Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
This is an incomplete list of ghost towns in Maine. Main Street, Flagstaff, Maine, circa 1915. Appledore (York County) Askwith, now named Tarrantine (Piscataquis County) [1] [2] Flagstaff, submerged to form Flagstaff Lake (Somerset County) [2] [3] [1] Freeman [2] (Franklin County) [1] Ligonia Village, in South Portland [3] (Cumberland County) [2]
The locomotive boiler jackets and asbestos lagging were removed in 1995 but the stripped locomotive shells remain a unique reminder of the industrial revolution in the Maine North Woods. [7] Eagle Lake and West Branch Railroad Consolidation locomotive #2 in operation Eagle Lake and West Branch Railroad locomotive #2, abandoned in the Maine ...
The Maine Insane Hospital, later the Augusta Mental Health Institute (AMHI), was a psychiatric hospital in Augusta, Maine.It was the principal facility for the care and treatment of Maine's mentally ill from 1840 to 2004, and its surviving buildings represent the oldest surviving complex of mental care facilities in the United States.
Former religious buildings and structures in Maine (1 C) S. Defunct schools in Maine (1 C, 16 P) Defunct sports venues in Maine (1 C) U.
Pages in category "Unused buildings in Maine" ... (Skowhegan, Maine) This page was last edited on 5 December 2021, at 12:43 (UTC). ...
Fort Knox, now Fort Knox State Park or Fort Knox State Historic Site, [1] is located on the western bank of the Penobscot River in the town of Prospect, Maine, about 5 miles (8.0 km) from the mouth of the river. Built between 1844 and 1869, it was the first fort in Maine built entirely of granite; most previous forts used wood, earth, and stone ...
This category includes buildings in the United States that are currently unoccupied and unmaintained. For buildings that no longer exist, see Category:Former buildings and structures in the United States. For buildings that have decayed past the point of repair, see Category:Ruins in the United States.
The entire southern Maine area, with only a small population, was devastated in repeated conflicts between the British colonies of New England and New France, and was effectively abandoned after repeated raids involving the French and their Native American allies in the late 17th and early 18th centuries. As a result, there are very few ...