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April 13, 1984 (36 Pine St. 4: John Bottume House: John Bottume House: April 13, 1984 (4 Woodland Rd. 5: C.H. Brown Cottage: C.H. Brown Cottage: April 13, 1984
The George Cowdrey House is a historic house at 42 High Street in Stoneham, Massachusetts. It was built about 1865 for George Cowdrey, a local shoe manufacturer and state legislator, and is one of the town's finest examples of residential Second Empire architecture. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1984. [1]
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Most of the houses on Berkeley Street were built between 1852 and 1872, for people prominent in business, culture, and politics. [2] Berkeley Place, a dead end street projecting southerly from Berkeley Street, was laid out in 1890; it was originally a back lane to the Longfellow House, which was Worcester's home in the 1840s. Most of its houses ...
The Elisha Knight (formerly erroneously Wright) Homestead is a historic house at 170 Franklin Street in Stoneham, Massachusetts.Built c. 1750, it is the only property of that period in Stoneham that retains a rural setting.
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 windows. The house was built for Thomas W. Jones, who built the last major shoe factory in ...
The Enoch Fuller House is an historic octagon house located at 72 Pine Street in Stoneham, Massachusetts. The two story wood-frame house was built c. 1850 for Enoch Fuller, a friend of P. T. Barnum, and is topped by a low pitch roof with a central cupola. There is a single story porch that wraps around the entire building.
The House at 6 S. Marble Street in Stoneham, Massachusetts, is a rare early 19th century worker's house, and the only significant survivor of the early quarrying industry in Stoneham. It is a wood-frame house, two stories high, five bays wide and one room deep, with a side gable roof and a granite foundation.