A 22-year-old Winslow man died early Friday when the car he was driving crashed into a utility pole on Maple Ridge Road in China.

Jordan D. Maroon was driving a 2003 Volvo toward Winslow when his car skidded off the road on a curve, striking the pole on the driver’s side, Maine State Police Lt. Aaron Hayden said. Maroon, a student at the University of Southern Maine, died at the scene.

The car’s speed and slippery road conditions were factors in the 4:30 a.m. crash, which is still under investigation, Hayden said. He said he did not know where Maroon was going at the time of the accident.

“His father’s residence is just up the road, but I can’t really tell you if he was going there,” Hayden said.

Delta Ambulance responded to the crash, as did Central Maine Power Co. workers, who fixed the broken pole. The road was temporarily closed to traffic.

Maroon was a junior at USM, where he majored in English. Maroon lived off-campus, according to Judie O’Malley, assistant director of public affairs at the university.

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The university has been on vacation this week, but O’Malley said when school resumes, counseling will be offered to anyone who asks for it. “The loss of a young person is just devastating,” she said.

O’Malley said that the university will send a message to faculty, staff and students about Maroon’s death and it will include any information about a memorial service or visiting hours. University officials will be in touch with Maroon’s family, she said.

A 2010 graduate of Winslow High School, where he was on the honor roll all four years, Maroon was a creative and upbeat person who had a lot of friends and a bright smile, according to his creative writing teacher, Jared Goldsmith.

Goldsmith, an English teacher, said Friday that Maroon took his class when he was a senior in high school.

“He was very much an individual,” Goldsmith said. “He was a very funny kid who marched to the beat of his own drum. He had his unique kind of style.”

One day, Maroon might come to class with long hair, for instance, and the next, he would show up with his head shaved.

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“He was also a very, very bright kid who I thought would – and probably was – really thriving in college,” he said.

Goldsmith recalled that Maroon hung out with a group of friends in high school and they started making documentary films. He was someone who wanted to be challenged, he said.

“He was very progressive,” Goldsmith said. “He was very creative. Creativity was his strong suit and he was always good at that stuff.”

Amy Calder can be contacted at 861-9247 or at:

acalder@centralmaine.com

Twitter: @AmyCalder17


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