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The Warren Fox Building is a historic commercial building in Lowell, Massachusetts.The four-story brick building was built in 1884 by Warren Fox, and is a good example of commercial Queen Anne architecture.
Listed at 57 Rolfe Street, now on the campus of University of Massachusetts Lowell. 2: Andover Street Historic District: Andover Street Historic District: June 2, 2000 : 245–834 Andover St., 569, 579 E. Merrimack St. 3
The Howe Building is a historic commercial building at 208 Middlesex Street in downtown Lowell, Massachusetts. The four story brick building was built in 1883, and is one of the city's finest Queen Anne commercial buildings. Its architecturally prominent features include a mansard roof (unusual for the style and period), and a large central ...
Eliot School on Favor Street, Hood's Laboratory (Thorndike Street) - Originally built to produce 'Hood's Sarsaparilla', [4] the former Lowell Jail (Thorndike Street) later housing Keith Academy Catholic High School, [5] St. John's Church (Gorham Street), St. Peter's Church and Rectory (Gorham Street) and, the Middlesex County Courthouse (Gorham ...
The Owl Diner, formerly known as the Monarch Diner is a historic diner at 246 Appleton Street in Lowell, Massachusetts. The diner was built by Worcester Lunch Car Company as #749 in 1940, and was originally located in Waltham, Massachusetts, where it operated as the Monarch Diner. In 1951 the diner was moved to its present location in Lowell.
The City Hall Historic District is a historic district in Lowell, Massachusetts, United States, bound roughly by Broadway, Colburn, and Kirk streets. The centerpiece of the district is the Richardsonian Romanesque City Hall, built in 1893 to a design by Merrill & Cutler , with its 180-foot (55 m) clock tower.
The section of Wilder Street between Westford Street and Branch Road contains a remarkable collection of large late 19th-century houses. About one dozen wealthy businessmen built elaborate houses in Queen Anne, Italianate, Stick, and Second Empire styles in this area, which was developed by its landowner, Charles Wilder, and it was considered ...
The Belvidere Hill Historic District encompasses a residential area on the east side of Lowell, Massachusetts known for its fine 19th-century houses. The area, roughly bounded by Wyman, Belmont, Fairview, and Nesmith Streets, was developed beginning in the 1850s, and was one of the finest neighborhoods in the city, home to many of its business and civic leaders.