of self-proclaimed micronations all over the world, some issuing passports, currency, postage stamps, electing (or crowning) heads of state and ambassadors, and tendering one another diplomatic recognition. Some have existed for decades. They range from something like the Kingdom of Redonda (an absolute monarchy established on an uninhabited Caribbean island in 1865); to the Kingdom of Talossa, a founded in 1979, by a 14-year-old Milwaukee lad, with territory consisting of his bedroom (since expanded); changed from an absolute to a constitutional monarchy in 2007 (GDP today of $842.50); to the very ambitious Nova Roma, ("Dedicated to the restoration of classical Roman religion, culture and virtues").

I bet you could find one or two of them that would even have recognized the CSA!
 
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There are, today, scores of self-proclaimed micronations all over the world, some issuing passports, currency, postage stamps, electing (or crowning) heads of state and ambassadors, and tendering one another diplomatic recognition. Some have existed for decades. They range from something like the Kingdom of Redonda (an absolute monarchy established on an uninhabited Caribbean island in 1865); to the Kingdom of Talossa, a founded by a 14-year-old Milwaukee lad, with territory consisting of his bedroom (since expanded); changed from an absolute to a constitutional monarchy in 2007 (GDP today of $842.50); to the very ambitious Nova Roma, ("Dedicated to the restoration of classical Roman religion, culture and virtues").

I bet you could find one or two of them that would even have recognized the CSA!
Two of my favorites are:
  1. the Conch Republic (Key West seceded from the U.S. in 1982); I believe that it actually declared war on the U.S. It certainly might have recognized the CSA
  2. a small island off Oakand, CA (Winter Island?) seceded in 1898 in a dispute between its owner (Major William Oscar Howes--1st Maine SharpShooters and 20th Maine Infantry) and the U.S. government over the appointment of Mark Hanna to the US Senate.
 

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