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Stoughton / ˈ s t oʊ t ən / (official name: Town of Stoughton) is a town in Norfolk County, Massachusetts, United States. The population was 29,281 at the 2020 census . The town is located approximately 17 miles (27 km) from Boston , 31 miles (50 km) from Providence, Rhode Island , and 35 miles (56 km) from Cape Cod .
Fogg Building: Fogg Building: March 10, 1983 : 100-110 Pleasant St. and 6-10 Columbian St. ... Stoughton Railroad Station. January 21, 1974
The building was designed by Walter Atherton and given to the town by Lucius Clapp, a local schoolteacher and businessman. [2] It now houses the Stoughton Historical Society. The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1992.
The large building also housed Stoughton's first telephone exchange, a bank, offices, and fraternal organizations. [ 2 ] [ 11 ] The Hausmann Block Saloon at 105 E. Main is a 2-story brick business block built in 1903 by L.B. Gilbert.
Providence/Stoughton Line: layover/storage 2006; replaced by Pawtucket Layover Bennett Carhouse south of Harvard Square, Cambridge Harvard-based streetcar and trackless trolley routes maintenance and storage 1970; Eliot Shops closed Eliot Shops south of Harvard Square, Cambridge Red Line (also Blue Line from 1924–1952) maintenance and storage
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New England Sinai Hospital was a for-profit chronic care specialty hospital located in Stoughton, Massachusetts. [1] Founded in 1927 and opened in 1936 in Rutland, Massachusetts as the Jewish Tuberculosis Sanatorium, the facility changed its name and moved to Jamaica Plain in 1955 before settling in Stoughton in 1976. [2]
Stone & Webster was an American engineering services company based in Stoughton, Massachusetts.It was founded as an electrical testing lab and consulting firm by electrical engineers Charles A. Stone and Edwin S. Webster in 1889.