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North Worcester West Side East Side Central Downtown South Worcester Greendale: Forest Grove: Great Brook Valley: Elm Park: Lincoln Square [2] Webster Square Burncoat: Salisbury Street: Booth Apartments Area: Crown Hill/Piedmont: Federal Square [2] South Worcester (proper) Indian Hill: Tatnuck: Brittan Square: Main Middle: Worcester Common ...
The Elm Street Historic District encompasses a collection of high-style Queen Anne Victorian three-decker houses in Worcester, Massachusetts.Normally a building style intended for occupation by the working classes of the city, these stylish buildings were built 1904–06 facing Elm Park on the fashionable west side, and attracted a higher class of occupant. [2]
Hammond Heights is an historic neighborhood subdivision on the west side of Worcester, Massachusetts.It includes properties along Germain, Haviland, Highland, and Westland Streets and Institute Road, most of which were built between 1890 and 1918, and is a good example of a turn-of-the-century residential subdivision, with a diversity of period architectural styles.
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Worcester is the headquarters of the Providence and Worcester, a Class II railroad operating throughout much of southern New England. The city is a significant intermodal shipping hub for CSX's Boston Subdivision. Worcester is also the western terminus of the Framingham/Worcester commuter rail line run by the Massachusetts Bay Transportation ...
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The Henry G. Taft House built c. 1868 (118 Woodland) was originally owned by Henry Gordon Taft of Uxbridge, who served as the Commissioner of Worcester County from 1876 to 1903. [4] Three of the five original Second Empire houses—the Andrew Schofield House (c. 1868), Sumner Wallace House (c. 1870), and William Brason House (c.1870) -- have ...