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The Washington Street Historic District encompasses a fashionable 19th-century residential area near downtown Peabody, Massachusetts. It extends along Washington, Holten, and Sewall Streets, and is where business and civic leaders of the community built their homes. The district was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1985. [1]
Cited source estimates date of late 17th or early 18th century Nathaniel Felton Sr. House: Peabody [c] 1700 [109] Date estimate by Peabody Historical Society, owner Capt. John Thorndike House: Beverly 1702 With addition dating to late First Period [110] [failed verification] Old Powder House: Somerville: 1704 Oldest stone building in Massachusetts
The Southwick House is located west of downtown Peabody, on the north side of Lowell Street just west of its junction with Southwick Road. It is a 2 + 1 ⁄ 2-story wood-frame structure, with a gambrel roof, central chimney, and clapboarded exterior. Its main facade is five bays wide but slightly asymmetrical, with a center entrance framed by ...
John P. Peabody House at 15 Summer Street – built in 1867; Salem Old Town Hall 1816–17, Federal Style building. Quaker Meeting House; West Cogswell House is a historic set of row houses located at 5–9 Summer Street and built in 1834; William Pike House, 19th Century; Witch House – c. 1642 – home of Witch Trials Judge Jonathan Corwin
The Peabody Civic Center Historic District encompasses a well-preserved portion of the historic center of Peabody, Massachusetts.Extending along Chestnut and Franklin Streets south of Peabody City Hall, the district includes a small residential area built in the mid-19th century, as well as the city hall and St. JOhn the Baptist Roman Catholic Church, two monumental structures defining the ...
Image credits: Spiritual-Isopods Old House Dreams has been running since 2009 and has amassed over 200 million page views, shared over 24,000 properties, and encouraged many individuals to turn ...
The John Proctor House is a historic First Period house in Peabody, Massachusetts, United States. According to local tradition, this wood-frame house was occupied by John Proctor , who was convicted and hanged for witchcraft during the Salem witch trials of 1692.
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