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February 23, 1984 (3376, 3384, 3387, 3391, 3397-3399, and 3404 Post Rd. Warwick: 2: John Waterman Arnold House: John Waterman Arnold House: September 10, 1971
Although the Warwick settlement on Warwick Cove is 60 years older, the early homes there no longer stand. [ citation needed ] By the 1830s the Greenes supported the efforts of the Kinnecom family, American Indian residents living by the beach, to open Buttonwoods Beach as a clambake and beach destination for the public.
The Knight Estate is a historic estate in Warwick, Rhode Island, that is home to the Knight Campus of the Community College of Rhode Island.Developed as a country estate for a family of industrialists and later donated to the state, the main house and its outbuildings were listed on the United States National Register of Historic Places in 1984.
Aldrich Mansion is a late 19th-century property owned by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Providence since 1939. It is located by the scenic Narragansett Bay at 836 Warwick Neck Avenue in Warwick, Rhode Island, south of Providence, Rhode Island. Originally called Indian Oaks, and once the Senator Nelson W. Aldrich Estate.
Cowesett is bounded on the north by Rhode Island Route 117, on the south by East Greenwich, Rhode Island, on the east by U.S. 1 (Post Road), and on the west by Crompton / Rhode Island Route 2. To the east is the neighborhood of Chepiwanoxet and Greenwich Bay, an arm of Narragansett Bay.
Oldest house in Providence until its demolition in 1900; Arthur Fenner House Cranston c. 1655: 1886 Arthur Fenner House (c. 1655) in Cranston, demolished 1886; John Smith House Warwick Before 1663 1779 Built by Colonial president John Smith; Razed in 1779 [18] Epenetus Olney House North Providence c. 17th century: by 1900