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Old Town Farm is a historic poor farm building in Methuen, Massachusetts. The brick two story building was built in 1846, after Methuen lost its earlier poor farm due to the loss of part of its territory to newly founded Lawrence. The building is five bays wide and deep, with entries on the front and side; the front entrance is recessed with a ...
Essex County, of which Methuen is a part, is the location of 471 properties and districts listed on the National Register. Methuen itself is the location of 45 of these properties and districts. [2] This National Park Service list is complete through NPS recent listings posted November 29, 2024. [3]
Ellie's, the Parisian cafe and bakery, is back open in a brand new home at 250 Westminster St. in Providence.. In 2019, Ellie's moved across from the Providence Performing Arts Center to 225 ...
Searles was born on July 4, 1841, in Methuen, Massachusetts, US to Jesse Gould Searles (1805–1844) and Sarah (Littlefield) Searles. His father worked in a local cotton mill and operated a small farm. On November 7, 1887, Searles married Mary Frances Hopkins (née Sherwood), a wealthy widow 22 years his senior.
Stephen Barker House is a historic house at 165 Haverhill Street in Methuen, Massachusetts.. Built in 1839, it is one of several handsome houses built at the periphery of the Methuen settlement in the mid-19th Century, and remains a well conserved "country Residence".
Spencer–Peirce–Little Farm – c. 1675–1700; The Swett–Ilsley House – c. 1670; North Andover. The Capt. Timothy Johnson House - c. 1708, First Period Colonial home with historical ties to Indian Raids, the Salem Witch Trials, and The Underground Railroad; Salem. Andrew–Safford House was built in 1819
The gatehouse was originally a two-story rough stone farm house built by Richard Whittier between August and November 1830. In April 1882, it was purchased by Charles H. Tenney. It was redesigned in 1883 by architects Damon Brothers into a gatehouse for the 76-acre (310,000 m 2 ) Tenney estate known as Grey Court .
This colonial farm house was built in 1750 and remains a well preserved 18th century dwelling and conserves a portion of the original rural landscape. [3] The house was added to the National Register of Historic Places on January 20, 1984. [1]