North Yarmouth and Freeport Baptist Meetinghouse

The front facade is five bays wide, the central three projecting in a gable-topped section from which the church tower rises.

The central section has three doors, the outer ones topped by lancet-arched windows, the center one framed by pilasters and a corniced entablature.

The following year, George W. Hammond and his wife, Ellen, purchased the meetinghouse and re-opened it as the Hillside Library and Antiquarian Society.

During World War II the building was used by the Civilian Defense System as an observation post, looking for enemy aircraft.

Immediately inside the gate, on the left-hand side, is a billboard-style trio of gravestones — one of two in the cemetery, but only around forty are known to have been found in Maine.