Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The New Bedford Fire Museum is a local history museum at 51 Bedford Street in New Bedford, Massachusetts, United States. It is located in the 1867 Fire Station No. 4, the city's oldest surviving fire station. The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1975. [1]
Whaling City Festival. Date: July 11-14. Exciting rides, mouthwatering food, and endless fun await at the Whaling City Festival.From July 11 to July 14, bring the whole family to experience 15 ...
January 3, 1985 (Steamship Wharf: 10: Fire Station No. 4: Fire Station No. 4: July 24, 1975 (79 S. 6th St. 1867 building was oldest fire station in state when closed; now home of New Bedford Fire Museum
The Howland Mill Village Historic District is a historic district roughly bounded by Bolton, Winsper, Hemlock Sts., and Rockdale Avenue in New Bedford, Massachusetts.It consists of a collection of single-family mill worker housing units constructed in 1888-89 for workers at the nearby Howland Mill, and several double-decker houses built in the 1920s.
Buttonwood Park is a roughly L-shaped public park located west of downtown New Bedford. The northernmost section of the park is wooded, and is separated from the rest of the park by a 7-acre (2.8 ha) pond. The southern edge of the pond is dammed, and a road, part of the park's circulation, passes east–west across the dam.
The fire on the west side of the building at 27 Healey St. was first reported through 911 calls initially followed by a fire alarm activation, according to a post on the department's Facebook page.
A fire that broke out at the Harborview Towers West apartment complex in New Bedford on Oct. 31, 2024, left four adults and one child displaced, according to New Bedford Fire Department. Question ...
The Acushnet Heights Historic District is a predominantly residential historic district in central New Bedford, Massachusetts.It encompasses a densely-built urban area about 20 acres (8.1 ha) in size, which was developed as a working-class area, beginning in the 1860s, for the many workers in the city's factories.