National Register of Historic Places Inventory -- Nomination Form
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3. Classification 4. Owner of Property
NFS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 (3-82) Exp. 10-31-84 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service For NPS use only National Register of Historic Places received mjp Inventory Nomination Form date entered JAN I 0 I985 See instructions in How to Complete National Register Forms Type all entries complete applicable sections________________ 1. Name historic and/or common CQLBURN PARK HISTORIC DISTRICT 2. Location North, South, East, West Park Street; 3 Camp ell St.; street & number j School St.; 1 Bank St.; 9-10 Lebanon Mall 11^"0* for publication city, town Lebanon, n/_a_ vicinity of state New Hampshire code 055 county Grafton code 009 3. Classification Category Ownership Status Present Use _JL district public _X_ occupied __ agriculture museum building(s) private unoccupied X commercial X park structure X botn work in progress educational X private residence site Public Acquisition Accessible entertainment X religious object in process yes: restricted X government scientific being considered JX__ yes: unrestricted industrial transportation X n/a no military other: 4. Owner of Property name (see enclosed multiple ownershi list 1-4-1 street & number city, town vicinity of state 5. Location of Legal Description Grafton County Courthouse courthouse, registry of deeds, etc. Grafton County Registry of Deeds P.O. Box 208 street & number city, town Woodsville, state New Hampshire 05875 6. Representation in Existing Surveys title Lebanon* S Historic Resource has this property been determined eligible? yes no Survey date 1984 federal state county X local depository for survey records np p Rr y a i 1py - .qim apee Council city, town Lebanon, state New Hampshire Condition Check one Check one excellent deteriorated unaltered _X_ original site _X- good ruins X altered moved date N/A fair '"-. -
Strategic Plan 2020-2024
Strategic Plan 2020-2024 Submitted by: Candace Bradbury-Carlin, Library Director [email protected] (413) 665-4683 75 North Main Street South Deerfield, MA 01373 www.tiltonlibrary.org TABLE OF CONTENTS: Acknowledgments 3 Approval of Board of Trustees 3 Mission and Vision Statements 4 Why a Strategic Plan? 4 Community Description 5 Library Description 6 Planning Methodology 9 Assessment of User Needs 10 Goals 11 Strategies 12 Action Plans 13 Appendix A: Community Input Session Results 24 Appendix B: Community Survey Results 31 2 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS The Board of Library Trustees gratefully acknowledges all those whose participation made this planning process possible, including: ● The 200 community members who responded so thoughtfully to the Strategic Plan survey ● The many participants from the community, Trustees, Friends, and staff in the Community Input Sessions and interviews, and for all their many useful suggestions and insights ● Consultant Abby Strauss for her inspiring and knowledgeable professional guidance APPROVAL The Library Board of Library Trustees of the Tilton Library approved and adopted this Strategic Plan at their meeting on September 4, 2019. Trustees: Satu Zoller, Chair Marjorie Shearer, Vice Chair Cynthia Von Flatern, Secretary Grant Bialek Nancy Maynard Kathy O’Rourke Elizabeth Schmitt 3 MISSION STATEMENT The mission of the Tilton Library is to enrich our community through opportunities for learning, sharing, growth, and fun. VISION STATEMENT The Tilton Library: The heart and mind of our community. WHY WE DO STRATEGIC PLANNING The Massachusetts Board of Library Commissioners (MBLC) requires libraries to complete and submit multi-year strategic plans to be eligible for direct grants from the MBLC under the federal Library Services and Technology Act (LSTA) or any state funded grants. -
Pennsylvania Magazine of HISTORY and BIOGRAPHY
