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The Jabez Bacon House stands near the southern end of Woodbury's main village, on the north side of Hollow Road between Sycamore and Main Streets. It is a 2 + 3 ⁄ 4-story wood-frame structure, with a dormered gambrel roof, central chimney, and clapboarded exterior.
The following are approximate tallies of current listings by county. These counts are based on entries in the National Register Information Database as of April 24, 2008 [2] and new weekly listings posted since then on the National Register of Historic Places web site. [3]
Woodbury Historic District No. 2: February 23, 1972 : Both sides of Main St. from Woodbury–Southbury town line to Middle Quarter Rd. Woodbury: 175: World War I Memorial: World War I Memorial: February 17, 1984
Gilman-Hayden House; Glass House; Glebe House (Woodbury, Connecticut) Glover House (Newtown, Connecticut) John Glover House; Godillot Place; Solomon Goffe House; Timothy Goodman House; Landis Gores House; Gothic Cottage (Suffield, Connecticut) Gould House (Norfolk, Connecticut) Gov. Smith Homestead; Grace Church Rectory; Graham House (Stamford ...
Hurd House: Woodbury: CT 1681 Residential The older, north section, dates to around 1680 and was the home of John Hurd, who became the town's miller in 1681. The south section, which may have originally been the home of Hurd's son, was added to the older structure in 1718, to increase the overall size of the house. Deacon John Graves House ...
The Woodbury Historic District No. 1 encompasses the linear town center of Woodbury, Connecticut.Extending along two miles of Main Street (United States Route 6), from Flanders Road in the north to Old Sherman Hill Road in the south, the district represents an architectural cross section of the town history, from the late 17th century to the present.
The Woodbury Historic District No. 2 encompasses a linear rural-residential area of southern Woodbury, Connecticut. It extends along the town's Main Street (United States Route 6), from the town line with Southbury in the south to the South Pomperaug Avenue junction in the north. It contains some of the town's finest examples of 18th and early ...
The Colonial property includes two contributing buildings, the second being termed the "Slave House". Joshua Hempsted House: New London: 1678 One of the earliest documented houses in Connecticut, now a museum. [10] Parker House: Old Saybrook: 1679 Early gambrel roof. The house remained in the Parker family until the 1960s. NRHP John Hollister ...