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Shannon Raposo and James A. Primo III, seen here in this Nov. 17, 2023 photo, are owners of the new Primo on Water Street, set to open on the Fall River waterfront by early 2024.
Pop-up events and St. Paddy's Day bash. The following week, Primo on the Water is hosting a weekend-long St. Patrick's Day celebration March 15-17 — with a lineup of live entertainment and menu ...
The Pilgrim Maiden, Brewster Gardens, Plymouth, Massachusetts. This statue is not of a particular Pilgrim, but it most closely fits Elizabeth Tilley and Mary Chilton in age. Brewster Gardens is a small 2.9 acres (0.012 km 2) park located in the center of Plymouth, Massachusetts. The park name honors Mayflower settler Elder William Brewster. [1]
The district is about 7 acres (2.8 ha) in size, and is now almost entirely residential in character, the industries on which its growth was based having either been demolished or severely altered. The principal surviving element of industry is visible in the brick structure of the Plymouth Marine Company at Union and Water Streets. [2]
December 14, 1978 (105 Alden St. Duxbury: 3: Bartlett–Russell–Hedge House: Bartlett–Russell–Hedge House: April 30, 1976 (32 Court St. Plymouth: 4: Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church and Parsonage
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Built in 1749, the two-story wood-frame building is believed to be the oldest wooden courthouse in the United States; it stands on the site of the first courthouse built by Plymouth Colony settlers, and may incorporate elements of a 1670 building. The site was originally the site of Edward Winslow's first house in Plymouth. [2]
The Plymouth Antiquarian House (also known as Hedge House or "Hammatt House") is an historic house museum in Plymouth, Massachusetts owned by the Plymouth Antiquarian Society. The house was built in 1809 for William Hammatt, a New England sea captain. The Hedges, a family of entrepreneurs, purchased the house in 1830 and lived there until 1919. [2]