MAINE
Recreation and Places Of Interest
Maine’s scenic beauty attracts artists,
writers, and photographers, and its many lakes,
rivers, wooded areas, and mountains lure sports
enthusiasts the year round. Its long coastline
is noted for its picturesque coves, harbors, and
islands. Numerous sheltered sandy beaches alternate
with imposing rocky headlands where breakers crash
against the shore. Maine’s coastal waters
attract a steadily increasing number of saltwater
sports fishing enthusiasts. Thousands of pleasure
craft, from tiny sailboats to large yachts explore
the coast. Camping, canoeing, mountain climbing,
hunting, golf, and skiing are also available to
vacationists.
National Parks
The state’s only national park is Acadia
National Park, which occupies most of Mount Desert
Island, just off the coast. A small section of
the park lies on Schoodic Peninsula, on the mainland,
and another part is on Isle au Haut, 40 km (25
mi) out in the Atlantic Ocean. In the park, on
the shore of Mount Desert Island, is Thunder Hole,
a deep crevice where the crashing waves cause the
water rushing into it to rise as high as 12 m (40
ft). One of the attractions of the park is Cadillac
Mountain on Mount Desert Island, the highest mountain
on the eastern coast of North America. Also on
Mount Desert Island is Bar Harbor, one of New England’s
most famous summer resorts.
Saint Croix Island International Historical Site
marks the site of the first European settlement
on the Atlantic coast north of Florida. The Franklin
D. Roosevelt Memorial Bridge connects Lubec with
Campobello Island in New Brunswick, on which is
situated the Roosevelt Campobello International
Park. The park contains the summer cottage of the
former United States president and is jointly administered
by the United States and Canada.
Near Mount Katahdin is the beginning of the Appalachian
National Scenic Trail, which follows the Appalachian
Mountains for 3,473 km (2,158 mi) from Maine to
its terminus at Mount Oglethorpe, Georgia.
National Forests and Rivers
The largest alpine area east of the Rocky Mountains
and south of Canada is found in White Mountain
National Forest, a portion of which lies in Maine.
Campgrounds, hiking and biking trails, scenic drives,
and historic places can be found in the forest.
In 1970, the Allagash Wilderness State Waterway,
148 km (92 mi) long, in northern Maine became a
state-administered recreation area to be added
to the National Wild and Scenic River System.
State Parks
The 30 developed state parks in Maine boast extensive
trails and year-round outdoor recreation. Grafton
Notch State Park has unique roadside hikes and
vistas, including Screw Auger Falls Gorge. Many
areas in this park offer views of natural stone
bridges and extensive cave systems composed of
rock slabs. Many of the state parks in the interior
are located on lakes.
Maine has a number of state parks located on the
seacoast. These include the Two Lights State Park,
at Cape Elizabeth; Reid State Park, near Popham
Beach; Camden Hills State Park, near Camden; Moose
Point State Park, at Searsport; Crescent Beach
State Park, near Portland; Lamoine State Park,
south of Ellsworth; Warren Island, at Islesboro;
and Cobscook Bay, at Dennysville.
Baxter State Park, covering 81,000 hectares (200,000
acres) in north central Maine, is the state’s
largest park. The land, given to the state by former
governor Percival P. Baxter, is maintained as a
wilderness area and wildlife sanctuary. Mount Katahdin’s
highest peak, Baxter Peak (1,605 m/5,267 ft), is
the highest point in the state, and lies in the
southern section of the park.
Museums
One of Maine’s notable museums is the Farnsworth
Art Museum, and its Center for the Wyeth Family,
in Rockland; another is the Portland Museum of
Art, with collections of paintings by major 18th
and 19th century American artists, as well as sculpture
by Maine native Benjamin Paul Akers. The Bowdoin
College Museum of Art also contains important American
paintings and an impressive antiquities collection.
Maine also has a number of museums of special
historical interest, such as the marine museums
at Bath and Searsport, and the Abbe Museum, in
Bar Harbor, which contains an extensive Native
American collection. The Center for Maine History
in Portland and the State Museum in the capitol
building in Augusta also display a number of Native
American relics. The town of Bar Harbor features
a Museum of Natural History and in the nearby town
of Southwest Harbor is the Wendell Gilley Museum
of Bird Carving. The Peary-MacMillan Arctic Museum,
at Bowdoin College, features polar artifacts and
exploration lore.
Other Places to Visit
The Blaine House in Augusta, which is the executive
mansion, was built in the 1830s and bought by Maine
political leader James G. Blaine in 1862. The silver
service in the dining room was recovered from the
battleship Maine ten years after it was sunk in
the harbor of Havana, Cuba, in 1898. This service
was presented to the battleship by the state when
the ship was launched.
Souvenirs, documents, and personal belongings
of American poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow are
displayed in Portland’s Wadsworth-Longfellow
House, his childhood home. The Portland Head Lighthouse,
on Cape Elizabeth on the south side of Portland
Harbor, is one of the oldest and most recognized
of the nation’s lighthouses. Another attraction
is the Seaside Trolley Museum, in nearby Arundel,
with the world’s largest collection of trolley
cars.
The covered Sunday River Bridge, built in 1870
near Bethel, has been photographed and painted
so often it has been nicknamed “Artist’s
Bridge.” Life continues in the mode of the
19th century at the Norlands Living History Center,
a stately Victorian mansion, granite library, church,
and schoolhouse near Livermore. The famous seacoast
village of Bar Harbor features the Natural History
Museum. In Columbia Falls, the 1818 Ruggles House
sports a flying staircase and intricately detailed
woodcarvings throughout the interior. Acadian Historic
Village in Van Buren consists of 16 reconstructed
and relocated buildings preserving the unique French
Acadian culture.
Burnham Tavern, in Machias, has been made into
a museum. It was used in 1775 as a meeting place
by local patriots planning the first naval battle
of the American Revolution (1775-1783). Old Gaol,
in York, was used as a jail from the time it was
built in 1719 until 1860. It is now a museum and
contains many colonial and Native American relics.
Fort Popham, on Popham Beach, is near the site
of Maine’s first attempted English settlement,
made in 1607. The present fort was begun in 1861,
and although it was never completed, it was used
by U.S. soldiers until World War I (1914-1918).
A number of other historic forts have been preserved
as memorials, including Fort McClary at Kittery,
Fort Edgecomb near Wiscasset, and Fort O’Brien,
near Machiasport. Maine’s largest fort is
Fort Knox across the Penobscot River from Bucksport.
Fort Western, in Augusta, was built on the site
of a trading post constructed in 1628. The original
garrison house has been restored, furnished with
colonial antiques, and made a museum.
Source: MSN
Encarta: Online Encyclopedia