Vassalboro Mill

Criterion A: Industry

Criterion C: Architecture

Period of Significance: 1861 - 1955

Local Level of Significance

The Vassalboro Mill is a brick woolen mill located in Vassalboro, Kennebec County, Maine. The mill is in the village of North Vassalboro along Outlet Stream which powered the mill. The predominately three- and four-story buildings with low-slope roofs were constructed between 1861 and 1955 and reflect the prosperity and expansion of the textile industry locally and more widely throughout New England during the period.

Sagamore Village Historic District, Portland, Cumberland County

Criterion A: Politics/Government

Criterion A: Community Planning and Development

Period of Significance: 1942 - 1953

Local Level of Significance

The ninety-one building Sagamore Village public housing complex is eligible for the National Register at the local level of significance. It is significant under Criterion A: Politics/Government for association with the 1940 Lanham Act, passed by Congress in 1940 to facilitate expanded national defense activities, including the creation of housing for defense workers.

West Auburn School, Auburn, Androscoggin County

Criterion A: Education

Criterion C: Architecture

Period of Significance: 1858 to 1950

Local Level of Significance

The West Auburn School is in the rural northwest section of the City of Auburn, Androscoggin County, Maine. The gable-front, Greek Revival-style schoolhouse is significant at the local level under Criterion A for its association with patterns of education and under Criterion C for the distinctive architectural characteristics of a rural one room schoolhouse.

Dunn & Elliot Sail Loft, Thomaston, Knox County

Criterion A: Industry

Criterion A: Maritime History

Period of Significance: 1875 to 1925

Local Level of Significance

The Dunn & Elliot Sail Loft is a large two-story, gable-front braced frame building on the waterfront in Thomaston, Knox County, Maine. The loft is significant under Criterion A for industry and maritime history at the local level. The Sail Loft represents a less well known support industry that was central to maintaining sailing ships.

Surry Village School, Surry, Hancock County

Criterion A: Education

Period of Significance: 1872 to 1952

Local Level of Significance

Surry Village School is a two-story, two-room schoolhouse located in Surry, Hancock County, Maine. The gable-front, Italianate-style building is significant at the local level under Criterion A for its association with patterns of education. The building is the largest school constructed in Surry prior to the 1952 construction of the Surry Elementary School.

West Auburn School

Criterion A: Education

The West Auburn School is in the rural northwest section of the City of Auburn, Androscoggin County, Maine. The gable-front, Greek Revival-style schoolhouse is significant at the local level under Criterion A for its association with patterns of education and under Criterion C for the distinctive architectural characteristics of a rural one room schoolhouse. The building represents the typical response to evolving educational practices which were often recommended if not mandated by the State of Maine.

Otisfield Town Pound, Otisfield, Oxford County, Maine

Criterion A: Agriculture

Criterion A: Early Settlement

Criterion A: Law

Period of Significance: 1819 to 1882

Local Level of Significance

The Otisfield Town Pound is near the geographic center of Otisfield, Oxford County, Maine. The stone animal enclosure is near the early settlement centered on Bell Hill and is the only known pound for the town. Construction of the pound was approved at the 1818 town meeting, and it was constructed by the first pound keeper Stephen Knight in 1819.

Farwell Brothers Store, Thorndike, Waldo County, Maine

Criterion A: Commerce

Criterion A: Industry

Criterion C: Architecture

Period of Significance: ca. 1872 to 1960

Local Level of Significance

The Farwell Brothers Store is a functionally related group of three commercial buildings located along the Belfast and Moosehead Lake Railroad line in the Town of Thorndike, Waldo County, Maine. The store was built ca. 1872 and served the community from then until 1960 as a general store with the mill building added ca. 1915 and the lumber shed added ca. 1920. The store was owned by O. J.

Thomas B. Reed School, Portland, Cumberland County, Maine

Criterion A: Education

Criterion C: Architecture

Period of Significance: 1926 to 1969

Local Level of Significance

The Thomas B. Reed School possesses integrity of design, location, setting, materials, workmanship, feeling, and association, and meets Criteria A and C at the local level for listing in the National Register of Historic Places. The period of significance extends from 1926, when the original school building was constructed, to 1969, the fifty-year cut off period for National Register listing.

Old Red Store, Tremont, Hancock County, Maine

Criterion A: Commerce

Criterion A: Social History

Period of Significance: ca. 1885 to 1940

Local Level of Significance

The ca. 1885 Old Red Store in the Village of Bernard in the Town of Tremont, Hancock County, Maine is an intact small-town grocery store that also served as post office and social gathering place. Originally housing the T.W. Jackson Market, the building was maintained in the same family as a store for fifty years.

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