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The Town of North Providence is bordered by Providence to the south, Johnston to the west, Smithfield and Lincoln to the north and Pawtucket to the east. Within the town, there are multiple neighborhoods and villages, such as Allendale , Centredale , Fruit Hill , Greystone , Louisquisset , Lymansville , Marieville , Woodville and Geneva .
The Greystone Historic District is a historic district encompassing the early 20th-century mill village of Greystone in North Providence, Rhode Island.The district most significant elements is the Greystone Mill, a complex of brick industrial buildings on the North Providence side of the Woonasquatucket River, as well as the dam spanning the river and a water tank in Johnston.
January 2, 2008 (1-16 Beckside Rd., 1-29 Greystone Ave., 1-24 Oakleigh Ave., 1-40 Langsberries Ave., 2-20 Larchmount Ave N, 1-16 S... North Providence and Johnston: Mill complex and associated village and housing area
The Greystone Mill Historic District encompasses an early 20th-century textile mill complex on Greystone Avenue in Johnston and North Providence, Rhode Island. The complex consists of three brick buildings on the North Providence side of the Woonasquatucket River, a dam spanning the river, and a water tank near the dam in Johnston. The main ...
Location of Providence in Providence County, Rhode Island. This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Providence, Rhode Island. This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Providence, Rhode Island, United States. Latitude and longitude ...
Additions, 1880-1947. Allendale Mill is a historic mill at 494 Woonasquatucket Avenue in North Providence, Rhode Island, on the banks of the Woonasquatucket River.. The oldest buildings in the mill complex were built in 1822 by John Holden Greene for Zachariah Allen.
By the 1680 Colonial census – less than 50 years after Rhode Island first became a colony – there were 175 Native and Black enslaved people living in Rhode Island, according to research done ...
It was greatly enlarged in 1762 by Daniel Jenckes, a judge from a prominent Rhode Island family, for his son, and was for many years in the hands of Jenckes' descendants. The house is the only known surviving stone-ender in North Providence. [2] The house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1978. [1]