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The district encompasses 11 contributing components and three non-contributing components. The centerpiece of the district is the Farmington Friends Meetinghouse, an Orthodox Quaker meetinghouse built in 1876, with a commemorative tablet marking the sites of meetinghouses built in 1796 and 1804, but later demolished. Also in the district is an ...
The district includes some significant buildings in Farmington: [2] Governor Fred M. Warner House, a symmetric, block shaped house with a low hipped roof topped by a cupola, built in 1867. The Masonic Lodge (formerly Township Hall), a two-story building with towers, corbels, arched doorways and a mansard roof in patterned slate, completed in 1876.
The Farmington Historic District encompasses a 275-acre (111 ha) area of the town center of Farmington, Connecticut. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1972. The area roughly corresponds to the section of Route 10 between Route 4 and U.S. Route 6, and includes 115 buildings, primarily residences, built before 1835.
The state’s designation of this district in Farmington recognizes two centuries of historic significance since the first three-quarters of an acre of land were deeded to the Farmington Quaker ...
Notable contributing resources include the Farmington Community Cemetery (1881), Wiseman-Kennen House (1873), Dr. Lester P. and Helen Bahnson Martin House (1936, 1987), Williard Garage (1920s), Francis Marion Johnson Store (1873, 1922), Charles F. and Jane A. Bahnson House (c. 1878), Jarvis-Horne Store (c. 1870, 1910, 1940), Brock Marker (c ...
The first phase of Farmington's long-awaited Piñon Hills ... During a Jan. 30 special meeting, councilors unanimously approved a motion to award a construction contract of nearly $37 million to ...
The district includes Farmington's city offices at 160 S. Main Street, which distributes a self-guided tour of sites in the district. [2] The district may also have been known as the Farmington Sycamore Historic District, or is otherwise associated with that. It runs along Main St. from 200 S.to 600 N., along 600 North St. to Park Ln. and 100 ...
The Gridley-Parson-Staples House is a historic house museum at 1554 Farmington Avenue in Farmington, Connecticut.Probably built about 1760, it is the oldest surviving house in northwestern Farmington, and a fine example of 18th century Georgian architecture.