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Crofut Block, 253–255 Main Street. This brick 1876 building with wooden pedimented window hoods, corner quoins and pressed tin ceiling in the store interior at 255 is an excellent example of the high commercial application of the Italianate style. Danbury News Building, 288 Main Street. This 1873 building had a distinctive Queen Anne tower ...
Throughout the history of the Danbury station, the station has had many different depots. The first depot was opened in 1852 and served as the headquarters for the D&N. The Danbury station would have three different depots over the course of its history from 1852 to today. [5] The 1903-built union station was an important part of Danbury's ...
Roman Catholic churches in Danbury, Connecticut (5 P) Pages in category "Buildings and structures in Danbury, Connecticut" The following 25 pages are in this category, out of 25 total.
The Danbury Railway Museum (reporting mark DRMX) [2] is a railway museum housed in the former Union Station on the east end of downtown Danbury, Connecticut, United States.It was established in the mid-1990s following the closure of the station by the Metro-North Railroad in favor of a new station nearby, and primarily focuses on the history of railroading in southern New England and ...
Meeker's Hardware (also known as The Red Block) is located at White Street and Patriot Drive in downtown Danbury, Connecticut, United States, near the city's train station and the Danbury Railway Museum, just outside the city's Main Street Historic District. It was built in 1883, opened in 1885 and remained in the Meeker family until 2013.
The station opened in 1881 to coincide with the expansion of the NY&NE line west to the Hudson River. [1] Mill Plain station had a long, low-level side platform that connected it to an adjoining freight depot, [2] which was also built in 1881. [1] The line became a part of the Central New England Railway in 1918. [1]
Great Plain Union Chapel was constructed in 1890. The highly ornamented Victorian Vernacular style building cost $1,100 to build. [6] For a time, it was the centerpiece of the neighborhood but eventually began deteriorating. It has been noted as in need of repair dating back to 1961, when there was an effort to restore the building. [7]
The Joseph W. Pepin Memorial Building [3] formally known as Alternative Center for Excellence (ACE) and the Alternative Center for Education, is located in the former Locust Avenue School at 26 Locust Avenue in Danbury, Connecticut, United States. It is an alternative high school within Danbury Public Schools, meant for at-risk students.