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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 ...
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
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.
Nobility Hill is roughly defined as a rectangular area bounded on the north and west by Cedar Avenue, on the south by Maple Street, and on the east by Chestnut Street. The area is located a few blocks west of Main Street and Stoneham's Central Square. Maple and Chestnut Streets are both roads laid out early in the 19th century as through streets.
Stoneham's First Congregational Church is set on the east side of Main Street (Massachusetts Route 28), just north of the town common, which is across Church Street. The main sanctuary is a rectangular wood-frame building, with a gable roof and a brick foundation. The front facade, facing west, is flushboarded, while the remaining sides are ...
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Early-20th-century postcard of the Dow Block. Central Square in the heart of Stoneham is a triangular square defined by Main Street (Massachusetts Route 28), which runs north-south, and Central Street, which extends northeast from a junction that also includes Franklin Street.
One of Stoneham's more stylish Gothic Revival buildings, the Stick style wood structure was built in 1869 for a Unitarian congregation that was organized in 1858. [2] The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1984, [ 1 ] and included in the Central Square Historic District in 1990. [ 2 ]