Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Original file (4,032 × 3,024 pixels, file size: 5.2 MB, MIME type: image/jpeg) This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons . Information from its description page there is shown below.
Watertown is a town in Litchfield County, Connecticut, United States. The town is part of the Naugatuck Valley Planning Region. The population was 22,105 at the 2020 census. [1] The ZIP Codes for Watertown are 06795 (for most of the town) and 06779 (for the Oakville section). It is a suburb of Waterbury.
The Palace Theater and the Majestic Theater are a pair of historic performance and film venues at 1315-1357 Main Street in downtown Bridgeport, Connecticut.Built in 1921-22 by Sylvester Z. Poli in a single building that also housed a hotel, they were in their heyday a posh and opulent sight, designed by noted theater architect Thomas W. Lamb.
The theater attracts hundreds of young people every year from around the state to perform in plays and other performances. The playhouse is one of the few youth theaters in the state of Connecticut. It is located on 128 Washington Street, around the corner from Middletown's Main Street.
U.S. Route 6 follows Cutler Street, Deforest Street, and Woodbury Road through the center of the community; it leads northeast 5 miles (8 km) to Thomaston and southwest 7 miles (11 km) to Woodbury. Connecticut Route 63 is Watertown's Main Street; it leads north 10 miles (16 km) to Litchfield and south five miles to Interstate 84 at the western ...
The Watertown Center Historic District encompasses the historic village center of Watertown, Connecticut. It exhibits architectural and historic changes from the early 1700s into the 20th century. It is roughly bounded by Main, Warren, North, Woodbury, Woodruff, and Academy Hill Roads, and was listed on the National Register of Historic Places ...
335 Main Street, Guy & Rice Building, 1930, Renaissance Revival; 339-351 Main Street, Commercial Building, 1892, originally erected as YMCA; 354 Main Street, The Capitol Theater, 1925, Neo-Classical Revival; 357-359 Main Street, Hubbard-Holland Building, 1873; 360 Main Street, Pythian Building, ca. 1874, remodeled 1938, Renaissance Revival detail
The 30,000 square foot center, located in an historic 1894 manufacturing shop of the U.S. Army's Watertown Arsenal, houses a 339-seat main stage theater, a 100-seat black box theater, exhibition galleries, art classrooms, and rehearsal studios.