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The Gushee Family House is a historic house at 2868 Sennebec Road in Appleton, Maine.Built about 1833 and remodeled in 1891, it is a well-preserved early rural Maine farmstead, with a well-preserved main entry surround that is unusually elaborate for the house's scale, but is also common to other period houses in the region.
Connected barns describe the site plan of one or more barns integrated into other structures on a farm in the New England region of the United States. The New England connected farmstead, as many architectural historians have termed the style, consisted of numerous farm buildings all connected into one continuous structure.
The Gov. Abner Coburn House is a historic house on Main Street in Skowhegan, Maine. Built in 1849 by a local master builder, it is one of the town's finest examples of Greek Revival architecture . It was built for Skowhegan native Abner Coburn , one of its wealthiest citizens, who served one term as Governor of Maine .
Camden is the location of the 2001 HGTV Dream Home. The Points North Institute, located in Camden and Rockport, Maine, is organizing the annual Camden International Film Festival (CIFF) founded in 2005. It focuses exclusively on documentary film and building community among the professional filmmakers.
Olson House is a 14-room Colonial farmhouse in Cushing, Maine. The house was made famous by its depiction in Andrew Wyeth's Christina's World. The house and its occupants, Christina and Alvaro Olson, were depicted in numerous paintings and sketches by Wyeth from 1939 to 1968. The house was designated as a National Historic Landmark in June 2011.
Learn about Original Medicare (Parts A and B), Medicare Advantage (Part C), prescription drug (Part D), and supplemental (Medigap) coverage in Maine.
A prominent local builder named Anthony C. Raymond lived in the home from 1836 until 1838, when it was purchased by David & Alice Dunlap. The Dunlaps kept the home until 1849 and were followed by Edward Fisher (1849–1851), George B. Upham (1851–1852), Roswell Hitchcock (1852–1856) and finally John Wild (1856–1859).
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