Enoch Hall House, c.1800 - Buckfield, Oxford County

Located in a rural area east of Buckfield proper, the Enoch Hall House is a one-story frame building with a side-gabled roof and a large central chimney. The house has a symmetrical front facade with a central entry flanked by two windows on each side. The front door and its sidelights are framed by pilasters with delicately carved pointed arch capitals. Enoch Hall settled here in 1783 and originally constructed a log house.

Brick School, c.1810 - Winslow, Kennebec County

Located in the southern part of Winslow, the Brick School is one of the oldest surviving district schools in the state. It is a single-story brick building with shingles in the gable ends. The facade faces south, with the entry door on the west and two windows on the east half. This southern facing orientation would have allowed maximum use of sunlight throughout the school day. The interior is made up of a single classroom with a small coatroom and fireplace on the west end. The school was constructed sometime between 1799 and 1820 and was part of School District No.

Cherryfield Historic District - Cherryfield, Washington County

The Cherryfield Historic District is a discontinuous area approximately seventy-five acres in size resting on both sides of the Narraguagus River. Located on Route 1 and framed by secondary roads Routes 182 and 193, there are fifty-two contributing and ten non-contributing residential and commercial buildings that represent a wide selection of architectural styles roughly beginning in 1790 to 1947. Due to the proximity of the river, Cherryfield flourished as a lumber milling and shipping center.

Blazo-Leavitt House, c.1812-1817 - Parsonsfield, York County

The Blazo-Leavitt House is an excellent example of a Federal-style residence in rural Maine. It was built by Daniel Blazo, the son of a shipbuilder and merchant of French descent from Portsmouth, New Hampshire. It is believed he hired ship carpenters in Portsmouth who were unemployed by the Embargo of 1807 (which was enacted to protect American sailors, but unfortunately greatly curtailed trade in the North Atlantic). The carpenters completed elaborate interior woodwork and features including intersecting central hallways with arched ceilings.

Waldoborough Town Pound, 1819 - Waldoboro, Lincoln County

During the early European-American settlement of Maine's towns, many areas were largely agricultural and animals including swine, horses, cattle, and sheep were allowed to roam free. As infrastructure improved and towns formed, the wandering animals became a health hazard and a nuisance. As a result, many towns constructed small pounds or enclosures to confine loose animals. The owner of the lost animal could then reclaim it from the pound for a small fee.

Harraseeket Historic District - Freeport, Cumberland County

The Harraseeket Historic District is a large and amorphous district containing three villages, South Freeport, Porter's Landing, and Mast Landing, and outlying areas, such as Wolfe's Neck. The villages are situated on the Harraseeket River which river flows into Casco Bay. European settlers arrived in Freeport in the 1600s, but development did not increase until the latter part of the 1700s. Mast Landing developed first at the river's head of tide. As early as 1753 the British and local colonists had shipped lumber from here, particularly timber cut for ship masts.

Pote House, c.1750 - Freeport, Cumberland County

The two-story, timber-framed, saltbox-plan, Pote House, located on Wolfe's Neck, faces an open field towards the Harraseeket River. Sheathed in split cedar shingles, the front facade has an odd number of windows and a right-of-center door-unusual for the time period and style. Originally built near Portland, the house was relocated to its current location c.1765 by its first owner Captain Greenfield Pote. Folklore notes that Captain Pote, a Yankee skipper, waited multiple days for a favorable breeze to set out to sea.

Stearns Hill Farm, c.1818-1958 - West Paris, Oxford County

Located on Stearns Hill to the southeast of West Paris proper, the Stearns Hill Farm consists of over 130 acres and a house, several barns, blacksmith shop, and sap house. Originally built prior to 1797 in the Cape form, the farmhouse was expanded sometime between 1818 and 1830 to its current configuration as a side-gabled house with a rectangular footprint. The barn and blacksmith shop also date to c.1818, though the size and shape of the barn was expanded several times in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.

Coburn School, c.1815 - Pittston, Kennebec County

Positioned on top of a small hill east of the Kennebec River, the Colburn School is a modest side-gabled building and a rare example of an early brick school. It has an asymmetrical facade with the front entry placed to the left of three windows. Each window is topped with a granite lintel. The wood shingled ell was constructed to hold two privies. The school is one-room, typical of nineteenth-century rural educational buildings where one teacher taught all grades in a single space.

Nutting Homestead, c.1796 - Otisfield, Oxford County

The Nutting Homestead is an example of the adaptability of a rural Maine farmstead which evolved through the late-eighteenth century to the early-nineteenth century. Initially constructed as a cape with a later, grand attached Federal period house, the farm grew to include a barn, carriage house, and corn crib. The cape, built by Nathan Nutting shortly after moving to Otisfield in 1796, is a one-story dwelling that sits on a granite foundation with clapboards siding, but has lost its original central entry.

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