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The Elm Street Congregational Church and Parish House is a historic church complex at Elm and Franklin Streets in Bucksport, Maine. It includes a Greek Revival church building, built in 1838 to a design by Benjamin S. Deane, and an 1867 Second Empire parish house. The church congregation was founded in 1803; its present pastor is the Rev. Debra ...
The renovation of the 1916 cinema brought community theater back to Bucksport, Maine. Soon after NHF purchased the building, the archive opened the doors for a public 16mm film screening series. The cinema shows current films every weekend and hosts a number of special events, including screenings of old films projected in their original format.
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Bucksport is a historical town in Hancock County, Maine, United States. The population was 4,944 at the 2020 census . [ 2 ] Bucksport is across the Penobscot River estuary from Fort Knox and the Penobscot Narrows Bridge , which replaced the Waldo–Hancock Bridge .
The Jed Prouty Tavern and Inn is an historic building at 57 Main Street in downtown Bucksport, Hancock County, Maine. It was built around 1780 as a two family home and was converted into a tavern and inn around 1820. In this guise it hosted prominent national figures, including Daniel Webster and Presidents Martin Van Buren and William Henry ...
The twenty-second episode (and series finale) debuted at the Alamo Theatre in Bucksport, Maine on October 18, 2014, as part of the 2014 Ghostport Festival. The finale made its online debut on October 31, 2014.
Maine Route 15 follows Main Street through the center of Bucksport and leads north up the Penobscot 19 miles to Bangor. According to the United States Census Bureau , the Bucksport CDP has a total area of 14.6 square miles (37.7 km 2 ), of which 11.4 square miles (29.6 km 2 ) are land and 3.1 square miles (8.1 km 2 ), or 21.54%, are water.
The Eastern Maine Methodist Conference was established in 1848, due in part to the rise in Methodism's popularity in the region in the 1840s. The conference elected to build a seminary soon afterward, and Wilson Hall was built in 1850-51. It is the largest Greek Revival building in Bucksport, and was home to the county's only seminary.