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Police issued a shelter-in-place order, evacuated homes and closed a section of the street in Auburn, trigging memories of the mass shooting in neighboring Lewiston less than eight months ago ...
Auburn is a city in south-central Maine, within the United States.Settled in the foothills of the Western Lakes and Mountains region of the state, The city serves as the county seat of Androscoggin County. [4]
The Androscoggin County Courthouse and Jail is located at 2 Turner Street in Auburn, Maine, the county seat of Androscoggin County. The original portion of the large brick Renaissance Revival complex was designed by Gridley James Fox Bryant and was built in 1857, with a sympathetic enlargement c. 1915-20. The jail was expanded in 1970 and 1990 ...
Lost Valley is a ski area in Auburn, Maine.Its east-facing slopes feature 22 trails & 9 gladed trails across the hill, and is served by four lifts in total, three double chairlifts and one ground lift carpet for the ski and snowboard learning center.
William A. Robinson House is a historic house at 11 Forest Avenue in Auburn, Maine. Built in 1874, it is one of the region's finest examples of Late Gothic Revival architecture, and is the state's only surviving work of local architects Herbert and Balston Kenway. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1993. [1]
The Auburn Commercial Historic District encompasses the main late 19th-century historic downtown area of Auburn, Maine.The twelve buildings in the district represent the city's growth between 1855 and 1902, housing businesses, professional offices and social halls, and also the city's municipal offices.
The Auburn Colony was founded in 1877 by a group of businessmen from Auburn, "for the purpose of securing the material advantage of society, health, and recreation." [2] Twenty small Gothic Victorian cottages were built on the property they acquired, which were tragically destroyed by fire in 1899, although the two community buildings survived.
The Frank L. Dingley House is a historic house in Auburn, Maine, United States.Built in 1867, it is a high-quality local example of Second Empire architecture. It is most significant as the long-time home of Frank L. Dingley, long-time editor of the Lewiston Evening Journal, the state's second-largest newspaper at the time.