Kennebunk Historic District(Additional Documentation)

Criterion C: Architecture

Period of Significance: ca. 1745 - 1950

Local Level of Significance

The Kennebunk Historic District in York County, Maine, is a concentration of primarily wood frame, residential buildings that are historically and aesthetically linked by the development of the town. The district was originally listed under Criterion C for its architectural significance at the local level. That significance is still reflected in the 260 resources that make up the district which includes all major architectural styles from the earliest ca.

Maine Spinning Company Mill

Criterion A: Industry

Criterion C: Architecture

Period of Significance: 1922 - 1972

Local Level of Significance

The Maine Spinning Company Mill in Skowhegan, Maine is eligible for listing in the National Register of Historic Places at the local level of significance. The four-story brick mill building was designed by the Lockwood, Greene & Co. engineering and architecture firm and constructed as a three-story mill between 1922-1923. One half of the building received an additional story in 1946.

Dow Bridge

Criterion C: Engineering

Period of Significance: 1889

Local Level of Significance

Dow Bridge in Standish, Cumberland County, Maine is a locally significant example of a stone slab bridge. The bridge is eligible under Criterion C for engineering as an increasingly rare example of what was a common bridge type in Maine from early settlement through the nineteenth century. The abutments are large blocks of dry laid ashlar with granite lintels spanning the opening. A bridge was constructed in this location ca.

David and Hadassah Wass House

Criterion C: Architecture

Period of Significance: 1819 - ca. 1830

Local Level of Significance

The David and Hadassah Wass House located in Addison, Washington County, Maine is a good example of a moderate sized Federal-period, Cape Cod form house that has maintained much of its original design and features. The house is reported to be the first constructed in the Addison Point section of town. The building has local significance and is eligible for the National Register under Criterion C architecture for its type, period, and method of construction.

Mount Desert Island Hiking Trail System

Criterion C: Art

Criterion C: Landscape Architecture

Criterion A: Community Planning and Development

Criterion A: Entertainment/Recreation

Criterion A: Social History

Criterion A: Conservation

Period of Significance: 1844 - 1942

National Level of Significance

The Mount Desert Island Hiking Trail System (trail system) is a nationally significant recreational resource that has important associations with the history of Mount Desert Island and the establishment of Acadia National Park.

Morrill Homestead

Criterion C: Architecture

Period of Significance: 1810 - ca. 1922

Local Level of Significance

The Morrill Homestead is a New England connected farm complex in Chesterville, Franklin County, Maine. The land was purchased by David Morrill in 1810 and the Federal-style house and a barn were constructed at that same time. Morrill farmed, operated a mill near the homestead on the Sandy River, preached, and worked as a carpenter.

Marginal Way

Criterion A: Entertainment/Recreation

Criterion A: Conservation

Period of Significance: 1925 - 1972

Local Level of Significance

Marginal Way in Ogunquit, York County, Maine is a one and one-quarter mile pedestrian path along the rocky shoreline of the Atlantic Ocean. Marginal Way, together with its access paths, is significant under Criterion A for association with entertainment and recreation in this coastal resort town and for conservation of this stretch of shoreline for public use.

Richard Vines Monument

Criterion A: Social History

Criterion C: Art

Criterion Consideration F: Commemorative Property

Period of Significance: 1909 - 1932

Local Level of Significance

The Richard Vines Monument is a granite and bronze memorial commemorating the 'first time' Europeans over wintered on the shores of what became Biddeford, York County, Maine. The marker was designed and erected in 1909 by William E. Barry, an architect, researcher, artist and writer who lived in Kennebunk, Maine.

Moonspring Hermitage

Criterion A: Social History

Criterion C: Architecture

Criterion Consideration A: Religious Property

Period of Significance: 1970 - 1972

Local Level of Significance

Moonspring Hermitage is a historic district located in Surry, Hancock County, Maine, that is eligible for listing in the National Register at the local level of significance. Many of the eight buildings are influenced by Japanese architectural design. The Zen Buddhist complex is significant for its Architecture and for Social History.

Rendezvous Point Burying Ground

Criterion A: Exploration and Settlement

Criterion C: Art

Criterion Consideration D: Cemetery

Period of Significance: 1721 - 1802

Local Level of Significance

The Rendezvous Point Burying Ground is a small, long-abandoned cemetery in a built-up rural section of Saco, York County, Maine. The cemetery was established as a public burying ground without an associated religious affiliation or buildings. Used since at least 1721, the site was donated to the town by James Coffin in 1827.

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