Princes Point Road
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Princes Point Road is a prominent street in
Yarmouth, Maine Yarmouth is a town in Cumberland County, Maine, United States, twelve miles north of the state's largest city, Portland. When originally settled in 1636, as North Yarmouth, it was part of Massachusetts, and remained as such for 213 years. In 1849, ...
, United States. It runs for about from Lafayette Street ( State Route 88) in the north to Sunset Point Road in the south. It was one of the first streets laid out in the town''Ancient North Yarmouth and Yarmouth, Maine 1636-1936: A History'', William Hutchinson Rowe (1937) when it was centered around the Meetinghouse under the Ledge in the 18th century. Gilman Road, another of the early roads in the area, intersects Princes Point Road near its northern end. In the late 19th century, trolleycars of the short-lived Portland and Yarmouth Electric Railway passed Princes Point Road en route to Yarmouth's village center after the town's population had moved away from the Broad Cove area. Yarmouth's
West Side Trail The West Side Trail is a multi-use trail in Yarmouth, Maine. A Town of Yarmouth project conceived in 1988 and opened in 2014, the trailhead for the eastern portion of the trail is in the parking lot of Tyler Technologies, on Tyler Drive, on the ea ...
crosses Princes Point Road between Gilman Road and Morton Road. The road is named for the Paul Prince (1720–1809), who served for Massachusetts in the
American Revolutionary War The American Revolutionary War (April 19, 1775 – September 3, 1783), also known as the Revolutionary War or American War of Independence, was a major war of the American Revolution. Widely considered as the war that secured the independence of t ...
.


Notable buildings and structures

Established in 1923, the Westcustogo Inn stands at the northern end of Princes Point Road, facing the traffic triangle at its intersection with Lafayette Street and the southern end of Pleasant Street. The inn was in business, albeit not continuously, for 83 years.Yarmouth Historical Society newsletter, summer 2021
– Yarmouth Historical Society
68 Princes Point Road, located just north of Whitcombs Way, is the former schoolhouse of District Number 2. It was converted to a home around 1940.Architectural Survey Yarmouth, ME (Phase One, September, 2018
- Yarmouth's town website)
The 1831-built home at 420 Princes Point Road, a short distance north of the Morton Road intersection, is the former residence of Captain Nicholas Drinkwater, Sr. Captain Sumner Drinkwater (1859–1942) was born in this house. Mrs. Snell lived at the southeastern corner of the Old Town Landing Road and Morton Road intersection, where Princes Point Road turns southwest. (Morton Road is named for Harry Newbert Morton, who built the first house on the street."Evelyn Yates Obituary - Yarmouth, ME , Portland Press Herald/Maine Sunday Telegram"
- ''Portland Press Herald'', March 29, 2017
A lobsterman, Morton moved to Yarmouth in 1929 and remained there until his death at the age of 89.) In the early 1880s, Princes Point began to develop as a summer colony. For several years it had become a favorite camping spot for the villagers and the inhabitants of the inland parts of the town who came here for clam bakes and picnics. The town road ended at the John Allen Drinkwater barn, and here a large gate opened into the pasture which included the two points now known as
Princes Point Princes Point is a promontory in Yarmouth, Maine, United States. It is located around south of Yarmouth Village and looks out into inner Casco Bay. Princes Point Road leads to the point, which is named for shipwright Benjamin Prince, while Prince ...
and Sunset Point. Captain Rotheus Drinkwater also had a home a stone's throw away. Captain John Cleaves fenced off a spot on his farm, at today's number 581, for the same purpose. Another sea captain, Joseph Gray (1734–1792), lived at today's 581 Princes Point Road, which dates to the 18th century The first cottage was built in 1884. It was later known as Battery Point Cottage. Others soon built nearby, including Dr. Herbert A. Merrill, Leone R. Cook's (a cottage named "Rest Awhile"), George H. Jefferds, Thomas and Nellie Johnston and Wilfred W. Dunn. The first to take up a lot on the western promontory now known as Sunset Point was Samuel O. Carruthers. In 1894 a wharf was built, and the steamer ''Madeleine'' made two trips daily from Portland, stopping off at the Cumberland and Falmouth Foresides. The short-lived electric railroad running the same route forced the discontinuation of the service. In 1899, a four-storey hotel of about thirty rooms, named Gem of the Bay, was built on Princes Point by Cornelius Harris. It was destroyed by fire in October 1900 after two seasons in business.''Yarmouth Revisited'', Amy Aldredge


References

{{Streets of Yarmouth, Maine Streets in Yarmouth, Maine