Argilla Road, Ipswich town, MA Argilla Road
En esta página puede encontrar un mapa de ubicación así como una relación de lugares y servicios disponibles en los alrededores de Argilla Road: Hoteles, restaurantes, instalaciones deportivas, centros de enseñanza, cajeros automáticos, supermercados, estaciones de servicio y más.
Edificios con nombre cercanos
- the Thomas and John Low house (before 1684) - 3865 m
Heartbreak Road 42
First Period Home - the James Burnham house (1690) - 3920 m
Heartbreak Road 45
First Period Home - 155 Argilla Road (moved here in 1951) - 1323 m
Argilla Road 155
This house is said to have been moved to this location from Newbury. Architectural features suggest an 18th Century origin. - Ipswich Family YMCA - 3964 m
County Road 110 - the Tilton-Smith house (c 1720) - 1246 m
Argilla Road 168
First Period House - Moritz B. Philipp and Jane Peterson estate (1885) - 3092 m
Old England Road 1
"The sightly residence of Moritz B. Philipp crowns the rugged eminence known in Mr. Hubbard's day and from the earliest times as Rocky Hill. The earliest name associated with the Hill is that of Humphrey Griffin." - Samuel Wade – S. F. Canney house (1845) - 3449 m
Argilla Road 17
Samuel Wade built this house as a cottage in 1845. In 1856 it was owned by S. F. Canney, whose lumber company burned at its first location by the County Street Bridge, and again at its Brown Square location. - George Dexter house (1893) - 3500 m
Argilla Road 15
George Dexter was a prominent Ipswich photographer in the 19th Century through 1920. This classic Queen Anne house includes an outbuilding which was used by Dexter as a photography studio. - Thomas and Elizabeth Brown house (c 1844) - 3549 m
The simple exterior is enlivened by Victorian elements, including two door hoods with elaborate scroll brackets decorated with incised floral motifs and sunbursts. Thomas Brown is the first known owner of the house. - 11 Argilla Rd. (c. 1900) - 3599 m
Argilla Road 11
Historic house in Ipswich, Ma - 14 Argilla Rd. (c. 1920) - 3578 m
Argilla Road 14
Historic home located in Ipswich, Ma. Estimated to be built around 1920. - Norman J. Bolles house (c 1900) - 3599 m
Argilla Road 12
The first known owner of this house is Norman J. Bolles, president of the Ipswich Savings bank. This house is a fine example of a Queen Anne Cottage. - 10 Argilla Rd. (c 1910) - 3633 m
Argilla Road 10
Historic house in Ipswich, Ma - the Rev. John Rogers – Col. John Baker House (c 1700, remodeled in 1761) - 3900 m
South Village Green 7 - the Dr. John Calef house (1671) - 3695 m
Poplar Street 7
First period home - the Captain John Whipple House (1677) - 3986 m
South Main Street 75
First Period Home - Heard House - 4044 m
South Main Street 54 - Ipswich Police Department - 4155 m
Elm Street 15 - Ipswich Historical Society Building - 4249 m
- John Heard House - 4251 m
- Ipswich Town Hall - 3926 m
Green Street 25 - the Howard – Arthur Wesley Dow House (1680) - 3696 m
Turkey Shore Road 41
First Period Home - Ipswich Public Library - 4388 m
North Main Street 25 - the Reginald Foster house (1690) - 3929 m
Water Street 6
First Period Home - the Harris-Sutton House (1677) - 3944 m
Water Street 8
First Period Home - the Stephen Boardman house (1720) - 3689 m
Turkey Shore Road 67
First Period Home - the Andrew Burley house (1688) - 4242 m
Green Street 12
First Period Home - the Wilcomb-Pinder house (1718) - 3979 m
Summer Street 43 - the Foster – Grant house (1717) - 4010 m
Summer Street 39
First Period Home - the Glazier – Sweet house (1728) - 3956 m
Water Street 12
First Period Home - Daniels Shoe Factory (est. 1843) - 4321 m
County Street 17
This house was built in 1843 near the EBSCO dam as Hoyt’s Veneer Mill. It was moved in 1859 to its present location where it became the Perkins & Daniels Stocking Factory. Farley & Daniels succeeded in 1884. - Abraham Knowlton house ( est. 1726) - 4250 m
County Street 16-18
The original house is believed to have been constructed between 1725 and 1740. The house was in poor condition and in 2003 was restored by Ipswich architect Matthew Cummings. It is identical in construction to the Dennis-Dodge house a few doors away. - Rev. Levi Frisbie house (est. 1788) - 4308 m
County Street 15
The house at 15 County Street was built in 1788 and is Federal in style. Rev. Levi Frisbie was Rev. Lev. Frisbie, who was installed as pastor of First Church in Ipswich on Feb. 7, 1776. He remained in that post for thirty years, and this was his home. - the Thomas Knowlton house (1688) - 4236 m
Summer Street 27
First Period Home - Bennet-Caldwell House (est. 1725) - 4311 m
County Street 11
Joseph Bennett built this early Second Period house in 1725. In 1818 the house was sold to Capt. Sylvanus Caldwell, who engaged in maritime trade along the coast from Massachusetts to Maine for a half century. - the Benjamin Dutch house (1705) - 4313 m
County Street 9
First Period Home - the Jonathan Pulcifer house (1718) - 4401 m
Summer Street 15
First Period Home - the Nathaniel Hovey house (1718) - 4446 m
Summer Street 11
First Period Home - the Thomas Dennis House (1663) - 4312 m
County Street 7
First Period Home - the Richard Rindge house (1718) - 4309 m
County Street 5
First Period Home - the Captain Matthew Perkins house (1701) - 4568 m
East Street 8
First Period Home - the James Foster house (1720) - 4538 m
Summer Street 4;6
First Period Home - the John Kendrick house (1665) - 4063 m
Hovey Street 3
First Period Home - the Harris – Stanwood House (1696) - 3963 m
Water Street 28
First Period Home - Polly Dole -John Updike house (1687-1720) - 4345 m
East Street 26
First Period Home - Jabesh Sweet house (1713) - 3886 m
Water Street 32
First Period Home - the Jordan – Snelling – Potter house (c 1708) - 4277 m
East Street 30
First Period Home - the York – Averill House (1715) - 3877 m
Water Street 36
First Period Home - The Day-Dodge House (1696-1737) - 4644 m
North Main Street 55;57
First Period Home - Gate Keeper's House - 3837 m
Argilla Road 260 - Ice House - 3746 m
- Worker Dorm - 3597 m
- The Barns - 3713 m
Argilla Road 280 - Gardeners Cottage - 3845 m
- Old Dairy - 3834 m