Bridge Street (Yarmouth, Maine)

[2] An iron truss bridge was in place around the turn of the 20th century, replacing a structure that dated to 1846.

[3] The original wooden 1811 NYA school building was removed to the adjacent Bridge Street "just below the residence of the late Charles O. Rowe," the father of William Hutchinson Rowe,[1] roughly where number 28 Bridge Street, built in 1860, is today.

[5] Crossing the river, directly across from the Sparhawk Mill tower is 80 Bridge Street, which was built as the office for the above business in the early 1880s.

[3] The 1840-constructed former home of George G. Loring, built by mill-owner Phillip H. Kimball,[6] stands on the hill overlooking the falls at 100 Bridge Street.

[7] The run-down building at 148 Bridge (at its intersection with Willow Street) has been vacant since the early 2000s.

The Second Falls around 1907, when an iron bridge crossed the Royal River and the Sparhawk Mill's tower had been completed
80 and, on the hill, 100 Bridge Street, the former home of George G. Loring
The Royal River rushing by the Sparhawk Mill on Bridge Street, en route to the First Falls