Significance: The Swedenborgian Church of Bath has used this wooden one-and-a-half story Greek Revival temple continuously throughout its history. Survey number: HABS ME-151 Building/structure dates: 1843 In More
Significance: This transitional Federal-Greek Revival residence with a colonnade along the facade and southern side was the home of George F. Patten, prominent Bath shipbuilding and businessman. Survey number More
Significance: This Victorian brick business block has a first story cast-iron front, made at the Bath Iron Foundry. It was built in 1863 for Oliver Moses. Survey number: HABS ME-157 Building/structure dates: More
Significance: This building is a typical commercial brick row block of the early 19th century (c. 1809), originally brick-fronted, and showing a characteristic form of stylistic "up-dating" in its Greek Revival More
Significance: The Church, built 1860, is a characteristic local version of the wood Gothic Revival church ("parish" or "rural") designed by Richard Upjohn and popularized in his Rural Architecture pattern book More
Significance: Arthur Gilman designed this wooden Gothic church in 1846; it has a cathedral-like interior detailed in wood, and stained glass windows. Survey number: HABS ME-148 Building/structure dates: 1 More
Significance: This wood and frame, rectangular, transitional Federal-Greek Revival residence was built for Henry Tallman, a prominent Bath lawyer and public office-holder. It has a balustraded colonnade on two More
Significance: The Library is a notable example of the Victorian Gothic idiom of the 1870s, more especially since an ecclesiastical form is used for a civic structure. The original (1878-79) building in its exte More
Significance: A rare surviving example of a mid-19th century wooden row house, probably built to house workers in the Hallowell Cotton Mill. Survey number: HABS ME-145 Building/structure dates: 1846 Initial More
Significance: This wooden Gothic house was built ca. 1850 for John G. Richardson, Bath ship chandler. Survey number: HABS ME-140 Building/structure dates: ca. 1849- ca. 1850 Initial Construction
Significance: This wooden church, a vernacular interpretation of the Gothic Revival style, is one of the finest examples of American Gothic Revival church architecture surviving in New England today. Survey n More