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Malden station in 1906 The former station repurposed as a restaurant. The Boston and Maine Railroad (B&M) opened through Malden in July 1845. [5] The first station was a two-story wooden depot on the east side of the tracks at Pleasant Street; it was replaced by a smaller station on the west side in 1871.
The Browne-Masonic Building is a historic commercial and fraternal organization building at 126-150 Pleasant Street in Malden, Massachusetts. Built in 1894, it is a good example of Classical Revival architecture, designed by the prominent Boston firm Hartwell & Richardson. The building from its inception served as a home for a variety of ...
1852 map of Boston showing Malden. Malden is bordered by Melrose on the north, Medford on the west, Everett on the south, Revere on the east, and Saugus on the northeast. Boojum Rock located in the north west corner of Malden inside the Middlesex Fells Reservation is the highest point in Malden with an elevation of approximately 275 feet.
The Odd Fellows Building is a historic commercial building in Malden, Massachusetts. The four story steel and masonry building was built in 1907 to a design by Louis C. Newhall for the local chapter of the International Order of Odd Fellows (IOOF). The building is faced in buff brick, and is predominantly Renaissance Revival in character.
Route 99 is a 6.67-mile-long (10.73 km) north–south state highway in metropolitan Boston, leading from the Boston neighborhood of Charlestown through the northern suburbs of Everett, Malden, and Melrose, and terminating in Saugus at U.S. Route 1 (US 1).
Faulkner, [17] [18] located in Malden on Faulkner Street. [20] Malden Center (also known as Malden), [17] [18] located in Malden on Ferry Street. [20] Not to be confused with the MBTA station of the same name or the Malden Station on Summer Street that now serves as a restaurant. [19] [20] Edgeworth, [2] [6] located in Malden off Medford Street ...
The Wilbur Fiske Haven House is a historic house at 339 Pleasant Street in Malden, Massachusetts. Built in the 1860s, this Second Empire house is a remnant survivor of a series of fashionable mid-19th century Victorian houses, known as "Doctor's Row". [2] The house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1992. [1]
St. John the Evangelist Church, 174 Humphrey St, Swampscott: Now partnered with St. Thomas Aquinas Parish [110] St. John Paul II Shrine of Divine Mercy: 30 St Peter St, Salem [111] St. Joseph 115 Union St, Lynn [112] St. Joseph 770 Salem St, Malden Founded as a mission 1894, because a parish in 1902 [100] St. Joseph 173 Albion St, Wakefield