Bustins Island
Bustins Island is a 138-acre island in inner Casco Bay, Maine, United States. It is one of 18 islands that are within the town boundaries of Freeport. Although physically located within Freeport, the Bustins Island Village Corporation is a self-governing entity. The island has approximately 117 summer cottages, with the earliest dating to the 18th century.
The island's main road is Bustins Island Road, which loops around the island for about. It is bisected by offshoot roads. Every island building stands beside one of the roads, allowing for easy access for trash removal.
The island operates its own ferry, the Lilly B, which debarks from the South Freeport town wharf. Typically, the ferry operates from Memorial Day weekend through Columbus Day weekend. The ferry arrives at public dock at the southeastern tip of the island, but there is also a steamer dock on the island's western side. A public landing ramp is located at the northern end of the island.
The island's interior is undeveloped because it is part of a resource protection area, which comprises parcels of land that are now protected against development. It, as with the rest of the island, is under constant threat of fire. There is no pressured water on the island, and since most of the cottages are over one hundred years old, they can be easily set alight accidentally. Six houses have burned to the ground over the years, the last in 2007. Due to this risk, no open fires or fire pits are permitted.
History
Bustins Island has eight known shell middens where Native Americans camped, with the Abenaki people having populated the region at the time colonial settlers arrived in the Casco Bay region.Bustins Island is named for John Bustion, who is thought to have acquired the island through purchase or a grant by 1660, and who sold it in 1667 to William Haines, a resident at the time of present-day Flying Point in Freeport just north of Bustins Island. After settlers were driven out of the Casco Bay region during conflicts with indigenous tribes that extended into the 18th century, in 1738 Bustins Island was awarded to John Powell as recompense for his work on a General Court of Massachusetts Committee on Eastern Claims and Settlements that was created to adjudicate land claims by landowners whose deeds had been destroyed or lost during the conflict. In 1789, Bustins Island was included in the boundaries of the new town of Freeport after its secession from historic North Yarmouth. In 1797, the estate of Jeremiah Powell sold the island to James Bibber for $300, with the island assigned the name Bibbers Island on nautical charts by the U.S. Geodesic Survey during the 19th century. Bibber sold most of the island in 1834 to Cumberland resident John Johnson for $1,000. Twenty years later, Johnson sold most of the island to Harpswell resident Elisha Stover Jr. for $1,500, along with adjacent Little Bustins Island. In 1876, Henry Merrill and Edwin Morse acquired the entirety of Bustins Island for the same amount. By 1888, a schoolhouse was built on Bustins Island.
A ferry, the Lilly B, is named for Lilly May Brewer, who, along with her husband Ralph, was the caretaker of Bustins during the 1950s and 1960s.