Fort Fairfield - Andover Border Crossing

Fort Fairfield - Andover Border Crossing

The US Border Inspection Station at Fort Fairfield, ME
Location
Country United States; Canada
Location

US Port: 4 Boundary Line Road, Fort Fairfield, ME 04742

Canadian Port: 6 Route 190, Carlingford NB E7H 5H6
Coordinates 46°45′55″N 67°47′22″W / 46.765331°N 67.789389°W / 46.765331; -67.789389
Details
Opened 1873
US Phone (207) 473-7474
Canadian Phone (506) 273-2073
Hours Open 24 Hours
Website
Official US web site
Official Canadian website

The Fort Fairfield - Andover Border Crossing is an international border crossing between the towns of Fort Fairfield, Maine, United States, and Perth-Andover, New Brunswick, Canada, joining Maine State Route 161 (Boundary Line Road) and New Brunswick Route 190 (Fort Road). The United States border station was built in 1933, and was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2014. The Canadian border station was built in 2007, replacing the previous facility that was built in 1954. This crossing was a historical flashpoint during the bloodless Aroostook War of the 1830s, in which the US and Great Britain disputed the border's location. That dispute was ended with the Webster-Ashburton Treaty in 1842.[1]

United States station

The United States border station is located about 100 feet (30 m) west of the international border, on the north side of Boundary Line Road. It consists of a single Colonial Revival brick building, with flanking garage sections (for performing vehicle inspections), and a projecting two-lane porte-cochere. The building is 1-1/2 stories in height, five bays wide, and topped by a gable roof. On either side are banks of four garage bays, some of which have been repurposed as office space and no longer serve their historic function. The main entrance to the building is now through a lobby area in one of the former garage bays on the west side. The interior of the building is divided into sections for customs and immigration processing respectively.[2]

Prior to the construction of this station, customs and immigration formalities took place at offices in the town of Fort Fairfield. With the advent of increased automobile traffic in the 1920s, as well as the need to interdict the movement of contraband liquor due to Prohibition, the federal government realized the need for border stations where immigration formalities and vehicle inspections could be performed close to the border, and consequently planned the construction of a series of such stations. The Fort Fairfield station is a "Type 1" rural station that was probably designed by Louis A. Simon, head of the Office of the Supervising Architect of the United States Treasury Department, and was built in 1933 with funding from the Public Works Administration. It is the only surviving station of this type to retain the original height of its porte-cochere. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2014 for its architecture and historical associations.[2]

Canadian station

The Canadian station includes two buildings.[3] The current station was built in 2007.

See also

References

  1. "Aroostook War". Retrieved 2014-07-26.
  2. 1 2 Paul, Daniel; Starzak, Richard (2011). NRHP nomination for US Border Crossing - Fort Fairfield; available by request from the Maine SHPO
  3. "Andover border crossing". Retrieved 2014-09-01.
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