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The following properties located in Quincy, Massachusetts are listed on the National Register of Historic Places. This National Park Service list is complete through NPS recent listings posted December 20, 2024.
Quincy (/ ˈ k w ɪ n z i / KWIN-zee) is a city in Norfolk County, Massachusetts, United States.It is the largest city in the county. Quincy is part of the Greater Boston area as one of Boston's immediate southern suburbs.
Quincy City Hall is the seat of government for the City of Quincy, Massachusetts.The historic town hall building at 1305 Hancock Street in Quincy Center was built in 1844. It is a somewhat monumental example of Greek Revival architecture, featuring a temple front with two-story Ionic pilasters and a triangular pediment.
Adams Street, Copeland Street, Furnace Brook Parkway, Quarry Street and Willard Street are major thoroughfares in West Quincy. Interstate 93 runs south-north through the neighborhood along Willard Street and the former route of the Granite Railway, with Exit 8 at Furnace Brook Parkway and Exit 9 at Bryant Avenue allowing direct access to West Quincy. [1]
Museums in Quincy, Massachusetts (1 C, 9 P) Pages in category "Buildings and structures in Quincy, Massachusetts" The following 53 pages are in this category, out of 53 total.
North Quincy is a neighborhood of Quincy, Massachusetts. It is separated from the city of Boston by the Neponset River, and borders the Quincy neighborhoods of Squantum, Montclair and Wollaston. It contains the smaller neighborhoods of Atlantic (sometimes used as a metonym for North Quincy) and Norfolk Downs, as well as much of Wollaston Beach.
Quincy bought 1455 and 1459 Hancock St. in July 2022, the former for $2.9 million and the latter for $3.9 million, Walker said. Their combined assessed value is just over $3 million, according to ...
The Munroe Building is a historic commercial building at 1227-1259 Hancock Street in Quincy, Massachusetts.Built in 1929 to a design by Shepard & Stearns, it is the best-preserved of two adjacent Colonial Revival two-story commercial blocks built on Hancock Street in the 1920s.