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The Piety Corner Historic District encompasses one of the oldest settled areas of Waltham, Massachusetts.It is centered on a major road intersection, the junction of Totten Pond Road with Lexington and Bacon Streets, and includes the city's largest single concentration of well-preserved 19th and early 20th-century houses.
Eastbound in Belmont. In Medford it passes the West Medford commuter rail station before intersecting Route 38 at Winthrop Square. From there Route 60 heads into downtown Medford, splitting at Main Street (just north of the Mystic Valley Parkway and Route 16) before rejoining at Medford City Hall to pass under Interstate 93 at Exit 32.
December 22, 1977 (144 Moody St. 10: Boston Manufacturing Company Housing: Boston Manufacturing Company Housing: September 28, 1989 (380–410 River St.
St. Charles Borromeo Church is a former parish of the Catholic Church in Waltham, Massachusetts.It is noted for its historic church building, completed in 1922.A high quality example of Italian Renaissance Revival architecture, it is emblematic of the shift on Waltham's south side from a predominantly Protestant population to one of greater diversity.
Central Square is adjacent to the Waltham commuter rail station and is served by six MBTA bus lines: 70 Cedarwood, Market Place Drive, or Central Square, Waltham - University Park; 70A North Waltham - University Park via Watertown Square and Central Square, Cambridge; 505 Central Square, Waltham - Downtown express via Massachusetts Turnpike
This is a list of properties and historic districts listed on the National Register of Historic Places in Norfolk County, Massachusetts, other than those within the city of Quincy and the towns of Brookline and Milton. Norfolk County contains more than 300 listings, of which the more than 100 not in the above three communities are listed below.
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Waltham, 1793 Map of Waltham, 1877. The name of the city is pronounced with the primary stress on the first syllable and a full vowel in the second syllable, / ˈ w ɔː l θ æ m / WAWL-tham, though the name of the Waltham watch was pronounced with a reduced schwa in the second syllable: / ˈ w ɔː l θ əm /. [48]