THE Pennsylvania Magazine OF HISTORY AND BIOGRAPHY VOLUME LXV APRIL, 1941 NUMBER TWO Some Qree\T(evival Architects of Philadelphia HILADELPHIA saw alike the birth and the death of Greek Revival architecture in America: its birth in the Bank of Penn- Psylvania, which Latrobe designed in the spring of 17985 its death—or should one say its final swan song?—in the Ridgeway Branch of the Library Company, designed in the 1870's by Addison Hutton, far out on South Broad Street. And, in the years between, several of the most important Greek Revival architects in the coun- try established their homes in Philadelphia, found there a most profitable field for their activity, and designed for it some of the most remarkable of its buildings. Latrobe, Mills, Strickland, Havi- land, and Walter all contributed much to the appearance of the growing city, and in the work of all, whether it was strictly Greek or not, the ideals of the new architectural movement were enshrined. It is not strange that this should have been the case. Philadelphia was, in the early years of the Republic, the undoubted metropolis of the country. It was, in its own characteristic staid way, the center of culture and of art. Boston was still, in architecture, largely under the sway of English late-Georgian inspiration, so beautifully re-created in New England in the domestic work of Bulfinch, the exquisite 121 122 TALBOT HAMLIN April interiors of Mclntire, and the early handbooks of Asher Benjamin. New York, struggling out of the devastation caused by the long British occupation, was still dominated by the transitional work of John McComb, Jr., the Mangins, and such architects as Josiah Brady and the young Martin Thompson; Greek forms were not to become popular there till the later 1820's. -
Asher Benjamin As an Architect in Windsor, Vermont
Summer 1974 VOL. 42 NO.3 The GpROCEEDINGS of the VERMONT HISTORICAL SOCIETY This famous architect built a meetinghouse and three private houses in Windsor before he left for Boston in 1802 ... Asher Benjamin as an Architect in Windsor, Vennont By JOHN QUINAN N August of 1802 the architect Asher Benjamin wrote from Boston to I Gideon Granger, the Postmaster General of the United States, seeking aid in obtaining a commission for a marine hospital in that city. Benjamin's letter identifies by name and location most of his first eight commissions - a rare and unusual document in American architectural history which enables us to trace his path northward from Hartford, Con necticut, to Windsor, Vermont. Benjamin wrote, in part: "Sir, I have since I left Suffield Conn. built the following houses, Viz. Samuel Hinckley, Northampton, William Coleman's Greenfield, Luke Baldwin's Esq., Brookfield, and a Meeting House and three other large houses in Windsor, Vermont, The Academy at Deerfield. l Most of these commissions have not fared very well. The Deerfield Academy building (Memorial Hall, 1798-1799) was altered sufficiently during the nineteenth century to obscure much of its original character. The Baldwin and Hinckley houses (both c.17%) were demolished early in the twentieth century and are lost to us, and it seems that the William Coleman house in Greenfield (1797) (Fig. 6) is the sole survivor of Benjamin's first decade of practice. But what of the four unnamed build ings in Windsor? Are they identifiable? Do they still stand in Windsor? Have they any special interest or significance? The four Windsor buildings are identifiable despite the fact that the three houses have been demolished and the meetinghouse has been altered I. -
Town of Deerfield Housing Production Plan
Town of Deerfield Housing Production Plan Effective March 24, 2014 – March 23, 2019 Prepared by: The Deerfield Planning Board Housing Subcommittee and the Franklin Regional Council of Governments This project was funded by a Direct Local Technical Assistance Grant from the Massachusetts Department of Housing and Community Development [This page intentionally blank] Deerfield Housing Production Plan Contents 1. Introduction...................................................................................................................................1 Purpose of a Housing Production Plan .....................................................................................................1 Planning Process and Public Participation................................................................................................1 Local, Regional, and State Housing Context .............................................................................................2 2. Comprehensive Housing Needs Assessment....................................................................................7 Community Demographics .......................................................................................................................7 Current Housing Characteristics and Trends ..........................................................................................18 Analysis of Current and Projected Housing Needs .................................................................................37 3. Development Conditions and Constraints: Opportunities -
