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Keywords: Congregational churches
Historical Items Showing 3 of 317 View All
Item 19201
Title: The Congregational and Episcopal Churches in Bar Harbor, ca. 1920
Contributed by: Jesup Memorial Library
Date: circa 1920
Location: Bar Harbor; Eden
Media: Postcard
Item 79525
Title: Dixfield Congregational Church, High Street, Dixfield, 2006.
Contributed by: Dixfield Historical Society
Date: circa 2006
Location: Dixfield
Media: postcard
Item 27635
Title: Hampden Congregational Church, 1893
Contributed by: Hampden Historical Society
Date: 1893
Location: Hampden
Media: Photographic print
Tax Records Showing 3 of 5 View All
Item 76675
Address: 790-792 Stevens Avenue, Portland
Owner in 1924: Stevens Avenue Congregational Church
Use: Church
Item 51977
Address: 16 Fobes Street, Portland
Owner in 1924: Congregational Church Bldg. Society
Use: Parsonage
Item 76673
Address: 788 Stevens Avenue, Portland
Owner in 1924: Stevens Avenue Congregational Church
Use: Dwelling - Single family
Exhibits Showing 1 of 1 View All
Exhibit
After the American Revolution, settlers on Maine's frontier -- away from the coast -- brought with them religions that were quite different in belief and practice from the traditional New England Congregationalists.
Sites Showing 1 of 1 View All
Site
Strong, a Mussul Unsquit village
The history of a small western Maine community north of Farmington as told by a team consisting of Strong Historical Society, Strong Elementary School, and Strong Public Library. Exhibit topics include Strong's prominence in the wood products industry (it was once the "Toothpick Capital of the World"), the "Bridge that Changed the Map," schools and educational history, clubs and organizations, "Fly Rod" Crosby, the first Maine guide, and a rich student section related to the Civil War and post-Civil War era in the town.