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Eagle Lake (French: Lac Aigle) is a town in Aroostook County, Maine, United States. The population was 772 at the 2020 census. [2] The town was named by a body of troops heading from Bangor to the Aroostook War for the many eagles that they saw around the lake. [3] A total of 49.0% of the population speaks French, reflecting a trend in ...
Eagle Lake is the first, largest, and deepest lake of the Allagash Wilderness Waterway in the North Maine Woods. [4] The lake covers the eastern side of Eagle Lake township. The southern end of the lake extends into Maine township 7, range 12, where it receives overflow from Indian Pond, and into Soper Mountain township where it receives overflow from Haymock Lake via Smith Broo
In Maine, a plantation is an ... Eagle Lake: Town Aroostook 772 37.4 97 1859 New Portland: Town Somerset 765 43.9 114 1808 Island Falls: Town Aroostook
Eagle Lake (Florida), on the west side of the town of Eagle Lake, Florida Eagle Lake (Maine) , at the head of the Allagash Wilderness Waterway Eagle Lake (Fish River) , one of the Maine Fish River chain of lakes
According to Bangor Daily News, "Golden eagle sightings are much less frequent in Maine than those of bald eagles. Golden eagle nesting pairs haven’t been tracked here since 1997, according to ...
The unorganized territory (UT) of Maine is the area of Maine that has no local, incorporated municipal government. The unorganized territory consists of 435 townships, primarily heavily forested areas of the state's north, east, and west, along with de-organized municipalities and islands.
The Eagle Lake Tramway is a historic timber-transport mechanism in the remote North Maine Woods in northeastern USA. [2] The tramway, built in 1902 and operated until 1907, transported timber across a neck of land between Eagle Lake and Chamberlain Lake, with one end eventually becoming the eastern terminus of the Eagle Lake and West Branch Railroad in 1927.
The Eagle Lake and West Branch Railroad was a forest railway built to transfer pulpwood between drainage basins in the Maine North Woods.The railroad operated only a few years in a location so remote the steam locomotives were never scrapped and remain exposed to the elements at the site of the Eagle Lake Tramway.