Brittle Fracture History of the Montague Basin, North-Central Massachusetts
BRITTLE FRACTURE HISTORY OF THE MONTAGUE BASIN, NORTH-CENTRAL MASSACHUSETTS BY ARTHUR G. GOLDSTEIN CONTRIBUTION NO. 25 GEOLOGY DEPARTMENT UNIVERSITY OF MASSACHUSETTS AMHERST, MASSACHUSETTS. BRITTLE FRACTURE HISTORY OF THE MONTAGUE BASIN, NORTH-CENTRAL MASSACHUSETTS by Arthur G. Goldstein Contribution No. 25 Department of Geology and Geography University of Massachusetts Amherst, Massachusetts July, 1975 ii TABLE OF CONTENTS Page ABSTRACT ................................................ viii INTRODUCTION .....•.................................•..... 1 The Problem ........................................ 1 Location ........................................... 1 Topography and Drainage ............................ 3 Regional Geology 3 Stratigraphy and Structure.......................... 6 Acknowledgements 11 METHODS . 13 Field Forms . 13 Joint Sampling Methods 18 Fault Sampling Methods 19 JOINTING . • . 21 Method of Study . 21 Regional Patterns . • . • . • . 21 Patterns within Subareas ............................ 25 Eastern basement area .......................... 25 Turners Falls area............................. 29 Cheapside area . • . • . 29 Mt. Toby/Mt. Sugarloaf area.................... 30 Western basement area . 30 Relationship of Jointing in Sedimentary Rocks to Jointing in Crystalline Rocks ..................•... 30 iii TABLE OF CONTENTS (Continued) Page Separations of Classes of Joints .... ... ......... ... 25 Turners Falls area............................. 33 Cheapside 2rea . 33 Ht. Toby /Mt. Sugarloaf <Hea . .. .. .. .. .. 33 -
Optimistic About the Town's Future, Windsor Residents
WINDSOR VERMONT Optimistic about the town’s future, Windsor residents chose architect Asher Benjamin (1773-1845) to design a new church and meetinghouse in 1798. Ben- jamin’s three-year residence in Windsor yielded at least three houses, all of them since lost, as well as this landmark Federal- style church. He designed fine buildings in several Connecticut River Valley towns before establishing a successful practice in Boston. He is best known as the author of the first American builder’s guide. The Country Builder’s Assistant, published in Greenfield, Massachusetts, in 1797, was the first of many influential guides The “Design for a Meeting House” from Asher Benjamin’s first guide,The Country he wrote. The books functioned as cata- Builder’s Assistant, inspired his design of Old South Church (Plate 33, 2nd edition, 1798). logs of the latest architectural styles and Courtesy Dartmouth College Library/Rauner Special Collections practices, enabling local builders to design residential and public buildings in popular fashions. Windsor’s first church, formally organized in 1766, included members from Cornish, New Hampshire. The minister, who was paid in money or “in grains, or pork, or beef or day’s labor,” forded the river weekly to preach to the Windsor members. The congregation formed its own church in 1774 and built a simple, frame meetinghouse for both town and church business. Delegates met there on July 2, 1777, to craft the Vermont Constitution but adjourned to Elijah West’s tavern to complete their work. The meetinghouse was the site of the first Vermont legislative session and Old South Church Old South the inauguration of its first governor, Thomas Chittenden, on March 12, 1778. -
Geologic Quadrangle Maps United States
