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Sabbath Day House (Billerica, Massachusetts)

Houses completed in 1765Houses in Billerica, MassachusettsHouses on the National Register of Historic Places in Middlesex County, MassachusettsMiddlesex County, Massachusetts Registered Historic Place stubs
Sabbath Day House, May 2012, Billerica MA
Sabbath Day House, May 2012, Billerica MA

The Sabbath Day House is an historic house located in Billerica, Massachusetts. The main block of the 1.5-story wood-frame house was built in the mid-1760s to provide a place for parishioners to warm themselves in between the morning and afternoon services at the adjacent Congregational Church. The house was in that time maintained by a caretaker, and came into private ownership in 1818, when it was no longer needed for its original purpose.On August 14, 1973, the house was added to the National Register of Historic Places.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Sabbath Day House (Billerica, Massachusetts) (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Sabbath Day House (Billerica, Massachusetts)
Andover Road,

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 42.560833333333 ° E -71.2675 °
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Address

First Congregational Church

Andover Road 18
01821
Massachusetts, United States
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Phone number

call+19786638433

Website
fccbillerica.org

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Sabbath Day House, May 2012, Billerica MA
Sabbath Day House, May 2012, Billerica MA
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Nearby Places

Billerica Mills Historic District
Billerica Mills Historic District

The Billerica Mills Historic District is a historic district between the Concord River, Treble Cove Terrace, Kohlrausch Avenue, Indian Road, Holt Ruggles, and Rogers Streets in the village of North Billerica, Massachusetts (part of the town of Billerica). The C.P. Talbot & Company mill building still stands in the center of the district. The buildings were planned and sited over decades, spanning from the mid-19th century until the 1920s. The Talbot brothers were able to secure land bordering the Concord Falls from the defunct Middlesex Canal Company (MCC) in 1851. The dam, water power and 20 acres (8.1 ha) of MCC land were secured for $10,000. In 1857, CP Talbot secured additional property from neighbor Faulkner and an agreement with Faulkner over water power rights. Also in 1857 they partnered with the Lowell-based Belvidere Company for 5 years, supplying water power while Belvidere gave the equipment and know-how. The exact date of the large brick building and clock tower is not known, but likely between 1865 and 1870. It was at this time that the Talbot brothers built the first tenement company housing for workers as well. The company operated and existed for 100 years until 1956. The Talbot brothers were the children of Charles and Phoebe (White) Talbot (married in 1802) whose children were Charles P. (b. 1807) and Thomas (b. 1818) among six others. From Cambridge, New York, they moved to Vermont and then Northampton, Massachusetts, where the brothers learned the trades of the textile mills. The district, which encompasses the mill complex and worker housing along Wilson Street and Talbot Avenue built by the Talbots, was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1983.