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Woburn Public Library, previously known as the Winn Memorial Library (1876–79) is a National Historic Landmark in Woburn, Massachusetts. Designed by architect H. H. Richardson, the Romanesque Revival building was a bequest of the Winn family. [3] It houses the Woburn Public Library, an institution that was established in 1856. [4]
The Woburn Sentinel newspaper began in 1839; In 1840 the first membership library opened; The telegraph started operating in Woburn in 1867 "America's oldest active gun club," the Massachusetts Rifle Association, was founded in 1875 and moved to Woburn in 1876. The public library opened in 1879
The Minuteman Library Network (MLN), [1] founded in 1984, is a consortium of 41 public and academic libraries in the MetroWest and Middlesex County areas of eastern Massachusetts, US that share resources, patrons and services.
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A new study reveals how your mood is linked to the time of day, day of week, and season.
Anderson Regional Transportation Center (RTC) (noted on MBTA schedules and maps as Anderson/Woburn, and on Amtrak schedules and maps as Woburn–Anderson) is a train and bus station located at 100 Atlantic Avenue, off Commerce Way, in Woburn, Massachusetts, a suburb of Boston.
A Check List of American Eighteenth Century Newspapers in the Library of Congress. U.S. Government Printing Office; O. M. Dickerson (1951). "British Control of American Newspapers on the Eve of the Revolution". The New England Quarterly. 24 (4): 453– 468. doi:10.2307/361338. JSTOR 361338. Charles E. Clark (1991).