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It consists of fifteen properties on Hillside and Grand View Avenues, near the downtown area of the city. Most of the houses in the district are Queen Anne Victorians, built in the 1890s; there are a number of Colonial Revival, Tudor, and Shingle style homes, all dating in construction between 1875 and 1895.
Included roadways are in Medford, Stoneham, and Winchester. 20: Middlesex Fells Reservoirs Historic District: Middlesex Fells Reservoirs Historic District: January 18, 1990 : Roughly bounded by Pond St., Woodland Rd., I-93, and MA 28
The 82-acre (33 ha) property is owned by the city of Medford, and managed by a trust established to preserve the property. Its principal feature is the manor house constructed in 1880 by Shepherd Brooks, a member of a prominent Medford family, and is the only major 19th-century estate to survive relatively undeveloped in the city. The grounds ...
Spadafora is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: David Spadafora, American historian; Domenico Spadafora (1450–1521), Italian Roman Catholic priest; Hugo Spadafora (1940–1985), Italian-Panamanian physician and guerrilla fighter; Paul Spadafora (born 1975), American boxer; Ronald Spadafora (1954–2018), American firefighter
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The Salem Street Burying Ground was originally the private cemetery of the Wade family. It was acquired by the town of Medford in May 1717. The earliest stone is dated 1683 and the latest 1881. Records indicate that there are six hundred people buried there, but there are only 485 markers. There are several known reasons for this discrepancy.
Medford is a city 6.7 miles (10.8 km) northwest of downtown Boston on the Mystic River in Middlesex County, Massachusetts, United States. At the time of the 2020 U.S. Census, Medford's population was 59,659. It is home to Tufts University, which has its campus on both sides of the Medford and Somerville border.
A brick house is known to have been standing on this site in 1689, when Jonathan Wade, Jr., died. The house was given Georgian styling in the mid-18th century, and was owned for many years in the 19th century by Samuel C. Lawrence, Medford's first mayor. [2] The house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1975. [1]