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The Lynn Public Library building is a historic library at Five North Common Street in Lynn, Massachusetts. Although library services were offered in Lynn as early 1815, it was not until a bequest in 1896 that the city began planning a permanent home for the growing collection. After some controversy, library trustees chose a Renaissance Revival ...
Library Web site Town/City County Friends-group link Consortium; Abington Public Library: Abington: Plymouth: OCLN: Acton Memorial Library: Acton: Middlesex: MLN: West Acton Citizens' Library Acton: Middlesex: Russell Memorial Library Acushnet: Bristol: SAILS: Adams Free Library Adams: Berkshire: Agawam Public Library Agawam: Hampden: Alford ...
One of five registered structures in Lynn designed by Holman K. Wheeler: 11: Lynn Bank Block: Lynn Bank Block: August 26, 1982 : 21-29 Exchange St. 12: Lynn Common Historic District: Lynn Common Historic District: April 10, 1992
The estate was established in 1793 by Boston merchant Theodore Lyman on 400 acres (160 ha) of grounds, and was the Lyman family's summer residence for over 150 years. It consisted originally of the mansion and its lawns, gardens, greenhouses, woodlands, a deer park, and a working farm.
WLYN first signed on the air on December 11, 1947, as a daytime-only station.It operated at 500 watts, and the transmitter was located near the Fox Hill Bridge. [3] The opening was covered by the city's two local newspapers, the Lynn Daily Evening Item and the Lynn Telegram-News.
The Central Library is the main branch of the Somerville, Massachusetts, public library system. It is an architecturally distinguished Renaissance Revival brick building designed by Edward Lippincott Tilton and was built in 1914 with funding assistance from philanthropist Andrew Carnegie . [ 2 ]
The Lynn Memorial City Hall and Auditorium is a large Art Deco building that defines the civic heart of Lynn, Massachusetts.The building serves three functions: first, it houses the city's principal offices, including the mayor's office, as well as the chambers of the city council.
The Levi Heywood Memorial Library Building stands amid a cluster of civic and religious buildings in the historic civic center of Gardner, located east of its commercial downtown on the south side of Pearl Street. It is a 1-1/2 story masonry structure, built out of red brick with brownstone and terra cotta trim, and covered by a slate roof.