Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Anthony [1] (previously known as Greenville and The Quaker Village) is a village along Route 117 within the town of Coventry, Rhode Island near the villages of Washington and Quidnick on the southwestern banks of the Pawtuxet River (Flat River). The village comprises "Anthony, Arnold, Boston, Mapledale, Meeting, Taft, Washington and Laurel ...
Anthony Village Historic District. September 20, 2010 Washington St ... Coventry: 9: Hopkins Hollow Village: Hopkins Hollow Village: January 27, 2010
Anthony – Mill village in the eastern part of the town; Arkwright – Mill village founded by James DeWolf, a slave trader; Blackrock – Named after a large dark rock rumored to be the site of Native American marriage ceremonies; Colvintown – Named after original settlers, the Colvin's; Coventry Centre – Village in the geographic center ...
Anthony Village Historic District. September 20, 2010 ... Coventry: 53: Pawtuxet Village Historic District: Pawtuxet Village Historic District. April 24, 1973
Anthony's son and grandson continued the business after his death. By the late nineteenth century the mill closed and a summer colony developed around Lake Tiogue, which has largely altered the village and the only two nineteenth century buildings that remain are the William H. Anthony House located on Holmes Road and the Samuel Tarbox House ...
The General Nathanael Greene Homestead, also known as Spell Hall, is a historic house at 50 Taft Street in Coventry, Rhode Island. [3] It was the home of American Revolutionary War general Nathanael Greene from 1770 to 1776, and was owned afterwards by his brother Jacob Greene and his wife Margaret. The house is owned and operated by the ...
This is The Takeaway from today's Morning Brief, which you can sign up to receive in your inbox every morning along with:. The chart of the day. What we're watching. What we're reading. Economic ...
Blackrock is a village in Kent County, Rhode Island, United States, located in the town of Coventry between the villages of Anthony and Arkwright. The area was named after a large dark rock which was rumored to be the site of Native American marriage ceremonies. The rock is located on Blackrock Road.