Maine Tea Rooms
From Mystic Tea Room
Revision as of 09:19, 4 December 2020 by Catherine Yronwode (Talk | contribs)
Maine State Tea Room Gallery, in alphabetical order by name of city or town.
Contents |
Dry Mills
Eustis
![](/w/images/thumb/e/e8/Cathedral-Pines-Tea-Room-Eustis-ME-RPPC-postcard-front.jpg/600px-Cathedral-Pines-Tea-Room-Eustis-ME-RPPC-postcard-front.jpg)
Cathedral Pines Tea Room, Eustis, Maine, exterior, RPPC postcard front. This extremely rustic tea room, with its amateur signage and lovingly-tended front flower garden, takes its name from the Cathedral Pines wilderness area. Note the twin lightning rods mounted on the roof and the old Bell Telephone Long Distance Service sign mounted on a pine tree.
Kennebunkport
![](/w/images/9/9b/Old-Grist-Mill-Tearoom-Kennebunkport-ME.jpg)
The Old Grist Mill Tea Room, Kennebunkport, Maine, exterior, postcard front. Here is a prime example of the New England (and British Commonwealth) inclination to repurpose old buildings as cunning tea rooms. There are many tea rooms in old barns and granaries, and quite a few, like this one, inside old grist mills ... which is why it is called The Old Grist Mill Tea Room.
Winthrop
catherine yronwode
curator, historian, and docent
The Mystic Tea Room