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Cole's Hill was later deeded to Samuel Fuller (c. 1580–1633), a church deacon and the colony's physician. It afterward became the property of James Cole, who arrived in 1633 and kept a tavern on the hill in the 1640s. It is from him that the hill's name derives: "Cole's Hill" first appears in town records in 1698.
Location of Worcester County in Massachusetts. This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) designated in Worcester County, Massachusetts.The locations of NRHP properties and districts for which the latitude and longitude coordinates are included below, may be seen in a map.
Roughly bounded by Highland Ave., Walnut Mill St., Otis St., and Lowell Ave.; also roughly Highland and Lowell Aves., Otis St., and Birch Hill Rd., and Walnut St. from Newtonville to Washington 42°20′44″N 71°12′28″W / 42.345556°N 71.207778°W / 42.345556; -71.207778 ( Newtonville Historic
Green Hill Site: Green Hill Site: September 25, 1980 : near the Neponset River: Canton: A sizable prehistoric site encompassing Middle and Late Archaic remains. Part of the Blue Hills and Neponset River Reservations Multiple Resource Area (MRA). 51: Emery Grover Building: Emery Grover Building: August 20, 1987 : 1330 Highland Ave.
The Dudley Hill area, where the town center is located, had a longer history as a Nipmuc settlement, and some of its land was granted for the erection of the first church in 1734. After American independence, the town center grew, with the Black Tavern (c. 1803) serving travelers, and Nichols Academy (founded 1815) located there. [2]
At that time, the Hilltop served nearly 2.4 million customers annually, three times the volume of the nation's second-largest restaurant, Tavern on the Green in Manhattan. That year they exceeded $27 million gross. [7]
The tavern site is located within the Cape Cod National Seashore, and is accessible via the Great Island Trail. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] The site was excavated in 1969–70, recovering thousands of artifacts, including clay pipes, drinking artifacts, a harpoon, and a chopping block fashioned from whale vertebrae.
Today, the Warren Tavern is a staple for local Charlestown residents as well as a popular location for tourists who want to understand American Colonial history and culture. It is located at the intersection of Pleasant Street and Main Street in Charlestown Massachusetts across the Charles River from downtown Boston.