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Freeport is a town in Cumberland County, Maine, United States.Freeport is included in the Lewiston-Auburn, Maine metropolitan New England City and town area.The population was 8,737 at the 2020 census. [2]
The Freeport Main Street Historic District encompasses a 1-2 block area of Main Street (U.S. Route 1) in Freeport, Maine.It extends from Grove and Holbrook Streets in the south to Mill and Nathan Nye Streets in the north, just south of the L. L. Bean complex.
The farm is located at the southern end of Pettengill Road in Freeport's Mast Landing area. (The name is erroneously spelled Pettengil on the street sign and, subsequently, on some maps.) The house faces south, looking down the Harraseeket River. The property's trails are open to the public daily from dawn to dusk.
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The Harraseeket Historic District encompasses some of the oldest maritime village areas of the town of Freeport, Maine.It includes properties along both banks of the tidal Harraseeket River, from the Mast Landing area (roughly where Bow Street crosses the river) in the north to Wolf Neck and the villages of Porter's (or Bartol's) Landing and South Freeport on the west bank of the river. [2]
List of television stations in Canada by call sign; List of Canadian television networks (table) List of Canadian television channels; List of Canadian specialty channels; Category A services; Category B services; Category C services; List of foreign television channels available in Canada; List of United States television stations available in ...
An 1871 map with a Porter's Landing inset. Porter's Landing is named for Seward Porter (1753–1800), who was born in Weymouth, Massachusetts.He and his wife, Eleanor Merrill, moved to Freeport, District of Maine, from Falmouth (the part now today's Portland) in 1782.
U.S. Route 1 (US 1) in the U.S. state of Maine is a major north–south section of the United States Numbered Highway System, serving the eastern part of the state.It parallels the Atlantic Ocean from New Hampshire north through Portland, Brunswick, and Belfast to Calais, and then the St. Croix River and the rest of the Canada–United States border via Houlton to Fort Kent.