Colonial Theatre, 1913-1964

The 1913/1926 Colonial Theatre on Water Street in Augusta is the last surviving cinema in the downtown area of Maine?s state capitol. Built to replace an earlier movie house that burned along with neighboring buildings in 1912, this theater was designed by Harry S. Coombs, one of Maine?s most popular architects at the time. After another fire in 1926 the building was immediately rebuilt and the size expanded. Recent investigations have revealed that much of the fa?ade of the theatre survived the fire, and many aspects of Coombs' design are extant.

Winthrop Mills Historic District. 1882-1964

The Winthrop Mills Company Historic District was recently listed in the National Register of Historic Places for its local significance in association with the cotton and woolen textile industry in Winthrop, Maine in the 19th and 20th centuries. The complex, which contains two separate mills, and has eight total contributing historic resources, manufactured textiles with wool manufacturing in the larger complex adjacent to Main Street and cotton manufacturing in the smaller complex on Clark Street.

Union Meeting House, 1848, c. 1910

Located in Appleton Village, in Knox County, Maine the Appleton Union Meeting House is a classic example of a double entry, double-aisle mid-nineteenth century New England Greek Revival style meeting house. It was built in the years before the Civil War, in the relatively prosperous time just before the peak of population was attained in the town, and just five years after this thriving village of McLain's Mills (now known as Appleton Village) was transferred from the Town of Hope to the Town of Appleton with attendant civic enthusiasm.

Holden Town Hall, Holden, Penobscot County, 1873- c. 1964

The Holden Town Hall is an architecturally notable one-and-one-half story wood frame structure located on Main Road in the Penobscot County town of Holden. Erected by the town in 1873 to the designs of an as of yet unknown architect, and later used by the local chapter of the Patrons of Husbandry, the handsome building with Gothic Revival, Italianate and Stick Style details served as the site of the municipality?s governmental functions until the mid-1960s, and as the meeting hall for the local Grange until 1995.

Village School, Unity, 1898-1953

The Village School is a one-story, three-room, eclectically-styled, schoolhouse located in the Waldo County town of Unity, Maine. The school was constructed in a central location in 1898 as smaller, dispersed, rural districts were being consolidated. The school remained the largest grade school in the town until 1953, when a new school was constructed to alleviate the overcrowded conditions plaguing the school.

Lovell Meeting House, Lovell, Oxford County, c. 1796-1964

The Lovell Meeting House in the Oxford County town of Lovell is a building erected between 1796 and 1798 to serve as the town?s religious and secular assembly space. The site was first set aside in 1780 as the location for a meeting house, a training ground and a cemetery for the nascent community. Originally built as a two-story building with a high pulpit and gallery, the building was reduced in height by at least three feet in the 1820s.

Dixmont Town House, Dixmont, Penobscot County, c. 1836-c. 1952

The Dixmont Town House is a building erected circa 1836 to serve as the locus of governmental functions for the Penobscot County town of Dixmont. Prior to the middle decades of the 19th century governmental functions in many rural Maine towns were held in a town-built meeting house that also served as the town?s religious edifice. As the century progressed, communities increasingly abandoned their meeting houses, built town houses for civic business and placed their churches in separate buildings.

Bond Street Historic District, Augusta, c. 1878-1946

The Bond Street Historic District is a small collection of employer-built worker housing located on Bond Street in the Kennebec County city of Augusta. The seven residential units thatcomprise the district were built primarily in 1884 by the Edwards Manufacturing Company, a cotton factory, to house the mill workers and their families. The buildings in the district sharecommon massing, proportion and scale, and are arranged in a tight row along paved sidewalks.

Foster Redington House, Waterville, 1883 - 1923

During the late nineteenth- and early twentieth centuries the Foster-Redington House in Waterville, Maine was the home of two prominent men. The Queen Anne-style house was constructed by Moses C. Foster in 1883 as his own residence, and at the time was recognized as the first example of this architectural style in Waterville. Foster was a celebrated and prolific builder and contractor with important commissions for public buildings, churches and hotels throughout Maine and New Hampshire, as well as in Washington, D.C. and New Brunswick Canada.

Union Meeting House, Whiting, 1836, 1904

The Union Meeting House in the Washington County town of Whiting is a locally rare example of a once-common type of nineteenth-century New England religious architecture. Erected in 1836, this symmetrically composed, timber frame building exhibits the proportions, features and composition of a Federal-style meeting house, but also has a prominent Greek-Revival style closed pediment on the fa?ade. Erected to serve both the Congregational and Methodist-Episcopal societies, the building is now the only church in this small, rural town.

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