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The Bradford Common Historic District is a historic district encompassing the former town center of Bradford, now a village of Haverhill, Massachusetts.Centered on the former town common at South Main and Salem Streets, the area served as Bradford's civic and commercial center from about 1750 until its annexation by Haverhill in 1897, and retains architecture from the 18th to early 20th centuries.
Haverhill: 20: Bradford Common Historic District: Bradford Common Historic District: September 14, 1977 : S. Main St. Haverhill: 21: Breakheart Reservation Parkways-Metropolitan Park System of Greater Boston
Bradford is just south of Haverhill on the other side of the Merrimack River. In 1850, the eastern part of Bradford separated to become the Town of Groveland. At the time Haverhill was incorporated as a city in 1870, there were calls for Bradford to be annexed. In 1896, a vote in both Bradford and Haverhill approved the annexation.
The Main Street Historic District in Haverhill, Massachusetts represents the civic core of Haverhill and a gateway to the city's Highlands neighborhood and lakes district. . Overlooking a mid-20th century urban renewal clearance area northeast of the main business and industrial district of the city, it was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2
May 4—HAVERHILL — The site of the former Arthur Sharp True Value hardware store on Middlesex Street in Bradford is targeted for an 18-unit, seven-story apartment building overlooking the rail ...
Schools in Haverhill, Massachusetts (7 P) Pages in category "Buildings and structures in Haverhill, Massachusetts" The following 21 pages are in this category, out of 21 total.
A postcard of the former Bradford station building, which is still extant. The Boston and Portland Railroad opened to Bradford (at the time, a separate town), across the Merrimack River from Haverhill, on October 26, 1837. [2]: 5 It was the terminus of the line until the January 1, 1840 extension across the river and into New Hampshire.
The Downeaster began service, with a stop at the newly renovated Haverhill station, on December 14, 2001. [1] Haverhill station was temporarily closed for MBTA service on July 15, 2024, for replacement of the South Elm Street bridge in Bradford. Bradford station will be the outer terminal of the line until Haverhill station reopens in mid-2025.