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Ezra Carpenter House

Buildings and structures in Foxborough, MassachusettsHouses completed in 1800Houses on the National Register of Historic Places in Norfolk County, MassachusettsNorfolk County, Massachusetts Registered Historic Place stubs
Ezra Carpenter House, Foxborough MA
Ezra Carpenter House, Foxborough MA

The Ezra Carpenter House is a historic house at 168 South Street in Foxborough, Massachusetts. The 1+1⁄2-story Cape style house was built in 1800 by Ezra Carpenter, a veteran of the American Revolutionary War. Later generations of Carpenters also played significant roles in the civic life of the town. The main block of the house is five bays wide, with a centered entry, and an original central chimney. The ell to the right is a later 19th century addition.The house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1985.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Ezra Carpenter House (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Ezra Carpenter House
South Street,

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Latitude Longitude
N 42.051944444444 ° E -71.254722222222 °
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Address

South Street 165
02035
Massachusetts, United States
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Ezra Carpenter House, Foxborough MA
Ezra Carpenter House, Foxborough MA
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Foxborough State Hospital
Foxborough State Hospital

Foxborough State Hospital, historically known as the Massachusetts Hospital for Dipsomaniacs and Inebriates, is a historic medical treatment facility at the junction of Chestnut and Main Streets in Foxborough, Massachusetts. The creation of an alcohol abuse treatment facility was authorized by state legislation in 1889, and the Foxborough campus was developed in the 1890s. The original campus consisted of a series of residential wards in an L shape, with an administration building at the center, and a variety of ancillary support buildings on the grounds. Problems with the facility, including its location (whose access to roads and railroads gave easy access to escaping inmates), prompted the state to move the substance abuse facility in 1914 to a new campus in Norfolk. The Foxborough campus was then adapted for use as a standard mental hospital. The surviving 19th-century elements of the campus were listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1994.The hospital was formally closed in 1975, but the complex saw other minor uses until it was completely vacated in 1996. In the 2000s the oldest buildings in the complex were rehabilitated and adapted for use as mixed-income housing.Redevelopment of the hospital property began in 2005, with one of the largest buildings being torn down to make way for a shopping plaza. As of mid-2009, the plaza is complete, the main building has been transformed into luxury condominiums, and other structures have been renovated and made into single and multiple-family housing. However, many buildings were razed to make way for homes or open land, and a few still remain standing and unused, such as the former hospital auditorium.