Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Since its founding, J. Press' clothing has remained much the same. For example, the company produces the vast majority of its off-the-rack jackets in the traditional "three-button sack" style rarely found today in America, and for the most part, only produces plain-front trousers, for which the company suggests a traditional 1 3 ⁄ 4" cuff.
Harvard Square is a triangular plaza at the intersection of Massachusetts Avenue, Brattle Street and John F. Kennedy Street near the center of Cambridge, ...
The Coop's main store on Harvard Square was built in 1924 and designed by Perry, Shaw & Hepburn in the Colonial Revival style. The Harvard/MIT Cooperative Society (or The Coop, pronounced as a single syllable [1]) is a retail cooperative for the Harvard University and MIT campuses in Cambridge, Massachusetts. While the general public is able to ...
Even as the square’s great economic engine Harvard University opened up it just seemed to take a long time before street life vitality came back. Finally, the eminently strollable square almost ...
The Porcellian Club is an all-male final club at Harvard University, sometimes called the Porc or the P.C. The year of founding is usually given as 1791, when a group began meeting under the name "the Argonauts", [1] or as 1794, the year of the roast pig dinner at which the club, known first as "the Pig Club", [2] was formally founded.
Cambridge Common in 2022. Cambridge Common is a public park and National Historic Landmark in Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States.It is located near Harvard Square and borders on several parts of Harvard University.
Leavitt & Peirce is a Harvard Square tobacconist open since 1883. [1] The Harvard Crimson (in 1956) said it is the “last remnant of the "old Harvard."” [2] Forbes listed the store at number eight in the list of 2019 top ten independent retail experiences.
From 1909 to 1912, the Boston Elevated Railway (BERy) constructed its Cambridge subway from Park Street Under to Harvard Square. [1] Harvard Square station included a streetcar tunnel from Mount Auburn Street to Cambridge Street; many busy streetcar lines from the north and west were redirected away from the crowded square and into the new tunnel.