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The United Theater, commonly known as The United, is a historic center for performing arts and a cinema on High Street in Westerly, Rhode Island, originally opened on January 18, 1926. The United Theatre serves as a cultural hub for the community, hosting films, live performances, and special events, maintaining its role as a central ...
The Westerly Downtown Historic District is a historic district encompassing most of the commercial and civic district of Westerly, Rhode Island, United States.It extends from Broad and Union Streets eastward along High Street, and north along Canal Street to Railroad Avenue, where it extends to include the historic railroad station.
Railroad Ave., west of downtown Westerly 41°22′55″N 71°49′40″W / 41.381944°N 71.827778°W / 41.381944; -71.827778 ( Westerly Westerly
July 24, 1972 (124 Granite St. Westerly: 6: David S. Baker Estate: David S. Baker Estate: August 4, 2011 (51 & 67 Prospect Ave. North Kingstown: 7: Baptist Church in Exeter
High Watch (formerly named Holiday House but locally known as the Harkness House) is an 11,000-square-foot (1,000 m 2) home in Watch Hill, a historic district in Westerly, Rhode Island, United States.
Westerly has a set budget of $102 million for the Westerly Police Department in the 2024–2025 fiscal budget. [59] Westerly, RI has a general crime rate of 10 per 1000 residents, with most crime happening in Downtown Westerly, and along the coast. [60]
The Main Street Historic District of Westerly, Rhode Island, encompasses a predominantly residential section of Main Street and adjoining Maple Avenue and School Street.. The district includes nineteen houses, which are predominantly Greek Revival, Italianate, and Second Empire in style, as well as the Pawcatuck Seventh Day Baptist Church, a Greek Revival structure built 1847
When his second wife, Anna Maxson Babcock, died in 1812, the property was passed to Dudley Babcock. Dudley, having lost some ships in the war of 1812 and unable to pay some debts, sold the house to his distant cousin, Oliver Wells, in 1817. Mr. Wells used it as a prosperous tenant farm, however the house was allowed to fall into disrepair." [3]