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR UNITED STATES GEOLOGICAL SURVEY PREPARED IN COOPERATION WITH THE COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC W0RKS GEOLOGIC QUADRANGLE MAPS OF THE UNITED STATES STTRFICIAL GEOLOGIC MAP OF THE GREENFIELD QUADRANGLE FRANKLIN COeNTY, MASSACHUSETTS By Richard H. Jahns r I I I INDEX MAP OF MASSACHUSETI'S PUBLISHED BY THE U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY WASHINGTON. D. C · 1966 DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR TO ACCOMPANY MAP OQ- 474 UNITED STATES OEOLOOICAL SURVEY SURFICIAL GEOLOGIC MAP OF THE GREENFIELD QUADRANGLE FRANKLIN COUNTY, MASSACHUSETTS B y R i chard H. J a h n s The Greenfield quadrangle, lies mainly within the till in the quadrangle. The largest group of drumlins Connecticut Valley province of western Massachusetts. lies in the northern part of the Pocumtuck Range. It is drained by the Connecticut River and by the lower courses of five major tributary rivers. The valley A discontinuous but widespread blanket of ground floor, is interrupted by a long bedrock ridge on the moraine overlies the bedrock and in turn is covered west side of the Connecticut River and by several iso by younger surficial deposits in .most of the valleys. lated bedrock hills on the east side. Prominent ridges This ground moraine (Qgm) is not more than 10 feet and hills in the southeastern part of the quadrangle in average thickness, though much thicker accumu represent the western edge of the Worcester County lations, shown separately on the map (Qgt), are present plateau or central uplands province. on the lower slopes of several hills. No end moraines have been identified in the quadrangle or adjacent Schist and gneiss of Paleozoic age form the high areas, and their absence is compatible with outwash lands in the southeastern part of the quadrangle; the features indicating that recession of the last ice sheet remainder of the area is underlain by medium- to was characterized by a marginal zone comprising coarse-grained sedimentary rocks and by diabase, many individual, essentially stagnant masses of ice. -
Design Guidelines Publication Credits
Worthington Design Guidelines Publication Credits Text prepared by Benjamin D. Rickey & Co., 593 South Fifth Street, Columbus, Ohio 43206 Schooley Caldwell Associates, 300 Marconi Boulevard, Columbus, Ohio 43215 Photography by Benjamin D. Rickey & Co., 593 South Fifth Street, Columbus, Ohio 43206 Book design and drawings by Schooley Caldwell Associates, 300 Marconi Boulevard, Columbus, Ohio 43215 Cover engraving of the Worthington Female College provided courtesy of the Worthington Historical Society Acknowledgements This publication was made possible by the hard work and dedication of a number of people in the Worthington community. The following people and organizations deserve praise for the time, talent and expertise they gave to this publication: Worthington Design Guidelines Steering Committee: Robert F. Chosy, City Council David G. Foust, Municipal Planning Commission Nicki Budin Jane Trucksis James Ventresca Worthington Municipal Planning Commission and Architectural Review Board: David Norstrom, Chair Richard H. Hunter, Vice-Chair Kenneth T. Pearlman, Secretary James D. Sauer David G. Foust Arthur J. Scott Scott Myers City of Worthington Staff: Paul J. Feldman, Assistant City Manager and Economic Development Director Lynda B. Bitar, Development Coordinator William W. Watterson, City Engineer Robert Wetmore, GIS Manager Donald L. Phillips, Jr., Chief Building Inspector Steve Seaburn, Planning Consultant Worthington Design Guidelines Table of Contents Introduction Commercial/Institutional Guidelines The Purpose of the Guidelines -
National Register of Historic Places Inventory -- Nomination Form
Form No. 10-300 (Rev. 10-74) UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR NATIONAL PARK SERVICE NATIONAL REGISTER OF HISTORIC PLACES INVENTORY -- NOMINATION FORM SEE INSTRUCTIONS IN HOW TO COMPLETE NATIONAL REGISTER FORMS ____________TYPE ALL ENTRIES -- COMPLETE APPLICABLE SECTIONS______ I NAME HISTORIC Deer-Pi eld Vi 1 1 PnrrnntnrV AND/OR COMMON Old DeerfieldVillage | LOCATION STREET& NUMBER West of U.S. 5, on Mill Village Road, "The Street," Broughton's Pond Road, and Pogues Hole Road_NOT FOR PUBLICATION CITY, TOWN CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT Deerfield — VICINITY OF First STATE CODE COUNTY CODE Mas s achii<; et t <; F-ranVl-in Oil QCLASSIFICATION CATEGORY OWNERSHIP STATUS PRESENT USE X_DI STRICT —PUBLIC JCOCCUPIED X-AGRICULTURE -XMUSEUM _ BUILDING(S) —PRIVATE —UNOCCUPIED _ COMMERCIAL —PARK —STRUCTURE _$OTH -&WORK IN PROGRESS X-EDUCATIONAL JtPRIVATE RESIDENCE —SITE PUBLIC ACQUISITION ACCESSIBLE —ENTERTAINMENT —RELIGIOUS —OBJECT _IN PROCESS -X.YES: RESTRICTED ^GOVERNMENT —SCIENTIFIC _BEING CONSIDERED -XYES: UNRESTRICTED —INDUSTRIAL —TRANSPORTATION —NO —MILITARY —OTHER: I OWNER OF PROPERTY NAME STREETS. NUMBER CITY, TOWN STATE _ VICINITY OF LOCATION OF LEGAL DESCRIPTION COURTHOUSE, REGISTRY OF DEEDS,ETC Franklin Registry nf STREET & NUMBER CITY, TOWN STATE Greenfield Mas s achi is e 11 c; 1 REPRESENTATION IN EXISTING SURVEYS TITLE Historic American DATE .1559-60 XFEDERAL _STATE —COUNTY —LOCAL DEPOSITORY FOR SURVEY RECORDS Library of Congress, Division of Prints and Photographs ———————, _.«—————————————————————————. ———————————————————————————— ——————————————„————„————- -
Is for Aboriginal
Joseph MacLean lives in the Coast Salish traditional Digital territory (North Vancouver, British Columbia). A is for Aboriginal He grew up in Unama’ki (Cape Breton Island, Nova By Joseph MacLean Scotia) until, at the age of ten, his family moved to Illustrated by Brendan Heard the Kanien’kehá:ka (Mohawk) Territory (Montréal). Joseph is an historian by education, a storyteller by Is For Zuni A Is For Aboriginal avocation and a social entrepreneur by trade. Is For Z “Those who cannot remember the past are His mother, Lieut. Virginia Doyle, a WWII army Pueblo condemned to repeat it.” nurse, often spoke of her Irish grandmother, a country From the Spanish for Village healer and herbalist, being adopted by the Mi'kmaq. - George Santayana (1863-1952) Ancient Anasazi Aboriginal The author remembers the stories of how his great- American SouthwestProof grandmother met Native medicine women on her A is for Aboriginal is the first in the First ‘gatherings’ and how as she shared her ‘old-country’ A:shiwi is their name in their language Nations Reader Series. Each letter explores a knowledge and learned additional remedies from her The language stands alone name, a place or facet of Aboriginal history and new found friends. The author wishes he had written Unique, single, their own down some of the recipes that his mother used when culture. he was growing up – strange smelling plasters that Zuni pottery cured his childhood ailments. geometry and rich secrets The reader will discover some interesting bits of glaze and gleam in the desert sun history and tradition that are not widely known. -
Asher Benjamin's West Church
Asher Benjamin’s West Church: A Model for Change NANCY S. VOYE hysical deterioration and inade- Benjamins’ first major commission in quate space motivated the West Boston. Not only is the West Church P Boston Society to make the follow- central to a study of Asher Benjamin as a ing decision to replace the original church stage in his architectural career in Boston, structure, which had been built in 1737: but also as a model which Benjamin That on a view of the situation and size proposed for adoption by other builders. of the present building they are of the In his first edition of The American opinion, that should the Society cause Builders’ Companion, published in 1806, those repairs to be made, which are absolutely necessary for its preservation, Benjamin included sketches of the front or these alterations and additions, which facade of the Church, its floor plan, roof its size may be capable of admitting of structure, and pulpit design (Figures 1 future accomodation. such Expenditures and 2). In addition, Benjamin furnished would prove burthensome without at- the following description of the West taining those objects for which they would be made. Your Committee are Church: therefore of the Opinion that the present The size of the house is seventy five feet House be taken down, and another square, porch twenty by forty six feet; to erected upon the Land of the Society in a contain one hundred and twelve pews more extensive plan. ’ on the lower floor. The gallery is sup- ported by columns of the Composite The Building Committee commissioned order, as laid down in this book.* Asher Benjamin as their architect and appropriated up to $20,000 for the con- In The American Builders’ Companion struction of the Church.