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Maine
Place City
Colonial Pemaquid State Historic Site Bristol Includes unearthed remnants of Fort William Henry and Fort Frederick.
Fort George Castine Built by the British in 1789 and location of the largest American amphibious operation of the war.
Montpelier – The General Henry Knox Museum Thomaston Built in 1794, Montpelier was constructed as the retirement home of Henry and Lucy Knox, and was in use by the family until 1854; it was razed in 1871. The current Montpelier is a recreation built in 1930 and includes some of Knox’s personal effects.
Sayward-Wheeler House York Harbor Well-preserved home of Jonathan Sayward, a merchant and a loyalist, originally built in 1718 and then enlarged.

Washington’s refusal to accept a salary for his services was emblematic of his somewhat ostentatious public virtue. He did open a public expense account, however, and some have claimed that he made money from it by overcharging Congress. In fact, the £150 per month that he requested for expenses was not just for him, but also for his entourage, which sometimes swelled to a crowd. His account books, which still exist, list charges for things like ferry fares, innkeepers’ fees, candlesticks, saddle repair, meat, fruit, mounds of cabbages and beets, and (admittedly) oceans of grog, liquor, and wine. Washington even charged Congress for fifteen shillings Cash paid a beggar by the General’s order. But although he was not averse to placing his headquarters in the occasional mansion, he otherwise made do with precious few luxuries.

Edward G. Lengel
General George Washington: A Military Life (2005)