Elm Street (Yarmouth, Maine)

It was a key stagecoach stop, and a large barn was built beside Jeremiah Mitchell's tavern to house horses.

[3] The inn's location later became the site of Wilfred W. Dunn's house, then, between 1959 and 1972, Norton's Texaco gas station.

[4] The house of Richmond Cutter still stands at the southern corner of Church and West Elm Streets.

[3] Two doors further south from Cutter's house, a Methodist church was built in 1898 to mark a revival of the religion.

The church was disbanded thirty years later[3] and the building became a meeting place for a fraternal group.

[5] At the northwestern corner of the intersection with Deering Street stands number 111, designed by John Calvin Stevens and Albert Winslow Cobb for Captain Claudius Lawrence.

[11] Joel Brooks' pottery, which was located at today's 40 East Elm Street, was in business between 1851 and 1888.

[13] Number 53, "an early-19th century vernacular house, retains windows, door surround, clapboard siding, and overall form.

92 East Elm Street was formerly a mill workers’ boarding house, then a maternity hospital.

The Amtrak Downeaster crosses East Elm Street several times a day during its journeys between Brunswick and Boston, Massachusetts.

Looking north along West Elm Street to its intersection with Main Street and West Main Street (2022)
Today's 40 East Elm Street was the home of potter Joel Brooks from 1850, but it was built in 1810. Brooks' pottery buildings stood behind the house [ 7 ]
103 East Elm Street