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whatdoiknowjr.com
| | buildingsofnewengland.com
4.7 parsecs away

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| | The former Wadsworth School of Danvers, Massachusetts, was built in 1897 as a district schoolhouse for the growing town and is one of the finest examples of a school building designed in the Colonial Revival style in the state. The large building held four classrooms (two on each floor) for over 200 pupils with stairhalls...
| | buildingsofnewengland.com
4.5 parsecs away

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| | Located across the street from the Sabbathday Lake Shaker Meeting House in New Gloucester, Maine, this large, three and one-half story brick building has historically housed many of the active Shakers in the community. Built in 1883-4, the central dwelling house contains a self-contained town of rooms, including sleeping rooms, a chapel, music room, kitchen,...
| | buildingsofnewengland.com
4.5 parsecs away

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| | The largest house in the smallest town (in Middlesex County) of Ashby, Massachusetts, is this towering, three-story Federal period home on South Road. Local history states that the home was originally a two-story Federal style home with shallow hipped roof. The Goodnough's "modernized" the home by the 1870s, adding a mansard roof and built a...
| | buildingsofnewengland.com
16.2 parsecs away

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| The town of Scotland, Connecticut, is a rural community centered around agriculture and is the smallest municipality in Windham County's 'Quiet Corner'. European settlement began in earnest following the purchase of 1,950 acres of land from then Windham, by Isaac Magoon, a Scotsman, who named the new village after his ancestral home. The present-day town...