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Temple is a town in Franklin County, Maine, United States. The town was named after Temple, New Hampshire. [2] It is located at the end of Maine State Route 43 (Temple Road), and is said to be one of only two towns in Maine to be situated at the end of a public highway. [3] The population was 527 at the 2020 census. [4]
Temple Stream is a small river in Franklin County, Maine, United States.It is located in the Kennebec River watershed. [1]It is named for the town of Temple, Maine.Temple's Intervale Road runs along the stream's southern banks, while Cummings Hill Road crosses it, near it its intersection with Maple Street.
Strong (Maine) Temple (Maine) Weld; Wilton (Maine) Plantilla:Comtat de Franklin (Maine) Usage on cdo.wikipedia.org Franklin Gông (Maine) Usage on ceb.wikipedia.org Franklin County (kondado sa Tinipong Bansa, Maine) Usage on ce.wikipedia.org Франклин (гуо, Мэн) Usage on cy.wikipedia.org Franklin County, Maine; Rhestr o Siroedd Maine
The Temple Intervale School, also known as the District No. 5 Schoolhouse, is a historic one-room district schoolhouse at Intervale and Day Mountain Roads in Temple, Maine. Built in 1810–11, it is one of the oldest surviving schoolhouses in western Maine , and one of its longest-used, with a recorded history of academic usage extending to 1958.
Staples Pond is located in the town of Temple, Maine, in the United States.Some locals prefer to call it "Santa Claus Lake", because of its appearance from the air. Water from Staples Pond flows via Temple Stream to the Sandy River in Farmington, and thence to the Kennebec River.
This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Franklin County, Maine, United States. Latitude and longitude coordinates are provided for many National Register properties and districts; these locations may be seen together in a map. [1]
The Shiloh Temple, now Shiloh Chapel, is a historic religious facility at 38 Beulah Lane in Durham, Maine.Built in 1897, the surviving building is a small portion of a once-extensive religious enclave established by the evangelical Christian leader Frank Sandford, exhibiting a unique expression of religious and summer retreat architecture.
Peaks in the state of Maine [1] [2] Mountain Peak Elevation Prominence Isolation Location County; Mount Abraham: 4,049 ft 1234 m: 899 ft 274 m: 4.11 mi 6.62 km Franklin: Agamenticus: 692 ft 211 m: 522 ft 159 m: 12.05 mi 19.4 km