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The museum’s collection totals approximately 32,000 artifacts, equally divided between works of art and three-dimensional objects. The scope of the collection is international and includes miniature ship models, scrimshaw, maritime paintings, decorative arts, carved figureheads, working steam engines, and the world's only known Kratz-built steam calliope. [4]
The Norfolk Historic District encompasses the historic civic and commercial center of Norfolk, Connecticut.Centered around a triangular green at the junction of United States Route 44 and Connecticut Route 272, it is a well-preserved late 19th to early 20th-century town center, with a number of architecturally distinctive buildings and structures.
Norfolk is in northwestern Connecticut, in the Litchfield Hills.It includes the Norfolk Historic District, which covers the historic center of the village, but also extends west to include Old Colony Road, Blackberry Street, and Valley View Road, north to include Shepard Road, east to include Laurel Way and Beacon Lane, and south to include Highfield Road, Grant Street, and Battell Road. [2]
Norfolk (/ ˈ n ɔːr f ʌ k / NOR-fuhk) is a town in Litchfield County, Connecticut, United States.The population was 1,588 at the 2020 census. [1] The town is part of the Northwest Hills Planning Region.
North Carolina: Manteo: North Carolina Maritime Museum on Roanoke Island: North Carolina: Rodanthe: Chicamacomico Life-Saving Station: North Carolina: Southport: North Carolina Maritime Museum at Southport: Archived 2009-06-08 at the Wayback Machine: North Carolina: Wilmington: North Carolina Battleship Memorial: North Dakota: Devils Lake
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Alfredo S. G. Taylor (1872–1947) [1] was an architect, of the New York firm Taylor & Levi, which he co-founded with Julian Clarence Levi. [2]He was educated at Harvard College, class of 1894, and received his B.S. from Columbia Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation in 1897.
The Blackberry River Inn (historically known as the Moseley House-Farm) is a colonial mansion at 538 Greenwoods Road West (United States Route 44) in Norfolk, Connecticut. Constructed in 1763, the mansion was listed on the National Register of Historic Places under its historic name in 1984.