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The Freegrace Marble Farm Historic District encompasses a historic farmstead in Sutton, Massachusetts.Although most of its buildings date to the 19th century, the farm has retained the form of a typical 18th-century farm, including a substantial portion of the land granted in 1717 to Freegrace Marble, one of Sutton's earliest colonial settlers. [2]
Sutton, officially the Town of Sutton, is a town in Worcester County, Massachusetts, United States. The population was 9,357 in the 2020 United States Census . [ 1 ] Located in the Blackstone Valley , the town was designated as a Preserve America community in 2004.
The Sutton Center Historic District is a historic district encompassing the center of the village of Sutton, Massachusetts.The district, which covers 435 acres (176 ha), is centered on the junction of Boston Road, Singletary Avenue, and Uxbridge Road.
The Manchaug Village Historic District is a historic district encompassing the 19th century industrial village center of Manchaug in Sutton, Massachusetts. Developed in the 1820s around textile mills on the Mumford River, it was the largest industrial area in Sutton, with at least three mill complexes in operation. The district is centered on ...
The West Sutton Historic District encompasses the rural southwestern section of Sutton, Massachusetts, United States, including the rural village of West Sutton, which stretches along Central Turnpike from Manchaug Road to the Oxford town line. Most of its 460 acres (190 ha) are taken up by farmsteads and the associated agricultural lands.
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Sutton, Massachusetts; 0–9. 1967 LPGA Championship; 1968 LPGA Championship; 1970 LPGA Championship; 1971 LPGA Championship; 1972 LPGA Championship; 1973 LPGA ...
It was originally known as the Second or North Parish of Sutton. Because traveling from one part of the town to the other for meetings was time-consuming, inhabitants of the North Parish petitioned the Massachusetts General Court to split Sutton. North Parish became Millbury on June 11, 1813, by way of an act of incorporation. [2]