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Atwood House Museum, Chatham – built 1756; Isaac Crocker Homestead, Marstons Mills – built c. 1750s; Winslow Crocker House, Yarmouth Port – built c. 1780; Hoxie House, Sandwich – Cape Cod's oldest saltbox house; built c. 1675; Wing Fort House, East Sandwich, Massachusetts – built ca. 1641
A small number of Cape Code-style houses survive from the 18th century in the village, which also includes a representation of Greek Revival architecture from its first period of significant growth. Later buildings of architectural significance include the Queen Anne style South Chatham School (built 1903), which marks the eastern end of the ...
Roseland Manor (also known as the Strawberry Banks Manor House) 1887: Châteauesque Queen Anne: Arthur Crooks: Hampton: Destroyed by fire in 1985 [144] [144] more images: Maymont: 1893: Victorian: Edgerton S. Rogers: Richmond: Today, a historic house museum and arboretum [145] [68] more images. Poplar Hill (also known as the Dunnington Mansion ...
The town occupies the southeast corner (the "elbow") of Cape Cod. The town's villages include Chatham proper, Chatham Port, North Chatham, West Chatham, and South Chatham (west of West Chatham). Chatham is bordered by Harwich to the west, Pleasant Bay and Orleans to the north, the Atlantic Ocean to the east, and Nantucket Sound to the south
Escutcheon of the McMahon baronets of Ashley Manor. The McMahon baronetcy, of Ashley Manor, was created in the Baronetage of the United Kingdom on 7 August 1817 for John McMahon, Member of Parliament for Aldeburgh from 1802 to 1812 and Private Secretary to George IV from 1811 to 1817. [1]
Chatham Port is a census-designated place (CDP) in the town of Chatham in Barnstable County, Massachusetts, United States. [2] References
The Colonel John Ashley House is a historic house museum at 117 Cooper Hill Road in Sheffield, Massachusetts. Built in 1735 by a prominent local leader, it is one of the oldest houses in southern Berkshire County. The museum is owned and operated by The Trustees of Reservations, and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. [1]
Monomoy Island is an 8-mile-long (13-kilometre) spit of sand extending southwest from Chatham, Cape Cod off the Massachusetts mainland. Because of shifting sands and water levels, it is often connected to the mainland, and at other times is separated from it. It is home to the Monomoy National Wildlife Refuge.