York, Maine episode artwork

EPISODE · Jun 4, 2026 · 13 MIN

York, Maine

from Drive-Thru Towns · host Andrew Wilcox

York: The Town That Rented Itself by the WeekYork, Maine, is a town that has been destroyed, invented, abandoned, and sold back to the summer in three different centuries. Today, it looks like coastal New England pulled straight from a glossy brochure—complete with lobster shacks, sandy beaches, historic inns, and a traffic pattern that turns summer into a full-body civic condition.In this episode of Drive-Thru Towns, host Andrew Wilcox pulls off the highway to show you a village that is actually built over ruins twice over. Long before it became a seasonal city where the population swells from 12,000 to over 50,000 every June, York was Gorgeana—one of the earliest, most powerful English cities in America and a serious colonial port.We unearth the heavy layers of York’s history, from the devastating Candlemas Massacre of 1692 to the imposing timber walls of the Old Gaol (the oldest public building in the United States). Discover how the Embargo Act of 1807 broke York's maritime empire, and how the town pulled off the ultimate American survival trick: when the global shipping economy stops paying rent, you can always learn how to dress up your past and rent the view by the week.The First City: How Sir Ferdinando Gorges attempted to build an empire in the Maine woods, creating a political and commercial hub that once rivaled the biggest ports on the Atlantic.The Candlemas Massacre: A look at the brutal 1692 raid that burned the town to the ground, and how York's historic elegance is indelibly layered over early colonial violence and erasure.The Old Gaol: The architecture of timber, iron, and fear. Why the oldest public building in the country stands as a dryly ironic tourist attraction that forgot to retire.The Geographic Trap: How the very river that connected inland timber to seaborne wealth left York utterly exposed to global blockade, weather, and shifting markets.The Resort Pivot: The post-Civil War social invention that saved a stagnant village by transforming its historic homes into "heritage" and its scenic coast into a high-stakes vacation economy.If you want to look past the postcard and discover the gritty, adaptive history under America’s favorite summer destinations, follow the show on Spotify.Instagram: @50statefamilyLinkedIn: Andrew WilcoxEmail: [email protected] the EpisodeConnect & Follow

York: The Town That Rented Itself by the WeekYork, Maine, is a town that has been destroyed, invented, abandoned, and sold back to the summer in three different centuries. Today, it looks like coastal New England pulled straight from a glossy brochure—complete with lobster shacks, sandy beaches, historic inns, and a traffic pattern that turns summer into a full-body civic condition.In this episode of Drive-Thru Towns, host Andrew Wilcox pulls off the highway to show you a village that is actually built over ruins twice over. Long before it became a seasonal city where the population swells from 12,000 to over 50,000 every June, York was Gorgeana—one of the earliest, most powerful English cities in America and a serious colonial port.We unearth the heavy layers of York’s history, from the devastating Candlemas Massacre of 1692 to the imposing timber walls of the Old Gaol (the oldest public building in the United States). Discover how the Embargo Act of 1807 broke York's maritime empire, and how the town pulled off the ultimate American survival trick: when the global shipping economy stops paying rent, you can always learn how to dress up your past and rent the view by the week.The First City: How Sir Ferdinando Gorges attempted to build an empire in the Maine woods, creating a political and commercial hub that once rivaled the biggest ports on the Atlantic.The Candlemas Massacre: A look at the brutal 1692 raid that burned the town to the ground, and how York's historic elegance is indelibly layered over early colonial violence and erasure.The Old Gaol: The architecture of timber, iron, and fear. Why the oldest public building in the country stands as a dryly ironic tourist attraction that forgot to retire.The Geographic Trap: How the very river that connected inland timber to seaborne wealth left York utterly exposed to global blockade, weather, and shifting markets.The Resort Pivot: The post-Civil War social invention that saved a stagnant village by transforming its historic homes into "heritage" and its scenic coast into a high-stakes vacation economy.If you want to look past the postcard and discover the gritty, adaptive history under America’s favorite summer destinations, follow the show on Spotify.Instagram: @50statefamilyLinkedIn: Andrew WilcoxEmail: [email protected] the EpisodeConnect & Follow

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York, Maine

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This episode was published on June 4, 2026.

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York: The Town That Rented Itself by the WeekYork, Maine, is a town that has been destroyed, invented, abandoned, and sold back to the summer in three different centuries. Today, it looks like coastal New England pulled straight from a glossy...

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