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House at 170 Otis Street: House at 170 Otis Street: September 4, 1986 : 170 Otis St. West Newton: 77: House at 173–175 Ward Street: House at 173–175 Ward Street: September 4, 1986 : 173–175 Ward St.
The houses at 332 and 334 Otis Street are nearly mirror images of one another, with off-center projecting pavilions and hip roofs. [2] The corner house at 333 Otis Street features a pair of turrets, a wrap-around porch with columns with scamozzi capitals, a porte-cochère and a turreted carriage house which mimics the main house.
The House at 170 Otis Street in Newton, Massachusetts is a rare local work of the nationally known Boston architect Hammatt Billings.The two story Second Empire house was built in 1870–71 for Charles Ellis and Emma Claflin Ellis, the daughter of William Claflin, then Governor of Massachusetts, whose own home (no longer extant) was in Newtonville.
House at 31 Woodbine Street; House at 41 Middlesex Road; House at 47 Sargent Street; House at 60 William Street; House at 68 Maple Street; House at 81–83 Gardner Street; House at 102 Staniford Street; House at 107 Waban Hill Road; House at 115–117 Jewett Street; House at 152 Suffolk Road; House at 170 Otis Street; House at 173–175 Ward Street
The West Newton Village Center Historic District encompasses the heart of the village of West Newton, in the city of Newton, Massachusetts in the United States.It extends along Washington Street between Lucas Court in the west and Davis Court in the east, and includes a few properties on immediately adjacent side streets, including Watertown Street and Waltham Street.
West Newton is also served by express buses 505, 553, 554 that provide service to Boston and Waltham. West Newton also has easy access to the Massachusetts Turnpike and Route 128 (Massachusetts)/I-95. The Massachusetts Turnpike (Interstate 90) runs through West Newton. Routes 30 and 16 also pass through the West Newton.
The area that became Otis was laid out in a series of colonial land grants in the first half of the 18th century. The crossroad village at its center was first known as Bethlehem, and was combined with the neighboring town of Louden to form the town of Otis (named for politician Harrison Gray Otis) in 1810. The village's central location and ...
The Newton Highlands Historic District encompasses the historic heart of the village of Newton Highlands in Newton, Massachusetts.When it was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1986, the district extended along Lincoln Street from Woodward to Hartford Streets, and included blocks of Bowdoin, Erie and Hartford Streets south of Lincoln Street. [2]