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The Hunnewell House is located in central Scarborough, in a triangular wooded island formed by Black Point Road (Maine State Route 207), Old County Road, and Winnocks Neck Road. It is a 1 + 1 ⁄ 2-story Cape style wood-frame structure, three bays wide, with clapboard siding and a stone foundation.
SR 114 begins at an intersection with US 1/SR 9 and SR 207 in Scarborough. There, it heads northwest into Gorham. It has a short concurrency with SR 22. It goes through the city's center and junctions US 202 and SR 4 and SR 25. It heads into Standish and junctions SR 35. Then it follows the Sebago Lake coast into Sebago.
Wishing Well Manor, Scarborough; Bendale Acres, Scarborough - 302 beds facility built 1963; Lakeshore Lodge, Etobicoke - 150 beds built 1990; Castleview Wychwood Towers, Toronto - 456 beds; Cummer Lodge, North York - 391 beds; Fudger House, Toronto - 249 beds built 1965; Seven Oaks, Scarborough - 249 beds built 1966-1967
Scarborough: 51.1: 82.2: US 1 south – Saco: Western end of US 1 concurrency: 54.2: 87.2: SR 114 north (Gorham Road) / SR 207 south (Black Point Road) – Gorham, Prouts Neck: Southern terminus of SR 114; northern terminus of SR 207: 55.4: 89.2: To I-95 / Maine Turnpike / I-295 north – Portland: Interchange; eastbound exit and westbound ...
West Scarborough is an area within the northwesternmost portion of the town of Scarborough, Maine.. While the area of town around Dunstan Corner was once known as "West Scarborough" because of the station of that name on the Eastern Railroad, the term now refers to an area that is roughly defined as west of the Maine Turnpike and U.S. Route 1, west of Dunstan Corner, and southwest of North ...
U.S. Route 2 (US 2) in the U.S. state of Maine is a principal east–west route through the central portion of the state, extending from the New Hampshire border in Gilead to the town of Houlton less than a quarter mile from the Canadian border.
Prouts Neck first appears on a map by Samuel de Champlain from his 1604 explorations of New England. In early times, it was known as Black Point because of the dark appearance of its forests. Captain Thomas Cammock, a nephew of the Earl of Warwick, was the first European settler of present day Prouts Neck.
The village pub, which was known as The Langton Hotel until it changed its name to The Wishing Well in the 1970s, closed in 2004. The village is a short distance from Kiplin Hall , the stately home built by George Calvert, 1st Baron Baltimore , the founder of Maryland .