Estcourt Station, Maine
Estcourt Station is a village within the Big Twenty Township in the state of Maine. It is the northernmost point in the United States east of the Great Lakes. The ZIP Code for Estcourt Station is 04741. Although part of Maine, the village uses Quebec, Canada area code 418.
Overview
Estcourt Station is located on the Canada–United States border between Maine and Quebec, at the southern end of Lake Pohenegamook in the North Maine Woods region. It derives its name from the adjacent village of Estcourt, Quebec, which is part of the larger municipality of Pohénégamook. The Estcourt Station–Pohénégamook Border Crossing is staffed during the work week, usually for processing logging trucks that access Maine's North Woods to haul timber to Quebec saw mills.The populated part of Estcourt Station is essentially a sliver of the village of Estcourt that was cut off when the international boundary was properly surveyed through the area. It consists of a row of several houses along Rue de la Frontière, a street on the Quebec side of the border, some of which were built before the survey and which the border now passes through.
Although the US census reports that four people live in the village, according to a Canada Border Services Agency agent, no one lives in Estcourt Station full-time as of 2016. A few U.S. residents live in the village during the summer. They must follow the hours of the border control stations; thus, after 5 p.m. on Friday, they cannot leave until 8 a.m. Monday. Anyone wishing to travel between Pohénégamook and Estcourt Station legally after hours would have to travel on hundreds of miles of private logging roads through the North Maine Woods that are difficult to navigate during spring and summer rains, and almost inaccessible because of snow during the winter; there are no towns or paved roads in the North Maine Woods. Likewise, Estcourt Station is connected to Hydro-Québec for electricity. The community receives drinking water and other municipal services from Pohénégamook.
Canadian National Railway's transcontinental main line between Halifax and Montreal passes immediately north of Rue de la Frontière.
Michel Jalbert incident
In October 2002, a Pohénégamook resident named Michel Jalbert was arrested by two U.S. Border Patrol officers from the Canadian border after he had driven across to Estcourt Station to buy fuel for his truck. After he spent more than a month in a US federal prison, he was released and allowed to return to Canada on a $5,000 bond.U.S. agents said Jalbert had driven past a closed U.S. Customs Service post and not declared he was entering the United States. In March 2003, Jalbert pled guilty in a US federal court to a charge that he crossed the US–Canadian border illegally; his sentence was a plea deal that was 35 days' time already served in jail, two years of supervised release and no fines. The US Secretary of State at the time, Colin Powell, called the incident "unfortunate" during a visit to Canada.