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Orient – Fosterville Border Crossing

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Country
  
United States; Canada

Opened
  
1930

Orient – Fosterville Border Crossing httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Location
  
US Port: 632 Boundary Road, Orient, ME 04741 Canadian Port: 4575 Route 122, Fosterville NB E6H 2B6

Phone
  
US: (207) 448-2427 Canada: (506) 894-2281

US Hours
  
All times Eastern December 1-May 14: 7AM-5PM May 15-November 30: 7AM-11PM

Canadian Hours
  
All times Atlantic May 15-November 30: 8AM-1200AM December 1-May 14: 9AM-5PM Sun-Fri 8AM-12AM Sat Commercial traffic year-round: 9AM-5PM

The Orient – Fosterville Border Crossing is an international border crossing between the towns of Orient, Maine, United States and Fosterville, New Brunswick, Canada on the Canada–US border. At this crossing, the United States is still operating the original border station built in 1936, which was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2014. Canada built its current border station in 1986. This part of the border is at the St. Croix River, which is little more than a stream here. The original bridge connecting Orient with Fosterville was said to be the shortest international bridge between the US and Canada.

Contents

Canadian facilities

The Canadian government built a border station here in about 1930. The current station was built in 1986.

United States facilities

The United States facility is located on the north side of Boundary Road. The main building is a 1-1/2 story brick-faced Colonial Revival structure, with a side-gable roof and a projecting one-lane hip-roofed porte-cochere. The porte-cochere is supported by Classical Revival squared columns, with matching pilasters at the building front. Stylistically similar wood-frame single-story wings extend the building to either side; that on the left houses restrooms, that on the right offices. The interior of the main building is symmetrically organized, with customs on one side and immigration on the other. A small garage, dating to the same period as the main building, stands to the northwest.

Prior to the construction of this station, customs and immigration formalities would have taken place in the nearest town. 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. This building, built in 1937, is the least-altered of Maine's surviving early border stations. It was built to a standard "Type 1" plan, one of three built on the Canada–US border, and is the only one of those still in use in Maine. Others of this style are still in operation in other states, including Morses Line, VT and Alburg Springs, VT.

References

Orient – Fosterville Border Crossing Wikipedia