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The Old Village Historic District is predominantly residential historic district encompassing the old village center of Chatham, Massachusetts.The Old Village occupies the southeast corner of the town where it is framed by Main Street and Holway Street (north), Bridge Street and Bearse's Lane (south), Chatham Harbor (east) and Mill Pond and Little Mill Pond (west).
The South Chatham Village is a largely linear area extending along Main Street (Massachusetts Route 28) between the Harwich line to the west, and Cockle Cove Road to the east. The area contains an architecturally diverse collection of residential, civic, and commercial buildings dating from the 18th to 20th centuries.
Chatham is home to the Chatham Lighthouse, which was established by President Thomas Jefferson in 1808 to protect the ships circling the Cape. The 1808 towers were replaced in 1841 by twin brick towers that were eventually lost to erosion. They were rebuilt in 1877 out of cast iron, across the street from their original location.
The man found his wife's black Honda in the driveway of her boyfriend's house at 1624 Main St. in Chatham but got no response when he knocked on the door or called her cell phone.
17 High Street [82] James Moulton House Wenham c. 1658 [51] 123 Cherry St [83] Caleb Moody House West Newbury: c. 1658 [51] 803 Main Street [84] Dillingham House: Brewster: c. 1659 [51] Cpl. John Andrews–Richard Dummer House/The White Horse Inn House Ipswich c. 1659 [51] 34 High Street [85] Philip Call House Ipswich c. 1659 [51] 26 High ...
The Chatham library has its origins in a small library in South Chatham in 1875, and a library and reading room in Chatham village in 1887. Marcellus Eldredge, a Chatham native who made a fortune as a brewer in Portsmouth, New Hampshire , offered the town a new library building, which was constructed in 1896 at a cost of $30,000.
[2] The ballpark features a large adjacent playground, and draws from the bustling foot traffic of nearby Main Street shops. The grassy right field hillside seats fans on blankets and beach chairs, and is topped by the quaint backdrop of the town's fire house and the former rail station that is now the Chatham Railroad Museum. The infield is ...
The Atwood Museum in Chatham, Massachusetts is a property of the Chatham Historical Society which, in 1926, purchased the property of Captain Joseph Atwood (1720–1794) to protect the property and to display and preserve articles and documents related to Chatham's history.