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Also included Concord's Colonial Inn [5] 5: Dr. John Cuming House: Dr. John Cuming House: November 11, 1977 : West of Concord at Barretts Mill Rd. and Reformatory Circle: At 998 Elm Street 6: Damon Mill: Damon Mill: May 25, 1979
Wright's Tavern is a historic tavern located in the center of Concord, Massachusetts. It is now a National Historic Landmark owned by the Society of the First Parish, Concord, with important associations with the Battle of Lexington and Concord at the start of the American Revolution .
West Concord is located in central Middlesex County at (42.454747, -71.400495), [3] in the southwestern part of the town of Concord The CDP is bordered to the north by Massachusetts Route 2; to the southeast by Dugan Brook, Caterina Heights, and Second Division Brook; to the southwest by the town of Sudbury; and to the west by the town of Acton.
Later, it housed restaurants Blue Mill Tavern, then Grange Hall (which later rebranded as "Blue Mill"), then Commerce, and finally Fifty, which closed in 2018. [ 1 ] The restaurant was founded by restaurateurs and married couple Jody Williams and Rita Sodi, their third collaborative project after Via Carota and Bar Pisellino , and fifth overall.
Concord's Colonial Inn (also known as Colonial Inn) is a historic inn in Concord, Massachusetts. Its original structure, still in use, was built in 1716. [1] [2] It became a hotel in 1889. [3] [4] The inn is included in the National Register of Historic Places as part of the listed Concord Monument Square–Lexington Road Historic District. [5]
Core of house is believed to date from as early 1634, but is now extensively renovated [46] [47] and currently operated as a tavern. [48] No dendrochronology survey. Concord Old Block House: Concord: c. 1637: Located at 57 Lowell Road. Part of the house was purportedly an early block house and moved to the current location from elsewhere in ...
The Parkman Tavern is an historic tavern (now a private residence) at 20 Powder Mill Road in Concord, Massachusetts.It is a 2 + 1 ⁄ 2-story timber-frame structure, built by ship's carpenters with wall frames wider at top of first story than base, five bays wide, with a side-gable roof, large central chimney with multiple ovens, and clapboard siding.
By the time of the Revolution, this area was known as Brooks Hill, and the cluster of houses on it Brooks Village. [3] There are three other Brooks-family houses within a quarter mile — the Job Brooks House, the Noah Brooks Tavern and the Joshua Brooks House. [4] Samuel Brooks inherited the house from his father, also Samuel.