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  2. Philip N. Carney - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philip_N._Carney

    Carney was born on June 6, 1919, in Lynn, Massachusetts. He attended Saint Mary's Boys High School, Bentley School of Accounting and Finance, Boston University School of Business Administration. Prior to entering politics, Carney worked in real estate. [1]

  3. Eastern Massachusetts Street Railway - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eastern_Massachusetts...

    [3] [4]: 225 When the northern section of the Tremont Street Subway opened in 1898, Lynn and Boston cars were routed into the subway via the Canal Street Incline, looping at Scollay Square station. [5] [6] This continued for 37 years under the Boston and Northern Street Railway, the Bay State Street Railway, and finally the Eastern Mass. [6]

  4. List of Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority yards

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Massachusetts_Bay...

    Fellsway Garage Salem Street, Medford: Local bus routes Lynn Garage Western Avenue, Lynn: Local bus routes; North Shore express routes: North Cambridge Carhouse: Massachusetts Avenue, North Cambridge: Formerly storage and maintenance for Harvard-based trolleybus routes; being converted for battery buses Quincy Garage Hancock Street, Quincy ...

  5. National Register of Historic Places listings in Lynn ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Register_of...

    One of five registered structures in Lynn designed by Holman K. Wheeler. 6: Fabens Building: Fabens Building: February 25, 1982 : 312-314 Union St. One of four registered buildings in Lynn designed by Henry Warren Rogers [6] 7: G.A.R. Hall and Museum

  6. Lynn station - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lynn_station

    The Bay State Street Railway took over operations in 1911 and joined the Eastern Massachusetts Street Railway in 1919. Trolley service in Lynn lasted until 1938. [8] The Boston and Maine Railroad built a new, more modern station in 1952 but reused the 1914-built platforms.

  7. Lynn Item Building - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lynn_Item_Building

    The Lynn Item Building is a historic commercial building at 38-54 Exchange Street in downtown Lynn, Massachusetts. It was built in 1900-1901 to a design by local architect Henry Warren Rogers. [2] It was home to The Daily Item, the city's leading newspaper, until 2014, and is the city's only surviving 19th-century purpose-built newspaper building.

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  9. Ralph S. Bauer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ralph_S._Bauer

    He later served as circulation manager of the Chicago Herald and Post and from 1893 to 1898 he was the business manager of the St. Louis Star. In 1894 he married Fannie Miller in Chicago. [4] In 1898, Bauer returned to Massachusetts. He purchased a stationer's store in Lynn that also sold newspapers and periodicals.