Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Comparison of Roman (red), Anglo-Saxon (green) and medieval wall (black) circuits, against early 13th-century Worcester street plan. The first defensive walls at Worcester were built after the Roman conquest of Britain in AD 43. Although a settlement existed on the site during the Iron Age, there is no evidence that walls were ever built around ...
The Main and Franklin Streets Historic District is an historic district encompassing most of two city blocks in downtown Worcester, Massachusetts.Roughly bounded by Main, Franklin, Federal, Portland, and Salem Streets, the district includes a well-preserved concentration of commercial buildings constructed during Worcester's economic height in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
St. Vincent Hospital at Worcester Medical Center in the downtown area rounds out Worcester's primary care facilities. Reliant Medical Group, formerly Fallon Clinic, is the largest private multi-specialty group in central Massachusetts with over 30 different specialties. It is affiliated with St. Vincent's Hospital in downtown Worcester.
WORCESTER — Signs establishing the city's new 25 mph statutory speed limit are coming soon to city streets. In addition, two streets that were the site of serious crashes will get traffic safety ...
The Planning Board has approved revised plans to redevelop a former screw factory on Shrewsbury Street. Worcester Planning Board approves revised plan for redevelopment of Shrewsbury Street ...
The Woodland Street Historic District is a historic housing district in the Main South area of Worcester, Massachusetts.It consists of 19 Victorian houses that either face or abut on Woodland Street, between Charlotte and Oberlin Streets. [2]
WORCESTER — Following reports of a resident dying in a collision on Mill Street, City Council Tuesday requested the city pause a controversial redesign of the street.
The Crystal Street Historic District is a group of three triple deckers facing University Park in the Main South area of Worcester, Massachusetts.The houses appear to have been built for developer James Harrop, who lived at 30 Crystal Street and owned them for 35 years.