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Craigie Arms

Cambridge, Massachusetts Registered Historic Place stubsHarvard SquareHouses on the National Register of Historic Places in Cambridge, Massachusetts
Craigie Arms, 6 Bennett Street, Cambridge, MA IMG 4336
Craigie Arms, 6 Bennett Street, Cambridge, MA IMG 4336

Craigie Arms is a historic apartment house in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Located in Harvard Square, the Georgian Revival four-story brick building was built in 1897 to meet local demand for apartment-style housing. The building occupies most of a city block along University Road, Mount Auburn Street, and Bennett Street. It is notable for its relatively modest decoration and the rounded corner projections.The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1986.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Craigie Arms (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Craigie Arms
University Road, Cambridge

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 42.373 ° E -71.122916666667 °
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Address

Chapman Arms

University Road 4
02138 Cambridge
Massachusetts, United States
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Phone number

call+16178647334

Website
chapmanarmscambridge.com

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Craigie Arms, 6 Bennett Street, Cambridge, MA IMG 4336
Craigie Arms, 6 Bennett Street, Cambridge, MA IMG 4336
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Murder of Jane Britton
Murder of Jane Britton

At 12:30 a.m. on January 7, 1969, Jane Britton (May 17, 1945 – January 7, 1969), a graduate student in Near Eastern archaeology at Harvard University, left a neighbor's apartment in Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States, to return to her own. The next day, after she had failed to answer her phone and missed an important exam, her boyfriend went to the apartment and found her dead. The cause of death was found to be blunt force trauma from a blow to the head; she had been raped as well.The crime attracted national media attention, as Britton's father was an administrator at Radcliffe College, and several factors led to a presumption that Britton's killer had been an acquaintance, perhaps a fellow student or faculty member of Harvard's anthropology department. Her body had been sprinkled with red ochre powder, used in many ancient funerals of multiple civilizations. No valuables had been taken from the apartment, nor had any of her neighbors heard any screams or other unusual noises (although later some were reported). Investigators were unable to find any likely suspects among the anthropology department. Albert DeSalvo reportedly confessed to raping and murdering another woman who had lived in the same building in 1963, following his arrest as the Boston Strangler several years earlier, but doubts remained as to whether he had committed all the murders linked to the case. Some also considered that there might have been a second Boston Strangler, leading to speculation that, if there was, he might have killed Britton as well. The case went cold but continued to fascinate the media and true crime enthusiasts on the Internet, some of whom brought lawsuits to have records made public from the investigation in the hope of resolving the case. Cambridge police and the Middlesex County district attorney's office announced in November 2018, two months before the crime's 50th anniversary, that they had identified a suspect in the case through DNA: Michael Sumpter, who had died in 2001 after being paroled into hospice care from a prison sentence that he was serving for a 1975 rape. It is the oldest cold case that Middlesex County law enforcement has ever solved. The DNA evidence has also linked Sumpter to several other unsolved rapes and murders in the Boston area.