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Restoring Maine’s Once-Vibrant Public Buildings

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Restoring Maine’s Once-Vibrant Public Buildings


By Sarah Stebbins
From our March 2024 issue

In 1880, the prospect of a new auditorium in the town of Dover generated much enthusiasm. “We can build a hall to which we shall be pleased to invite friends and strangers, let us be about it!” declared the Piscataquis Observer. Two years later, nearly 800 people attended the grand opening of the 7,200-square-foot mansard-roof Central Hall. In the ensuing decades, it hosted town meetings, dances, plays, graduations, silent movies, roller-skating nights, and basketball games. In 1925, two years after Dover merged with neighboring Foxcroft to form Maine’s only hyphenated town, an indoor shooting range was added. But the second-floor event space, with its handsome wooden stage and balcony, eventually became unusable on account of a leaking roof. In 2008, the town offices on the lower level moved to another building. Central Hall sat empty and residents faced a choice: demolish an aging behemoth that hadn’t hosted a social function in at least a decade or invest in its restoration.

Deferred maintenance, tight municipal budgets, and dwindling participation in churches and fraternal organizations have left once-vibrant community buildings by the wayside in small towns across Maine. Changes in industry, like the shuttering of 19th-century wool and lumber mills in Dover-Foxcroft, have destabilized economies and forced residents to seek work elsewhere, leaving them with less time to invest in their hometowns, says Brad Miller, preservation manager at the nonprofit Maine Preservation. “When we meet with economic-development folks in rural communities and ask, ‘Where do people primarily work?’ it’s usually like an hour away,” he says. “And so there isn’t the ability for everyone to pitch in at the Masonic lodge to sustain that place.”

A community without a communal gathering spot can feel isolating. “In this area, if you want to go out, you go to a bar,” says Bridgton musician Elizabeth Roth, who found herself constantly searching for other venues to perform and hang out in. In 2020, she opened Bear Mountain Music Hall in an 1844 church turned Grange hall in neighboring Waterford. “I saw it as a place to create community and have a conversation without having to scream,” she says. Following the Grange-hall model, she offers diverse events: ballroom-dancing lessons, author talks, and art classes, in addition to concerts by mostly local musicians. She’s currently working on opening a café in the former schoolhouse that was installed beneath the church in the 1870s. “People are happy to see someone bringing the place back to what it used to be,” she says.

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From left: Waterford’s Bear Mountain Music Hall, photo courtesy of Bear Mountain Music Hall; Surry Village School, photographed by James Talala/Alamy

Eclectic programming was also key to the reimagining of the 1872 Surry Village School. In 2016, when resident Gete Thomson learned the town might tear down the vacant Greek Revival and Italianate two-story building where she attended kindergarten, she formed a preservation group to raise the $200,000 needed to restore it and purchase an adjacent lot, where they plan to put in a park. The schoolhouse reopened in 2020 with a sandwich board out front announcing concerts, art shows, bake sales, and bean suppers. After presenting her budget to the town, Thomson says, “I thought, what in the hell have I done? That’s a lot of brownies, yard sales, and begging. But the people wanted it, they have ownership of it, and they appreciate that it’s been saved.”

In Dover-Foxcroft, a group of residents raised nearly $1,800,000 (via donations and capital-funding grants) to gut Central Hall and rebuild it as a modern auditorium that resembles the old one, with the original stage, balcony, and staircases. Reopened in 2019, the building hosts more than 1,000 classes and events per year, from tai chi and contra dancing to art exhibits, concerts, proms, and weddings. “In a small town, initiatives like this have to come from volunteers who are looking ahead,” says Chris Maas, a director at the Dover-Foxcroft Historical Society who spearheaded the Central Hall renovation. “Then, you get the support of the community and you end up with something very different than just saving an old building.”

From our special “Welcome to Small Town, Maine” feature, highlighting some of the challenges and charms of small-town life and people who are passionate about their tight-knit communities. Find a few “Welcome to Small Town, Maine” stories here on the website, and pick up a copy of our March 2024 issue to read them all!

Down East Magazine, March 2024 cover

Get all of our latest stories delivered straight to your mailbox every month. Subscribe to Down East magazine.





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Maine

Maine man pleads guilty in deaths of twin boys in Albion

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Maine man pleads guilty in deaths of twin boys in Albion


AUGUSTA, Maine (WGME) — A Maine man will spend 15-years-old behind bars for hitting and killing two young twin boys and critically injuring their mother in Albion.

According to Kennebec Journal, 44-year-old Benjamin Lancaster of Albion pleaded guilty on Wednesday to two counts of manslaughter, aggravated assault, aggravated criminal operating under the influence, and leaving the scene of an accident involving serious bodily injury or death.

As part of a plea agreement, Lancaster was sentenced to 25 years in prison with all but 15 years suspended, and four years of probation, according to the Kennebec Journal. This means he’ll serve 15 years in prison before being released on probation. If he violates any condition of his probation, he could serve the full 25-year sentence.

Twin brothers, Bradley and Noah, and their mother were hit by an impaired driver in Albion. (Martha Collins)

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Police said Lancaster was driving on Hussey Road in Albion on July 11, 2025, when he hit 2 1/2-year-old twin brothers, Bradley and Noah Bordeaux, and their mother, Mollie Egold. He then left the scene.

Egold was reportedly walking to a store, pushing her twin sons in a stroller, when police said she was hit from behind by the suspect’s vehicle.

Bradley died at the scene. His twin brother, Noah, was airlifted to Maine Medical Center in Portland where he died a few days later from his injuries.

Egold was critically injured but survived. She suffered a broken back among other injuries.

