Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
House at 170 Otis Street: House at 170 Otis Street: September 4, 1986 : 170 Otis St. West Newton: 77: House at 173–175 Ward Street: House at 173–175 Ward Street: September 4, 1986 : 173–175 Ward St.
The Commonwealth Avenue Historic District of Newton, Massachusetts, encompasses roughly the eastern half of Commonwealth Avenue, extending from Waban Hill Road, near the city line with Boston, westward to Walnut Street. The roadway was laid out in 1894 and completed in 1895.
The West Newton Hill NR Historic District is a residential National Register historic district in the village of West Newton, in the city of Newton, Massachusetts in the United States. It is composed of a cohesive collection of spacious houses built in the second half of the 19th century, representing the development of the West Newton area as ...
Newton Corner — centered on the intersection of Centre Street, Washington Street and the Massachusetts Turnpike; Newton Highlands — centered on the intersections of Centre Street, Walnut Street and Lincoln Street; Newton Lower Falls — the only Village located largely outside of Massachusetts Route 128; Newton Upper Falls — centered on ...
The Myrtle Baptist Church at 21 Curve Street has been a center for a thriving African-American community since the 1870s. [8] St. Bernard's Church and Rectory at 1515-29 Washington Street, a Catholic church, is a Newton City Landmark. [5] First Unitarian Church (1905). Photo by John Borchard. Railroad Hotel (1831). Photo by John Borchard.
House at 31 Woodbine Street; House at 41 Middlesex Road; House at 47 Sargent Street; House at 60 William Street; House at 68 Maple Street; House at 81–83 Gardner Street; House at 102 Staniford Street; House at 107 Waban Hill Road; House at 115–117 Jewett Street; House at 152 Suffolk Road; House at 170 Otis Street; House at 173–175 Ward Street
The House at 170 Otis Street in Newton, Massachusetts is a rare local work of the nationally known Boston architect Hammatt Billings.The two story Second Empire house was built in 1870–71 for Charles Ellis and Emma Claflin Ellis, the daughter of William Claflin, then Governor of Massachusetts, whose own home (no longer extant) was in Newtonville.
Newtonville was once served by the now defunct Newton Nexus bus, a free service provided by the city of Newton. Walnut Street is the main street of the village. The urban section of the road is home to restaurants, bakeries, and cafes, several banks, multiple fitness centers, and dry cleaners.