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Cities Near Belfast, ME

$349,000 View on Map
DGP6878
84 Woods Rd
Belfast, ME (in city)
3 Bed, 3 Bath Home
3081 sq.ft.
$449,000 View on Map
WWD9125 7 Photos
70 Church St
Belfast, ME (in city)
4 Bed, 2 Bath Home
2992 sq.ft.
$185,000 View on Map
MTM0109
17 Mortland Rd
Searsport, ME (5.2 miles)
3 Bed, 2 Bath Home
2400 sq.ft.
$399,000 View on Map
MBD5022 3 Photos
243 Shore Rd
Northport, ME (5.7 miles)
3 Bed, 1 Bath Home
Charming Victorian style home with gingerbread trim.  Stunning panoramic views of Penobscot …more»
$365,000 View on Map
JJJ0276
93 Youngtown Rd
Lincolnville, ME (10.5 miles)
3 Bed, 2 Bath Home
2200 sq.ft.
$695,000 View on Map
AJW2810
6 Old Stage Lane
Searsport, ME (14.3 miles)
3 Bed, 3 Bath Home
4500 sq.ft.
 

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Local city information for Belfast, ME

Belfast is a city in Waldo County, Maine, in the United States. As of the 2000 census, the city population was 6,381. Located at the mouth of the Passagassawakeag River on Penobscot Bay, Belfast is the county seat of Waldo County. The seaport has a wealth of antique architecture in several historic districts, and remains popular with tourists.


The area was once territory of the Penobscot tribe of Abenaki Indians, which each summer visited the seashore to hunt for fish, shellfish and seafowl. In 1630, it became part of the Muscongus Patent, which granted rights for English trading posts with the Indians, especially for the lucrative fur trade. About 1720, General Samuel Waldo of Boston bought the Muscongus Patent, which had evolved into outright ownership of the land, and was thereafter known as the Waldo Patent.

Waldo died in 1759, and his heirs would sell the plantation of Passagassawakeag (named after its river) to 35 Scots-Irish proprietors from Londonderry, New Hampshire. Renamed Belfast after Belfast, Northern Ireland, it was first settled in 1770, and incorporated as a town in 1773. The village was mostly abandoned during the Revolution while British forces occupied Bagaduce (now Castine). The British military burned Belfast in 1779, then held it for 5 days in September 1814 during the War of 1812.

Following the war, the seaport rebuilt and thrived. It was a port of entry, and designated county seat of Waldo County in 1827, although land would be set off in 1845 to form part of Searsport. Belfast was incorporated in 1853 as a city, the 8th in Maine. It developed into a shipbuilding center, producing hundreds of three, four and five masted schooners. Materials for wooden boat construction were shipped down the Penobscot River from Bangor, the lumber capital of North America during the later 1800s.

Shipbuilders became wealthy, and built the Federal, Greek Revival and Italianate mansions and civic architecture for which the city is noted, including the 1818 First Church by master-builder Samuel French, and the 1857 Custom House and Post Office by noted architect Ammi B. Young. Wooden ship construction would fade about 1900, but with the advent of refrigeration, the local economy shifted to harvesting seafood, including lobsters, scallops, sardines, herrings and mackerel for the Boston and New York markets.

A county wide connection to the main line of the Maine Central Railroad at Burnham 33-miles inland from Belfast was established by the largely city-owned Belfast and Moosehead Lake Railroad with its opening in 1871. For the first 55 years the line was operated under lease by the MEC as its Belfast Branch but its operation reverted to the B&ML on January 1, 1926, when the lease was terminated by the larger road. Regular passenger service ended in 1960, and all operations in Belfast of any kind ceased in 2005, when the main yard was torn up.

Shoe manufacture became an important business. After World War II, however, the Belfast economy was driven by its poultry industry, including 2 of the state's larger processors, Maplewood and Penobscot Poultry. Waldo County farms supplied the factories with up to 200,000 birds a day. The annual Broiler Festival became a popular summer event, attracting both local people and tourists. But the poultry business collapsed in the mid-1970s during a national recession, devastating the city and surrounding towns. In the early 1980s, the defunct chicken-feed silos that once fed millions of chickens at the foot of Main Street were demolished. There was an exodus of people seeking employment prospects elsewhere through the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s. But as they left, artists and young college graduates moved in.

In the early 1990s, credit-card giant MBNA established a large facility in Belfast. The company was instrumental in establishing the Hutchinson Center of the University of Maine, an outpost of the University of Maine System, less than a mile from the main MBNA campus. Jobs provided by MBNA, which was recently acquired by the Bank of America, helped increase Belfast's population significantly. Movies filmed in Belfast include Peyton Place (1957), Thinner (1996) and In the Bedroom (2001).


Image:Memorial Hall in Belfast, ME.jpg|City Hall in 1914
Image:A Bit of Belfast Scenery, Belfast, ME.jpg|General View in c. 1905
Image:Unitarian Church, Belfast, ME.jpg|First Church in 1909
Image:Old Tavern, Belfast, ME.jpg|Old Tavern in c. 1910


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