“He took away our babies. He took away our life, our family,” the twins’ grandmother, Martha Collins, told CBS13 in July 2025. “That man should be charged with murder, not manslaughter. This is murder. He murdered my babies.”

After his arrest, Lancaster tried to blame the deadly crash on his then-girlfriend. According to police affidavits, he told police she was driving. But his brother reportedly told authorities Lancaster admitted to him that he’d hit someone.

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Police said security cameras also showed Lancaster behind the wheel with no damage to the car’s front end three miles before the crash. According to police, another camera then showed Lancaster on Main Street in Albion with damage to the front of his car.

According to Kennebec Journal, Lancaster’s blood tested positive for THC methamphetamine, Clotiazepam, an anti-anxiety drug, and methadone.

The Kennebec Journal reports Lancaster agreed to the plea deal to take responsibility for his actions and to spare the family from having to sit through a trial.

This tragedy is sadly not the first for Egold and her family. In 2017, Egold’s oldest son drowned when he and his mother’s canoe got caught in a strong current and went over a waterfall.

His grandmother said 5-year-old William had a life vest on but got caught in debris under the water. His mom freed him, but he died hours later at the hospital.

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Proposed changes to Maine cannabis laws won’t appear on November ballot

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Proposed changes to Maine cannabis laws won’t appear on November ballot


Mainers will not weigh in on whether to cease recreational cannabis sales in Maine — at least not this November.

Organizers of the petition drive, which seeks to close the recreational cannabis market in Maine and strengthen state oversight of the medical marijuana market, did not submit their petition signatures by Monday’s deadline, the secretary of state’s office confirmed Wednesday.

At least 67,682 signatures, or 10% of the votes cast for governor in 2022, would have had to be submitted by Feb. 2 to put the cannabis question on the November ballot.

That does not necessarily mean the effort is dead, but it does mean it will not go to voters this year. Madison Carey, one of the organizers of the petition drive, did not answer a phone call Wednesday evening and their voicemail inbox was full.

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Organizers were seeking to repeal parts of the Maine Cannabis Legalization Act that allows for commercial cultivation, sale, purchase and manufacturing of recreational cannabis and cannabis products. The 15-page proposal, pushed by the political committee Mainers for a Safe and Healthy Future, would end all recreational sales and home-growing operations beginning Jan. 1, 2028. It would also add tracking and testing standards for medicinal cannabis previously opposed by caregivers.

Legalized by voters in 2016, Maine’s recreational marijuana market has grown from $82 million in 2021, the first full year of sales, to $244 million in 2024, the most profitable year yet. Preliminary sales figures put 2025 on pace to reach about $248 million, but final figures have not yet been released, according to data from the state Office of Cannabis Policy.

The petition effort was subject to criticism after some people accused signature collectors of misrepresenting the initiative. One person who spoke with the Press Herald last month said the petition was represented to them as an effort to ensure cannabis was free of toxic chemicals. They only learned it was to end recreational cannabis sales in Maine after they had signed.

At the time, Secretary of State Shenna Bellows said there was nothing her office could do if signature gatherers misrepresented a ballot initiative.

“You have a right to lie under the First Amendment,” she said. “I do not have authority to take any enforcement action over the truth of what is being said.”

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Funding for the effort came from an out-of-state source. Smart Approach to Marijuana Action Inc., a dark money group from Virginia, was the only donor listed on organizers’ campaign finance reports last month, contributing $2 million.



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Snow showers on tap for Maine on Wednesday before a blast of arctic air, more snow chances

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Snow showers on tap for Maine on Wednesday before a blast of arctic air, more snow chances


PORTLAND (WGME) — Scattered snow showers return to the forecast on Wednesday ahead of a major cool-down coming up this weekend.

Wednesday planner.{ }(WGME)

A weak system is set to swing through the area on Wednesday bringing clouds and some scattered snow showers.

High temperatures on Wednesday will run in the upper 20s and low 30s.

Scattered snow showers.{ }(WGME)

Scattered snow showers.{ }(WGME)

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Scattered snow showers will be in the area around late morning through the early afternoon.

Not everyone will receive a snow shower. There will be little to no accumulation, however.

Weekend planner.{ }(WGME)

Weekend planner.{ }(WGME)

By Thursday, we will turn brighter with highs sinking to the 20s.

A weak clipper will approach from our west late on Friday bringing more clouds to the area.

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Snow chances this weekend.{ }(WGME)

Snow chances this weekend.{ }(WGME)

A round of snow is expected at this time late Friday night through Saturday morning.

There is a possibility of an inverted trough to set up then, which will be difficult to forecast where it will set up.

Cold weekend ahead.{ }(WGME)

Cold weekend ahead.{ }(WGME)

The bigger weather story this weekend will be a blast of cold, arctic air Saturday afternoon into all day Sunday.

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Very cold wind chills late Saturday through Sunday.{ }(WGME)

Very cold wind chills late Saturday through Sunday.{ }(WGME)

Wind chills into the negative 20s and possible close to -30 degrees, specifically late Saturday into the day on Sunday.

Windy Saturday and Sunday.{ }(WGME)

Windy Saturday and Sunday.{ }(WGME)

There will be a gusty northwesterly wind up to 30 MPH as of midweek.

Next 8 to 14 days in the Northeast will experience above-normal temperatures according to NOAA's Climate Prediction Center.{ }(WGME)

Next 8 to 14 days in the Northeast will experience above-normal temperatures according to NOAA’s Climate Prediction Center.{ }(WGME)

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On a more positive note, an above-normal temperature trend could possibly take over the Northeast for February 11 – 17. Stay tuned.

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