Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Roughly, area surrounding Main and Park Streets, Lee, Massachusetts Coordinates 42°18′18″N 73°14′57″W / 42.30489°N 73.24903°W / 42.30489; -73
Monument Square and environs, at the eastern end of Main St.; also roughly bounded by Holden, Center, and Union Sts., East Middle School, Summer, and Main Sts. 42°41′57″N 73°06′37″W / 42.6992°N 73.1103°W / 42.6992; -73.1103 ( Monument Square–Eagle Street Historic
Lee station is located in the village center of Lee, on the west side of Railroad Street at its junction with Elm Street, one block west of Main Street (U.S. Route 20). It is set parallel to railroad tracks running north-south to its west, which roughly parallel the Housatonic River further west. The station is a single-story wood frame ...
Lee occupies land that was originally territory of Mahican Indians. The first non-native settlement in the area was known as Dodgetown as early as 1760. Dodgetown was named after its founding settler, Asahel Dodge, who immigrated to the area from Cape Cod. Lee was incorporated in 1777 from parts of Great Barrington and Washington.
Get the Lee, MA local weather forecast by the hour and the ... Main Menu. News. News. Entertainment. Lighter Side ... Meta posts sharply higher Q4 profit, revenue, topping Wall Street's ...
The Lee CDP is located in the center of the town of Lee at (42.306929, -73.247351 U.S. Route 20 passes through the CDP as Main Street and Housatonic Street, leading north to Lenox and Pittsfield and south to Interstate 90 (the Massachusetts Turnpike), which forms the southern edge of the CDP and accesses it via Turnpike Exit 2.
The South Lee Historic District encompasses the historic portion of the village of South Lee in Lee, Massachusetts.Extending mainly along Massachusetts Route 102 (Pleasant Street) between Fairview Street and the Stockbridge town line, the village is a well-preserved 19th-century mill village, with fine Federal and Greek Revival buildings and a later 19th-century paper mill.
The house has an L-shaped layout, with the front entrance on the front of the main block, and a porch in the crook of the L. The house's corners are decorated with pilasters, as is the front door entry, which is topped by an entablature and lintel shelf. [2] The house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on March 13, 1987. [1]