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.