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The Boardman House, also known as the Scotch-Boardman House or the Bennett-Boardman House, is a historic house located at 17 Howard Street, Saugus, Massachusetts. Built in 1692, it was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1961 because of the remarkable amount of original building material still present in the house.
Breakheart Reservation is a public recreation area covering 652 acres (264 ha) in the towns of Saugus and Wakefield, Massachusetts.The reservation features a hardwood forest, two freshwater lakes, a winding stretch of the Saugus River, and scenic views of Boston and rural New England from rocky hilltops.
Since 1947 Saugus has had a Plan E form of government, which is a combination of representative town meeting and Town Manager. Saugus was the first town in Massachusetts to accept this form of government. [56] [57] This plan included a Single transferable vote voting system, but this was abandoned in 1950. [58]
Lynn Fells Parkway is a parkway in Greater Boston, Massachusetts, in the United States.It is maintained by the Massachusetts Department of Conservation and Recreation.The road runs from the end of Fellsway East in Stoneham, eastward through Melrose, and ends in Saugus at US Route 1.
Saugus River and environs. The Saugus River is a river in Massachusetts.. The river is 13 miles (21 km) long, drains a watershed of approximately 47 square miles (120 km 2), and passes through Wakefield, Lynnfield, Saugus, and Lynn as it meanders east and south from its source in Lake Quannapowitt in Wakefield (elevation 90 feet (27 m)) to its mouth in Broad Sound.
Saugus Center and Town Hall. In 1874, construction began on Saugus' second and present town hall. The cornerstone was laid on October 17, 1874. The day's exercises began with a procession from Sutton Hall up Chestnut Street, through Winter and Central Streets, up Main Street, through Summer Street, down Pleasant Street, and down Central Street to the site of the Town Hall.
Soon thereafter, the two sides went to court over privileges established in the original lease, which entitled the Giuffridas and their guests to free food and drink and access to the first available table for life, which were lost following the sale. The court found in favor of High Country Investors. [12] In 2013, the Hilltop Steak House closed.
17th-century house restored by Wallace Nutting. In 1915, antiquarian Wallace Nutting purchased the Appleton-Taylor-Mansfield House, a 1680s farmhouse near the iron works site which was believed to be the former home of the ironmaster of the Saugus Iron Works. He renamed the home Broadhearth and undertook an extensive, albeit embellished ...