Business Directory
Lexington/Highland Historical Society

3 Back Road
Lexington TWP
ME
04961
Visit our Site: Lexington/Highland Historical Society
If you have any questions, please get in contact with us.
Contact Person: James Taylor
Phone: 207-628-2762
Business Days:
- Friday
- Saturday
We are open 11AM to 3PM every Friday and Saturday from Memorial Day to Labor Day.
Visit us on Facebook to see our Annual & Special Events.
The Lexington/Highland Historical Society (LHHS) is located in Lexington Township, Maine at the South junction of Long Falls Dam Road and the Back Road.
The Lexington/Highland Historical Society is dedicated to the preservation of the history and heritage of the settlers who came into this valley and surrounding area. The society collects, preserves, and exhibits artifacts in the fulfillment of its mission. Interpretation of the significance of topography, antiquity, civil, religious, social, literary, and natural history determines the focus of the society. Emphasis is to display artifacts that represent the values, ideals and Yankee ingenuity of those Lexington and Highland families. We seek to educate the public at large and in particular the youth, so that the history of the small rural Maine communities and their struggles and successes in taming the vast wilderness they faced in the early times will be preserved.
Visit us on Facebook to see our Annual & Special Events.
The Lexington/Highland Historical Society (LHHS) is located in Lexington Township, Maine at the South junction of Long Falls Dam Road and the Back Road.
The Lexington/Highland Historical Society is dedicated to the preservation of the history and heritage of the settlers who came into this valley and surrounding area. The society collects, preserves, and exhibits artifacts in the fulfillment of its mission. Interpretation of the significance of topography, antiquity, civil, religious, social, literary, and natural history determines the focus of the society. Emphasis is to display artifacts that represent the values, ideals and Yankee ingenuity of those Lexington and Highland families. We seek to educate the public at large and in particular the youth, so that the history of the small rural Maine communities and their struggles and successes in taming the vast wilderness they faced in the early times will be preserved.
Located in: Fine Arts & Education