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This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Plymouth County, Massachusetts. This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Plymouth County, Massachusetts, United States. The locations of National Register properties and districts for which the ...
Location of Essex County in Massachusetts. This list is of that portion of the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) designated in Essex County, Massachusetts.The locations of these properties and districts for which the latitude and longitude coordinates are included below, may be seen in a map.
Carver separated from Plympton, Massachusetts, and was incorporated in 1790 because many residents lived too far away to attend church in Plympton. The town was named for John Carver, the first Governor of the Plymouth Colony. Initially agricultural, Carver was known for the iron ore from its swamp lands used to make cooking tools by the 1730s ...
Realtor.com is a real estate listings website operated by the News Corp subsidiary Move, Inc. and based in Austin, Texas.It is the second most visited real estate listings website in the United States as of 2021, with over 100 million monthly active users.
Denver [4]. 1040 Osage Street; 655 Broadway; Arapahoe Plaza; Barney Ford; Casa Loma; Columbine Homes; Connole Apartments; Dispersed East; Dispersed South; Dispersed West
South Carver is a village in the town of Carver, Plymouth County, Massachusetts, United States. South Carver is the location of the main entrance to the Myles Standish State Forest and of the Edaville Railroad and King Richard's Faire. [1] [2] The cultivation and processing of cranberries is the predominant economic activity in South Carver. [3]
The Massachusetts Office of Coastal Zone Management limits its definition of the South Shore to the municipalities between Boston Harbor and Cape Cod, which includes Atlantic coastal and coastal watershed areas "from the three-mile (5 km) limit of the state territorial sea to 100 feet (30 m) beyond the first major land transportation route encountered (a road, highway, rail line, etc.)". [4]
Carver: Town Plymouth Open town meeting 11,645 39.7 sq mi (102.82 km 2) 37.4 sq mi (96.87 km 2) 1790 Pepperell: Town Middlesex Open town meeting 11,604 23.2 sq mi (60.09 km 2) 22.6 sq mi (58.53 km 2) 1775 Lakeville: Town Plymouth Open town meeting 11,523 36.1 sq mi (93.50 km 2) 29.6 sq mi (76.66 km 2) 1853 Holbrook: Town Norfolk Representative ...