By Walter Lunt
In the early days, new road construction and road upgrades
often resulted in either the reduction or the enhancement of commercial
activity in neighborhoods. Such was the case on Windham Hill and in the area
known as Foster’s Corner, or the rotary. This part of Windham has assumed many
names over its nearly 300 years of settled history: early on it was the Kennard
neighborhood; in the 1800s (before being assigned to the neighborhood
surrounding the intersection of Route 202 and Windham Center Road) it was
sometimes called Windham Center; in the 1850s, it became Morrell’s Corner after
a store owned by Andrew Morrell at a newly constructed intersection; by the
late 1800s the store was owned by the Foster Brothers, so Foster’s Corner; in
1951, with the creation of a circular intersection, the rotary.
When it was the Kennard neighborhood (pronounced KEN-nard, as
opposed to the Ken-NARDS of North Windham), a single road ran through it – a
thruway connecting the towns of Gorham and Gray known as ‘County Road,’ later
Gray Road. Todays Lott’s Drive, which runs nearly parallel to Route 202 around
the rotary, traces the original (or old 202) route.
As far back as 1784, maps showed the thoroughfare that would
become Route 302. But that early road skirted the area settled and farmed by
the Kennards and others. It ran from Raymond (later Bridgton) to Ward Road in
Windham, then to Windham Center Road at Windham Hill, and then to Portland
(joining today’s 302 just south of Albion Road).
Due to the creation of a new section of the Raymond/Bridgton Road, the Kennard neighborhood would be changed forever. The added section, from Ward Road in Windham to the spot near Albion Road - which ran through the center of the Kennard neighborhood - eliminated the need for travelers and teams of horses to navigate Windham Hill. Also, as a result, due to loss of traffic, commercial activity like overnight lodgings and taverns would transfer from Windham Hill to the new intersection at the Kennard neighborhood. Perhaps this was the trade-off for land taken from the Kennards and others for the new road. That new section of road joined the Raymond/Bridgton Road to become Route 302.
Citizen historian Isaac R. Jordan, writing in a local
newspaper in the early 1900s, described the early settlers of the Kennard neighborhood this way: “I cannot
help thinking that (they built) better than they knew. They are gone, but a
pleasant memory of their doings still lingers…we are left with reminders of
their well-done duties all around us.”
Although the new road created an intersection that would prove
to be problematic (The Windham Eagle – Stubborn Drivers, Dec. 18, 2020), the
farmers and merchants of Foster’s Corner contributed immensely to Windham’s
rich heritage.
Their story when we conclude this series next
time. <