Back Cove, Portland, Maine

Coordinates: 43°40′19″N 70°16′01″W / 43.672°N 70.267°W / 43.672; -70.267

Back Cove (top) as seen in NASA astronaut photograph.

Back Cove is an estuary basin on the northern side of the City of Portland, Maine's downtown district. It is nearly circular and about one mile in diameter. A popular loop trail runs around the circumference of the cove.[1] Being tidal, Back Cove dries out to mud flats at low tide and is not commercially navigable. It is sometimes incorrectly referred to as Back Bay.

A distance marker on the western side of Baxter Boulevard.

Baxter Boulevard

Baxter Boulevard is a road and parkway that wraps around the west side of Back Cove. The roadway served as the means to head north from downtown Portland before Tukey's Bridge, now on I-295, was built. The road was part of US Route 1 until May 2007.

The parkway and roadway began as an initiative of Mayor James Phinney Baxter, for whom it is named. It was envisioned as one of four parks in the city (along with Deering Oaks, Western Promenade and Eastern Promenade) which would encircle the city. The parkway was designed by the noted landscape design firm Olmsted, Olmsted and Eliot in 1895.[2] Property owners donated the land next to the cove and the walking and biking path were filled in. Originally called the Back Cove Boulevard, the parkway opened in 1917. It covers 30 acres (12 ha) and the pathway is 2.25 miles (3.62 km) in length.[3]

Tree planting began on the Boulevard in 1921 as a memorial to World War I victims.[4]

Baxter Boulevard was listed on the National Register of Historic Places as a historic landscape district in October 1989.[5]

A 3.6 miles (5.8 km) recreation path encircles Back Cove. An offshoot in the stretch that runs parallel to I-295 leads to East End Beach.

Panorama of the cove

References

  1. "Back Cove Trail". Portland Trails. Archived from the original on 2009-05-31. Retrieved 2009-04-24.
  2. "NRHP nomination for Back Cove" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved 2015-10-29.
  3. Portland City Guide Page 291
  4. Bold Vision, the Development of the Parks of Portland, Maine reprinted by Greater Portland Landmarks
  5. National Park Service (2010-07-09). "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service.
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