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Keywords: Dunn Street

Site Pages

These sites were created for each contributing partner or as part of collaborative community projects through Maine Memory. Learn about collaborative projects on MMN.


Site Page

Cumberland & North Yarmouth - "Main Streets" of North Yarmouth and Cumberland

"There was a gristmill and a blacksmith shop. Dunn's Corner was active until around 1943, when the store closed and the railroad no longer made stops…"

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Thomaston: The Town that Went to Sea - Shipbuilding During and after the Civil War - 1861 to 1900

"Walsh and Co., following which the firm of T. W. Dunn & Co. was established in 1866 after the retirement of key figures in the former company."

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Thomaston: The Town that Went to Sea - The End of Wooden Shipbuilding - 1910 to 1950

"In 1928 when coal was eliminated as a cargo item, the Reine Marie was towed from Portland to Thomaston and tied at Dunn and Elliot’s wharf, where she…"

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Thomaston: The Town that Went to Sea - Early Wharves and Yards - 1795 to 1825

"Currently, this is the site of the Lyman Morse Boatbuilding Co. wharf, east of the Wadsworth Street bridge."

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Westbrook Historical Society

View collections, facts, and contact information for this Contributing Partner.

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Cumberland & North Yarmouth - Representative Industries of Cumberland and North Yarmouth

"… after which the business was operated by Arthur Dunn. The greenhouse was later moved to Allen Farms on Gray Road in Cumberland."

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Cumberland & North Yarmouth - Brothers of the Civil War

"… Riverside Farm's milk daily to the train at Dunn's Depot. North Yarmouth Historical Society The James and Ellen Lawrence family, ca."