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Tyngsborough (also spelled Tyngsboro) is a town in northern Middlesex County, Massachusetts, United States. Tyngsborough is 28 miles (45 km) from Boston [ 1 ] along the Route 3 corridor, and located on the New Hampshire state line.
The Col. Jonathan Tyng House was a historic house on Tyng Road in Tyngsborough, Massachusetts. The oldest portion of this gambrel-roofed wood-frame house was built c. 1675 by Colonel Jonathan Tyng, the son of Edward Tyng for whom Tyngsborough is named. The house had a number of pre-Georgian features, including portholes under the eaves, through ...
The top-seeded Uxbridge High football team made four fourth-down stops and intercepted two passes as it held No. 8 Tyngsborough, which averaged 47 points over its previous three games and 34.2 on ...
Tyngsborough High School (THS) is a high school at 36 Norris Road in Tyngsborough, Middlesex County, Massachusetts, United States. It has approximately 484 students as of 2019, [ 8 ] and is part of the Tyngsborough school district.
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A $24 Million project to rehabilitate the Tyngsborough Bridge began in 2005. Repairs took around seven years, and the original bridge was re-opened on the morning of September 11, 2012. [ 2 ] In late 2011, through traffic just east of the bridge was rerouted to curve away from the Merrimack River before rejoining the original right of way.
The 19-acre (7.7 ha) [3] site is located one mile (1.6 km) from the center of Tyngsborough near the Dunstable border. Additionally, the landfill is bordered by a 16-acre (6.5 ha) marsh and 61-acre (25 ha) pond to the east, dubbed Flint Pond Marsh and Flint Pond respectively as well as the Dunstable Brook to the west.
The New England Huskies Junior Hockey Club is a non-profit 501-3 organization which chartered in 1993 as the Tyngsboro Huskies as a charter member of the Eastern Junior Hockey League (EJHL). The New England Junior Huskies trace their roots to 1981 and Fitchburg's "Wallace Wallopers" of the now-defunct New England Junior Hockey League (NEJHL).