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Coventry Public Library Coventry: Kent: Ocean State Libraries: Cranston Public Library: Cranston: Providence: Ocean State Libraries: Crompton Free Library: West Warwick: Kent: now used by Pawtuxet Valley Preservation and Historical Society Cross Mills Public Library Charlestown: Washington: Ocean State Libraries: Cumberland Public Library ...
The three buildings are Warwick City Hall, the Henry Warner Budlong Memorial Library, the Kentish Artillery Armory. Prior to its demolition the Old Fire Station was also included. The first three buildings line the north side of Post Road just east of the junction of US Route 1 and Rhode Island Route 117 , where the village of Apponaug was ...
The Norwood Public Library, now a branch of the Warwick Public Library, was built in 1923 at 328 Pawtuxet Avenue. [4] The neighborhood is also home to a number of churches. The first, St. William's R. C. Church, was established in 1924 as a mission of St. Matthew's of Cranston. The original building stood at what is today 108 Perry Avenue.
By July 2004, the Providence Public Library had cut 21 librarians and 14 clerical workers and slashed hours at the Central Library, eliminating all Saturday hours and most weekday evening hours.
Warwick (/ ˈ w ɒr ɪ k / WORR-ik or / ˈ w ɔːr w ɪ k / WOR-wik [5]) is a city in Kent County, Rhode Island, United States, and is the third-largest city in the state, with a population of 82,823 at the 2020 census.
Apponaug is located at the intersection of three of Warwick's primary streets: Post Road (U.S. Route 1), Greenwich Avenue (R.I. Route 5), and Centerville Road (R.I. Route 117). It is considered downtown or central Warwick, as Warwick City Hall is located here, plus police and fire headquarters, the Apponaug branch of the Warwick Public Library ...
At the Warwick Mall, the counter-anchor to Macy's is JCPenney. The department store chain went through its own series of closures after going through bankruptcy in 2020, when it closed 29% of its ...
Although the Warwick settlement on Warwick Cove is 60 years older, the early homes there no longer stand. [citation needed] By the 1830s the Greenes supported the efforts of the Kinnecom family, American Indian residents living by the beach, to open Buttonwoods Beach as a clambake and beach destination for the public.