Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Maine is divided into 16 counties and contains 482 municipalities consisting of cities, towns, and plantations. [2] In Maine, a plantation is an organized form of municipal self-government similar to but with less power than a town or a city.
The following is a list of mayors of the city of Brewer, Maine, United States. Bell on display outside city hall building on North Main Street in Brewer, Maine, 2016 Part of a series on the
In 1924, the organization changed its name to the International City Managers' Association, and, in 1969, to the International City Management Association. As part of the 1969 change, ICMA began recognizing local governments that provide for positions of professional management while retaining a form of government other than council-manager.
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.
As Somerset County, Massachusetts, from parts of Kennebec County: The county of Somerset in England. 51,302: 4,095 sq mi (10,606 km 2) Waldo County: 027: Belfast: 1827: From parts of Hancock County, Kennebec County and Lincoln County: Samuel Waldo, Maine landowner and a colonial soldier in the 1745 siege of Louisbourg. 40,620: 853 sq mi (2,209 ...
Bridgton is a town in Cumberland County, Maine, United States. The population was 5,418 at the 2020 census. [2] A resort area in Maine's Lakes Region, Bridgton is home to Bridgton Academy, a private preparatory school, and the Four on the Fourth Road Race. Bridgton is part of the Portland-South Portland-Biddeford metropolitan area.
The following is a list of mayors and council presidents of the city of Old Town, Maine, United States. View of City Hall building in Old Town, Maine, circa 1914 Part of a series on the
The Albany Town House is a historic town hall building at the junction of Maine Routes 5 and 35 with Vernon Street and Hunt's Corner Road in Albany Township, Maine.Built in 1848, it is the only surviving governmental structure of the former town of Albany, which was incorporated in 1803 and disincorporated in 1937.