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Buildings at 24–30 Summer St. December 5, 1985 : 24–30 Summer St. 8: Downtown Lawrence Historic District: Downtown Lawrence Historic District: November 1, 1979 : Roughly bounded by MA 110, Methuen, Lawrence and Jackson Sts.
The Canal Street–Clark Street Neighborhood Historic District encompasses a compact 19th-century working-class neighborhood of Brattleboro, Vermont. Most of its buildings are modest vernacular wood-frame buildings, erected between 1830 and 1935; there are a few apartment blocks, and one church.
In 1880, the Boston and Lowell Railroad extended the 1848-built Lowell and Lawrence Railroad to a new depot north of the Merrimack River on Canal Street. After the B&M absorbed the B&L in 1887 the depot became redundant, though it saw service until 1918. [5] Passenger service on the Lawrence & Lowell ended in 1926. [8]
The canal was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1975, while the district was first listed in 1984, and then expanded slightly in 2009. [1] The city of Lawrence was founded by industrialist Abbott Lawrence and the associates of the Essex Company as a model industrial
The Downtown Lawrence Historic District is a historic district roughly bounded by MA 110, Methuen, Lawrence and Jackson Streets in Lawrence, Massachusetts.The district encompasses the historic civic and commercial heart of the city, with a series of commercial and civic building built mainly between 1880 and 1920, as well as the Campagnone Common, one of the city's largest public parks.
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Lawrence's Downtown Historic District comprises the commercial core of Lawrence, Kansas. The district comprises areas along Massachusetts Street between 6th Street and South Park Street. Nearly all of the contributing structures are masonry commercial buildings, typically with display windows at street level and smaller windows at upper levels.
Knollwood Mall – St. Louis Park (1980–2014) Mall of America – Bloomington (1992–present) Maplewood Mall – Maplewood (1974–present) Midtown Square Mall – St. Cloud (1982–present) Miller Hill Mall – Duluth (1973–present) Minneapolis City Center – Minneapolis (1983–present) Northtown Mall – Blaine (1972–present)