Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us
Delis and restaurants offer dinner, sandwiches, charcuterie, pastries, desserts and more. Skip to main content. 24/7 Help. For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to ...
The Salem line was used by two of Wakefield's major manufacturers, the Wakefield Rattan Company, and the L. B. Evans Shoe Company. The present station first appears on city maps in 1874, suggesting a construction date between then and 1870. [2] The former station building was converted to a restaurant by 1962.
Wakefield Park: Wakefield Park: March 2, 1990 : Roughly Park Ave. between Summit Ave. and Chestnut St. A late 19th century "garden suburb" residential subdivision. 86: Wakefield Rattan Co. Wakefield Rattan Co. July 6, 1989 : 134 Water St.
Wakefield died in 1977, and the Toll House Inn burned down from a fire that started in the kitchen on New Year's Eve 1984. [8] The inn was not rebuilt. The site, at 362 Bedford Street, is marked with a historical marker and mounted restored sign. [ 9 ]
Wakefield, Massachusetts Registered Historic Place stubs (53 P) Pages in category "Wakefield, Massachusetts" The following 19 pages are in this category, out of 19 total.
The Common District encompasses the main civic center of Wakefield, Massachusetts. It is centered on the historic town common, just south of Lake Quannapowitt, which was laid in 1644, when it became the heart of Old Reading. The area was separated from Reading as South Reading in 1818, and renamed Wakefield in 1868. [2]
Samuel Longley Bickford (1885–1959) began his restaurant career in 1902. In the 1910s, he was a vice president at the Waldorf System lunchroom chain in New England and, in 1921, he established his own quick-lunch Bickford's restaurants in New York.