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The house was built c. 1912, late in the triple-decker housing boom on Belmont Hill. Most of the housing in this area was built for mainly Swedish and Finnish immigrants working in Worcester's northern steel and wire factories. Charles Magnuson, the first owner, was a foreman in a metal goods plant.
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The Mary Dean Three-Decker stood in Worcester's Belmont Hill neighborhood, east of downtown, on the south side of Belmont Street (Massachusetts Route 9), opposite the Oakland Place entrance to the UMass Memorial Medical Center. It was a three-story wood frame structure, with its basement partially exposed on the side due to the steeply sloping ...
WORCESTER — A 13-year-old girl lost her life last week after a Honda Acura hit her while she was walking across Belmont Street, renewing concerns over pedestrian safety on a stretch of road near ...
The Sarah Munroe Three-Decker (or Monroe) is a historic triple decker house in Worcester, Massachusetts. The house was built c. 1892, and was noted for its Queen Anne styling [2] when it was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1990. [1] Many of these details have subsequently been lost due to alteration (see photo).
The Paul Johnson Three-Decker is a historic triple decker house in Worcester, Massachusetts. Built about 1908, the house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1990 as a locally significant example of a Queen Anne Victorian triple-decker. [1] It has since been compromised by the removal of many of those features.
Salisbury Street: Booth Apartments Area: Crown Hill/Piedmont: Federal Square [2] South Worcester (proper) Indian Hill: Tatnuck: Brittan Square: Main Middle: Worcester Common: Cambridge Street [2] Indian Lake East: West Tatnuck: Biotech Park Area: Beacon Brightly: Hadwen Park North Lincoln Street: Mill Street [2] Green Hill Park [3] University ...
The Worcester skyline in November 2024. Worcester currently has 18 high-rise buildings. [1] In the city, there are 12 buildings that stand taller than 150 feet (46 m). The two tallest structures in Worcester are the 24-story tower at 600 Main Street and Worcester Plaza, both of which rise 289 feet (88 m). [1]