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Bangor Air National Guard Base; Bangor Auditorium; Bangor Children's Home; Bangor Civic Center; Bangor Fire Engine House No. 6; Bangor House; Bangor International Airport; Bangor Mall; Bangor Transportation Center; Bangor Union Station; Battleship Maine Monument; Congregation Beth Israel (Bangor, Maine) Building at 84–96 Hammond Street
Bangor Fire Engine House No. 6; Bangor Hose House No. 5; Bangor House; Bangor Public Library; Battleship Maine Monument; Blake House (Bangor, Maine) Broadway Historic District (Bangor, Maine) Building at 84–96 Hammond Street
The Isaac Farrar Mansion, known for much of the 20th Century as Symphony House, is a historic house at 166 Union Street in Bangor, Maine. Built in 1833, it was the first major commission of the noted 19th-century architect Richard Upjohn .
The estate, first settled in 1674, was originally named Ballyleidy, [2] after the townland in which it lay. The current Clandeboye House was built in 1801–1804 to a design by Robert Woodgate that incorporated elements of the previous building and was built for the politician Sir James Blackwood, 2nd Baron Dufferin and Clandeboye. [3]
Broadway reflects Bangor's aspirations, in the 1820s-1830s, to become one of the chief port cities in New England, if not the East Coast. It was laid out roughly on the model of Boston's Beacon Hill, with a green strip running down the center for the first two blocks, planted with a double row of elm trees. A few blocks further on, the street ...
Existing, under construction, approved, and proposed houses in Bangor, Maine, United States. Pages in category "Houses in Bangor, Maine" The following 18 pages are in this category, out of 18 total.
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The Zebulon Smith House is a historic house at 55 Summer Street in Bangor, Maine. Built in 1832, it is one of the two oldest houses (along with the Charles Q. Clapp House in Portland) in the state of Maine to be built with a Greek Revival temple front. The house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1974. [1]