Maine: Difference between revisions
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Resembling a hunting lodge, builders used timber from Maine forests, and built it in Maine. It was then taken apart in pieces and reconstructed in St. Louis by Maine woodmen without the aid of nails. | Resembling a hunting lodge, builders used timber from Maine forests, and built it in Maine. It was then taken apart in pieces and reconstructed in St. Louis by Maine woodmen without the aid of nails. | ||
The summer resorts of the | The summer resorts of the Maine coast were shown in window transparencies. | ||
An information bureau was situated inside the building. | An information bureau was situated inside the building. |
Revision as of 03:20, 20 March 2023
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Location | Plateau of States |
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Construction | |
Construction Cost | $22,361.40 ($674,403 in 2021) |
Architecture | |
Architect | John Calvin, of Portland |
Dimensions | 140' x 68' |
Maine's state building was a large two-story log cabin, with shaved shingles. It stood in a shady grove that extended from the Pennsylvania building on the Plateau of States westward to the Mining Gulch.
Description
Resembling a hunting lodge, builders used timber from Maine forests, and built it in Maine. It was then taken apart in pieces and reconstructed in St. Louis by Maine woodmen without the aid of nails.
The summer resorts of the Maine coast were shown in window transparencies.
An information bureau was situated inside the building.
On the right of the central hallway on the first floor, a staircase hall, the staircase was constructed of logs and timbers. The building was decorated with moose heads and specimens of the game and fish to be found in Maine. The walls of the building were hung with pictures of various scenes in the State.
After the Fair
After the Fair, it was purchased by a group of hunters from the Ozarks for $2,000 (equivalent to $60,319 in 2021) for the purpose of a sportsman's clubhouse. In 1906 it became Dobyns Hall in the College of the Ozarks. It was destroyed by fire in the late 1930's. In 2004, the Keeter Center at the College of the Ozarks was opened, with a design similar to the original Maine State Building.