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Greenville is a town in Piscataquis County, Maine, United States. The population was 1,437 at the 2020 census. [2] The town is centered on the lower end of Moosehead Lake, the largest body of fresh water in the state. Greenville is the historic gateway to the north country and a center for outdoor recreation in the area.
The William M. Shaw House is a historic house located at 40 Norris Street in Greenville, Maine, which now houses the Greenville Inn. Built in 1895, it is a handsome and elaborate example of Queen Anne architecture in a rural small-town setting. The house was designed by Edwin E. Lewis of Gardiner, with alterations by Wilfred E. Mansur of Bangor.
As of the census [4] of 2000, there were 1,319 people, 606 households, and 346 families residing in the CDP. The population density was 314.3 inhabitants per square mile (121.4/km 2).
Indian Hill Site may refer to: Indian Hill site (Manlius, New York), a 17th-century Onondaga town; Indian Hill site (Marquette, Kansas), listed on the National Register of Historic Places in Ellsworth County, Kansas; Indian Hill site (Royalton, Minnesota), listed on the National Register of Historic Places in Benton County, Minnesota (listing ...
K & S closes after 50 years on Greenville's Westside. More than 50 years of breakfast through dinner was served at 3107 White Horse Road, as K & S Restaurant closed its doors on Feb. 29.
St. Anne's Church and Mission Site is a historic religious site on Down Street at the southern end of Indian Island in Old Town, Maine, United States.The site includes a church, dating to about 1830, and a cemetery, established in 1668.
Aug. 12—A Rollinsford man was killed early Saturday and two others hurt when a pickup truck swerved off a road in rural Maine, state police said. Benjamin Harvey, 23, was pronounced dead at the ...
The Hunnewell House is one of the oldest surviving structures in the United States state of Maine.Located on Old County Road near Black Point Road in Scarborough, Maine, this modest single-story building was probably built in 1702-03 by Richard Hunnewell, who had first settled in Scarborough in 1684.