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The Central Square Historic District is a historic district encompassing much of the central business district of Stoneham, Massachusetts.It includes the town's largest concentration of 19th and early-20th century commercial architecture, in an area that developed in importance as a commercial center after the construction of the Andover-Medford Turnpike (now Main Street, designated ...
Stoneham (/ ˈ s t oʊ n ə m / STO-nəm) is a town in Middlesex County, Massachusetts, United States, nine miles (14.5 km) north of downtown Boston. Its population was 23,244 at the 2020 census. [1] Its proximity to major highways and public transportation offers convenient access to Boston and the North Shore coastal region and beaches of ...
Roughly bounded by Pond St., Woodland Rd., Interstate 93, and Massachusetts Route 28 42°27′18″N 71°05′43″W / 42.455°N 71.095278°W / 42.455; -71.095278 ( Middlesex Fells Reservoirs Historic
The Nobility Hill Historic District is a residential historic district roughly bounded by Chestnut and Maple Streets and Cedar Avenue in Stoneham, Massachusetts.The district includes a number of high quality houses representing a cross section of fashionable housing built between 1860 and 1920.
Stoneham's Oddfellows Building stands prominently facing the town's main square, at the northeast corner of the square with Franklin Street. It is a 2 + 1 ⁄ 2-story wood-frame building, with a dormered mansard roof providing a full third floor. Its square-facing facade originally had two storefronts, now combined into one, with entrances at ...
The Thomas W. Jones House is a historic house at 34 Warren Street in Stoneham, Massachusetts. It is Stoneham's best preserved Second Empire house, preserving significant external details, and its carriage house. The two-story wood-frame house has a T shape, and features a bracketed porch and cornice, gable screens, paneled pilasters, and oriel ...
Home to several generations of the Green family throughout the 18th and 19th centuries, its most notable resident was Capt. Jonathan Green, a prominent citizen of Stoneham, who served as town clerk and treasurer, and represented the town at a Constitutional Convention [6] to consider a constitution reported in the summer of 1787 by the Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia.
The Samuel Chamberlain House is a historic house at 3 Winthrop Street in Stoneham, Massachusetts. Built c. 1864, it is one of three well preserved Italianate side-hall style houses in Stoneham. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1984. [1]