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Cities Near Bangor, ME

$146,000 View on Map
MWP1765
2015 Ohio St
Bangor, ME (in city)
3 Bed, 1+ Bath Home
1150 sq.ft.

Perfect for Owner Occupy!

$162,500 View on Map
GWM6081 4 Photos
271 Ohio St
Bangor, ME (in city)
5 Bed, 2 Bath Duplex
Perfect for Owner Occupy! Immaculate 2-Unit duplex with 3-BR, 1-BA upstairs and 2-BR 1-BA …more»
$199,000 View on Map
TCM3312
57 Benjamins Way
Bangor, ME (in city)
3 Bed, 3 Bath Home
2128 sq.ft.
$249,000 View on Map
JJD0974
14 Virginia Ln
Bangor, ME (in city)
3 Bed, 2+ Bath Home
$289,000 View on Map
WPD3899
144 Hudson Rd
Bangor, ME (in city)
4 Bed, 3 Bath Home
3400 sq.ft.

Priced To Sell

$299,900 View on Map
TMJ5090 23 Photos
16 Elliott Cir
Glenburn, ME (in city)
4 Bed, 2+ Bath Home
3815 sq.ft.
This Contemporary four bedroom Colonial on a private 1.78 acre lot in the Riverbend subdivision of …more»
$319,500 View on Map
WPJ3165
31 Jillian Way
Glenburn, ME (in city)
3 Bed, 2 Bath Home
3200 sq.ft.
$320,000 View on Map
TAJ2154
8 Riverbend Dr
Glenburn, ME (in city)
4 Bed, 4 Bath Home
3000 sq.ft.
$375,000 View on Map
TPT4322 13 Photos
Ohio St
Bangor, ME (in city)
4 Bed, 2+ Bath Home
2600 sq.ft.
LOCATION! LOCATION! LOCATION! 6.2 acres in the heart of downtown Bangor with total Privacy. Feel …more»
$115,900 View on Map
WPD7918
115 Fowlers Landing Rd
Hampden, ME (8.0 miles)
2 Bed, 1 Bath Home
1900 sq.ft.
 

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Local city information for Bangor, ME

Bangor is a city in and the county seat of Penobscot County, Maine, United States, and the major commercial and cultural center for eastern and northern Maine. It is also the principal city of the Bangor, Maine Metropolitan Statistical Area which encompasses Bangor and all of Penobscot County. Bangor is pronounced "Bang-Gore" and not "Bang-Ger" as is comonly done by people from out of state.

As of 2008, Bangor is the third-largest city in Maine, as it has been for more than a century. The population of the city was 31,473 at the 2000 census. The population of the Bangor Metropolitan Statistical Area is over 148,000. The population of the five-county area (Penobscot, Piscataquis, Hancock, Aroostook, and Washington) for which Bangor is the largest market town, distribution center, transportation hub, and media center, is over 325,000 people.

Bangor is approximately 30 miles from Penobscot Bay up the Penobscot River at its confluence with the Kenduskeag Stream. It is connected by bridge to the neighboring city of Brewer. Other suburban towns include Orono (home of the University of Maine campus), Hampden, Hermon, Old Town, Glenburn, and Veazie.


Bangor is located at (44.803, -68.770). According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 34.7 square miles (90.0 km²), of which, 34.5 square miles (89.2 km²) of it is land and 0.3 square miles (0.8 km²) of it (0.86%) is water.

Geography has been both the city's prosperity, and a limiting factor in its growth. The Penobscot River watershed above Bangor is both extensive and heavily forested, yet was too far north to attract American settlers intent on farming. These same conditions made it ideal for lumbering, along with deep winter snows which allowed logs to be easily dragged from the woods by horse-teams. Carried to the Penobscot or its tributaries, logs could be floated downstream with the spring thaw to sawmills on waterfalls (water-power driving the sawblades) just above Bangor. The sawn lumber was then shipped from the city's docks, Bangor being at the head-of-tide (between the rapids and the ocean) to points anywhere in the world needing wood. The combination of forests and sheltered coves along the nearby Maine coast also fostered the development of a ship-building industry to service the lumber trade.

Bangor had certain disadvantages compared to other East Coast ports, including its rival Portland, Maine. Being on a northern river, its port froze during the winter, and could not take the largest ocean-going ships. The comparative lack of settlement in the forested hinterland also gave it a comparatively small home market.

Many of the same conditions that favored lumbering, however, were attractive to the pulp and paper industry, which took over the Penobscot watershed in the twentieth century. One large difference was transportation: the paper was shipped out, and the chemicals in, by railroad. The city began turning its back on the river as its train-yards became more important. The coming of the paper industry assured, however, that the Maine woods would remain unsettled for another century.

Bangor's other geographic advantage, not realizable until the mid-twentieth century, was that it lay along the most direct air-route between the U.S. East Coast and Europe (the Great Circle Route). The construction of an air-field in the 1930s, and its continual expansion under military auspices through the 1960s, allowed the city to eventually take full advantage of this geographic gift. Having the Canadian border close-by also helped. Bangor was the last American airport before Europe, or the first American airport one encountered flying from Europe. The extension of air routes connecting Europe with the U.S. West Coast and the Caribbean in the 1970s-80s put Bangor very much in the middle as a refueling stop for charter aircraft. The subsequent development of longer-range jets began to reduce this advantage in the 1990s.

A potential advantage that has always eluded the city is its location between the Canadian port city of Halifax and the rest of Canada (as well as New York). As early as the 1870s the city promoted a Halifax to New York railroad, via Bangor, as the quickest connection between North America and Europe (when combined with steamship service between Britain and Halifax). A European and North American Railway was actually opened through Bangor, with President Ulysses S. Grant officiating at the inauguration, but commerce never lived up to the potential. More recently attempts to capture traffic between Halifax and Montreal by constructing an East-West Highway through Maine have also come to naught. Most overland traffic between the two parts of Canada continues to go over Maine rather than through it.

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