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Maine Acadian CultureAssorted items--including a pony bank and historic boxes--sit on a table.
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Maine Acadian Culture
Bangor & Aroostook Railroad Turntable
Bangor & Aroostook Railroad Turntable

Bangor & Aroostook Railroad Turntable

Mid-may through September: No regular hours; call for appointment (207-389-3495).

Bangor and Aroostook Railroad Turntable
Saint Francis Historical Society
1074 Main Street
St. Francis, Maine 04774

At one time St. Francis was the end of the line for the Bangor and Aroostook Railroad. The first trains ran on wood, then coal and finally diesel. The turntable at St. Francis was built in 1904 to turn the locomotives around for return trips as their controls were not configured for extended periods of running in reverse.  The turntable was used into the 1980s.

The local trains went to two different branches, the St. Francis branch and the Fort Kent branch, which also went to Madawaska and Eagle Lake. In 1936 the 45-minute trip between St. Francis and Fort Kent cost 35 cents! During World War II troops provided the major business for the railroads. 

Train service to St. Francis stopped in 1990. Transporting goods by truck was faster. In 2001 private funds were donated to restore the turntable and landscape the St. Francis Historical Society grounds.

 

B&A Railroad Turntable

Potato Barn in New Canada, Maine  

Did You Know?
The log blockhouse in Fort Kent, Maine, was built for the "Bloodless" Aroostook War that included a brief period of armed conflict followed by several years of diplomatic disputes and negotiation between Great Britain and the United States. Today the fort is a state-owned national historic landmark.

Last Updated: August 01, 2008 at 15:05 EST