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The Head Tide Historic District encompasses a formerly industrial, now rural village at the head of tide of the Sheepscot River in Alna, Maine.The area had been industrially active since the mid-18th century, but its mills declined and were all destroyed by 1949, leaving a predominantly residential area with a number of houses dating mainly to the period before 1860.
Belfast: 53.73: 86.47: SR 7 north (Head of the Tide Road) – Brooks: Western end of SR 7 concurrency: 56.15– 56.25: 90.36– 90.53: US 1 south / SR 3 west / SR 7 ends / Waldo Avenue – Rockland, Augusta: Interchange, access from US 1 / SR 3 northbound and to US 1 / SR 3 southbound only; eastern end of SR 7 concurrency
The northern end of Church Street is anchored by the 1818 First Church of Belfast, a fine Federal-period building. [ 3 ] After the district was listed on the National Register in 1986, it was technically amended in 1993 to include three properties on Anderson Street, which had been omitted due to unclear boundaries of the Primrose Hill Historic ...
Alna is a town in Lincoln County, Maine, United States. The population was 710 at the 2020 census. [3] Alna is home to the Wiscasset, Waterville and Farmington Railway Museum and is noted for its historic architecture, including the early mill village of Head Tide.
Calais is located at the head of tide on the St. Croix River. Recently, [when?] the City of Calais acquired Devil's Head. The site comprises 318 acres (129 ha) of land, 1-mile (1.6 km) of frontage on the St. Croix River estuary, and 0.6 miles (0.97 km) of frontage on U.S. Route 1. Significant features on the property include a 340-foot (100 m ...
Date/Time Dimensions User Comment 12:46, 30 September 2016: 800 × 498 (464,403 bytes) w:en:Centpacrr (talk | contribs) == Summary == {{Information | Description= The "Passy Rail Trail" at MP 1.3 of the old Belfast and Moosehead Lake Railroad grade between the Upper Bridge and the Beavertail, Blefast, ME | Source=Digital photograph taken and owned by the uploader, [[Us...
State Route 7 (SR 7) is part of Maine's system of numbered state highways, running from an interchange with U.S. Route 1 (US 1) in Belfast, to an intersection with SR 15 in Dover-Foxcroft. Route 7 is 61.9 miles (99.6 km) long. Between Belfast and Newport, SR 7 is known as the Moosehead Trail.
The narrow gauge Wiscasset, Waterville and Farmington Railway closely followed the river through the town of Whitefield to Head Tide from 1895 until 1933 and bridged the river between the villages of Whitefield and Head Tide. At Wiscasset the estuary is bridged by the Maine Central Railroad Rockland Branch and by U.S. Route 1.