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Whitney & Company (Leominster, Massachusetts)

Buildings and structures in Leominster, MassachusettsCommercial buildings completed in 1893Industrial buildings and structures on the National Register of Historic Places in MassachusettsNational Register of Historic Places in Worcester County, Massachusetts
Whitney and Company
Whitney and Company

The Whitney & Company building is a historic industrial facility in Leominster, Massachusetts. The utilitarian brick four-story building was built in 1893, and extended in 1923. It was built by Fred Abbot Whitney and Walther F. Whitney, whose business was the manufacture of boxes, notably paper boxes and satin-lined boxes, used for shipping other products to customers. The site was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1989. It has since been converted into residences called the Watermill Apartments.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Whitney & Company (Leominster, Massachusetts) (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Whitney & Company (Leominster, Massachusetts)
Water Street, Leominster

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 42.528333333333 ° E -71.753611111111 °
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Address

Water Street 142
01453 Leominster
Massachusetts, United States
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Whitney and Company
Whitney and Company
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Monument Square Historic District (Leominster, Massachusetts)
Monument Square Historic District (Leominster, Massachusetts)

The Monument Square Historic District is a historic district on Main and Water Streets, and Grove Avenue in Leominster, Massachusetts. The district includes Leominster's traditional town common or square, which is known as "Leominster Square" or "the Common." Leominster's common is the site of several monuments, including: a monument marking the site of the town's second meeting house from 1775-1824 (which was replaced by the first town house), a Native American mortar (moved to the site in 1880), several veterans' memorials, and a firefighters' memorial. The Leominster Historical Society headquarters is adjacent to the square. In 1743 the common was chosen as the site of the "First Church" meeting house in Leominster. At that time, an active church congregation was required for a town to gain a charter from the Massachusetts government. Originally a Congregationalist (Puritan) congregation, First Church's members later adopted a Unitarian theology in the early 19th century, causing the traditional Reformed (Calvinist) members to leave the building and found what is now Pilgrim Congregational Church, also located on the common. The First Church congregation was funded with state tax revenue until 1835, when Massachusetts separated its churches from state funding.The historic district also contains many 19th-century buildings, and the area was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1982. The city hall and various churches and businesses are adjacent to the square.