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Bangor House

Coordinates: 44°47′54″N 68°46′23″W / 44.79833°N 68.77306°W / 44.79833; -68.77306
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Bangor House
Bangor House
Bangor House is located in Maine
Bangor House
Bangor House is located in the United States
Bangor House
Location174 Main St., Bangor, Maine
Coordinates44°47′54″N 68°46′23″W / 44.79833°N 68.77306°W / 44.79833; -68.77306
Area3 acres (1.2 ha)
Built1833 (1833)
Architectural styleGreek Revival, Italianate
NRHP reference No.72000076[1]
Added to NRHPFebruary 23, 1972

Bangor House is a historic former hotel at 174 Main Street in downtown Bangor, Maine. Built in 1833-34 and repeatedly enlarged, the hotel was a major fixture in the city, and one of the nation's early high-class hotels. Now converted into apartments, it was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1972.[1]

Description and history

Bangor House is located on the south side of Bangor's downtown area, at the southeast corner of Main and Union Streets. The U-shaped building occupies a slightly irregular city block, and is bounded on its southern sides by May Street and Gallagher Place. It is a four story building, built out of brick and stone, with the ground floor of its early sections built out of granite blocks, with brick walls above. Porticoed entrances face both Union and Main Streets, with a stone arcade on the ground floor supporting a four-column porch on Union Street and a simpler balustraded portico with supporting square stone columns and pilasters facing Main Street. A small balcony with large Italianate brackets stands above the Main Street entrance on the third floor.[2]

The hotel was built in 1833-34 by group of Bangor businessmen, seeking to create a public accommodation similar to that of the Tremont House in Boston, Massachusetts, an 1829 hotel that was then regarded as one of the pinnacles of luxury accommodation. The main building has retained its exterior despite a significant number of later alterations and enlargements. Originally built in a U open to the south, the inside of the U was in 1869 filled in with a billiard hall, and wings were added to the east and south.[2] Many of the additions have since been torn down as part of the building's conversion to apartments, replaced by residential wings that now give the building an east-facing U shape.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. July 9, 2010.
  2. ^ a b "NRHP nomination for Bangor House". National Park Service. Retrieved 2016-02-03.