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The Kittery Community Center is located in the former Frank C. Frisbee Elementary School at 120 Rogers Road in Kittery, Maine.The building, built in 1943 by the United States government as part of war-related expansions of Portsmouth Naval Shipyard, was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2015 for this association.
KITTERY, Maine — A multi-sport artificial turf playing surface will be installed at the Memorial Field complex and improvements will be made to the Kittery Community Center facility after voters ...
The town has provided bottled drinking water this week for residents near Kittery's dump, where PFAS chemicals may have seeped into well water. Here's what we know about solutions in Kittery for ...
The updated version of the proposal going before the Kittery Planning Board this week calls for a five-story, 107-unit apartment building, a four-story 119-room hotel with an indoor pool, and a ...
The Kittery Art Association was formed in 1958. It manages the KAA Gallery at 2 Walker Street in Kittery Foreside, as a cultural center and exhibition gallery. [34] The Kittery Art Association purchased the gallery building in 2022 from the town library, where the property was known as the Taylor Building, for $558,700.
The Rice Public Library is the public library of Kittery, Maine.It is located at 8 Wentworth Street (Maine State Route 103) in the central Kittery Foreside village, in an architecturally distinguished Romanesque Revival building built in 1889 and listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1979, with a large annex just across the street at 2 Walker Street.
Christopher Mende (foreground), vice president of surveying with Civil Consultants in South Berwick, led a formal perambulation of the disputed border between Kittery and York on Monday, June 24 ...
The Robert and Louisa Traip House is a historic house at 2 Wentworth Street (Maine State Route 103) in Kittery, Maine. Built about 1839, it is a rare statewide example of a Greek Revival house with colonnaded sides. Robert Traip, its first owner, was one of Kittery's wealthiest men at the time.