PORTLAND, MAINE - History reigns in Maine's largest city.
Often, Portland is just the launching pad for travel adventures along Maine's rugged coast or to the state's beautiful wooded lakes -- a stop along the way to tony destinations like Bar Harbor or eco-wonders such as Acadia National Park.
Even cruise ships that dock at the city's historic port bundle their passengers directly off to the L.L. Bean outlet megastore in nearby Freeport.
But in a state where tourism is a leading industry (Maine is also the No. 1 exporter of blueberries), Portland might just be its best-kept secret, fully worth a visit all its own and fully worth exploring past the curio shops and tourist-oriented restaurants that line the city's waterfront edge along Commercial Street.
Situated on a peninsula that juts into Casco Bay along Maine's southern coast, Portland boasts a historic urban core rich with fascinating architecture.
Though English colonists settled the area by the 1630s, much of the city's historic architecture is from the Victorian era. That's because in 1866, while the city was celebrating the first July 4th after the Civil War, a raging fire broke out and destroyed most of Portland's commercial buildings, many of its churches and countless homes. Remarkably, only two people died during the blaze that left thousands homeless.
One building that did survive the fire was the Portland Observatory. Built in 1807 on Munjoy Hill east of the city center by Capt. Lemuel Moody, the octagonal, 86-foot-high, seven-story tower served as a communication station for Portland's bustling harbor during the heyday of commercial sailing.
With its bird's-eye views of Casco Bay to the east and the White Mountains and Mount Washington to the west, the observatory has been a tourist destination since it opened. Today it makes a great first stop for a historic crawl through Portland. Catching views as you climb the steep wooden tower floor by floor, you'll get a sense of Portland's unusual coastal topography.