National Register of Historic Places listings in Lincoln, Rhode Island
This is a list of Registered Historic Places in Lincoln, Rhode Island.
Bristol | Kent | Newport | Providence | Washington |
- This National Park Service list is complete through NPS recent listings posted January 29, 2021.[1]
[2] | Name on the Register[3] | Image | Date listed[4] | Location | City or town | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Albion Historic District | July 19, 1984 (#84001899) |
Roughly bounded by Berkshire Dr., Willow Lane, Ledge Way, Kennedy Boulevard, and School and Main Sts. 41°57′06″N 71°27′26″W |
Lincoln | ||
2 | Eleazer Arnold House | November 24, 1968 (#68000006) |
Great Rd. (RI 123) near its junction with RI 126 41°54′10″N 71°25′14″W |
Lincoln | ||
3 | Israel Arnold House | December 18, 1970 (#70000017) |
Great Rd. 41°54′17″N 71°25′35″W |
Lincoln | ||
4 | Ballou House | August 30, 1984 (#84001908) |
Albion Rd. 41°56′48″N 71°28′21″W |
Lincoln | ||
5 | Blackstone Canal | May 6, 1971 (#71000030) |
From Steeple and Promenade Sts. in Providence to the Massachusetts border in North Smithfield 41°55′16″N 71°25′21″W |
Lincoln, Cumberland, Woonsocket, and North Smithfield | Initial listing extended from Providence, through Pawtucket, and as far north as Lincoln; a 1991 expansion (#91001536) extended it to the state line; the canal itself extended into Worcester County, Massachusetts, where it is the subject of separate listings. | |
6 | Elliot-Harris-Miner House | August 30, 1984 (#84001984) |
1406 Old Louisquisset Pike 41°52′43″N 71°26′11″W |
Lincoln | ||
7 | Great Road Historic District | July 22, 1974 (#74000051) |
Great Rd. 41°54′21″N 71°25′41″W |
Lincoln | ||
8 | Hearthside | April 24, 1973 (#73000069) |
Great Rd. 41°54′23″N 71°25′50″W |
Lincoln | ||
9 | Jenckes House | August 30, 1984 (#84002019) |
81 Jenckes Hill Rd. 41°54′16″N 71°27′32″W |
Lincoln | ||
10 | Jenckes House | October 10, 1984 (#84000088) |
1730 Old Louisquisset Pike 41°53′44″N 71°26′55″W |
Lincoln | ||
11 | Lime Kilns | August 30, 1984 (#84002015) |
Off Louisquisset Pike, Sherman and Dexter Rock Rds. |
Lincoln | Ruined remnants of three colonia-era lime kilns at different locations. | |
12 | Limerock Village Historic District | May 23, 1974 (#74000052) |
In an irregular pattern along Smith, Wilbur, and Great Rds., and Old Louisquisset Pike 41°55′40″N 71°27′22″W |
Lincoln | ||
13 | Lonsdale Historic District | May 25, 1984 (#84002022) |
Lonsdale Ave., Blackstone Ct., and Front, Main, Cook, Broad, Mill, Cross and Blackstone Sts. 41°54′34″N 71°24′11″W |
Cumberland and Lincoln | ||
14 | Manville Company Worker Housing Historic District | April 2, 2009 (#08001183) |
Bounded by Chestnut St., Angle St., Railroad St., Winter St., Fall St., Spring St., Park Way, Almeida Dr., and Main St. 41°58′13″N 71°28′18″W |
Lincoln | ||
15 | Old Ashton Historic District | August 30, 1984 (#84002037) |
Lower River Rd. and Blackstone Canal Towpath 41°56′11″N 71°26′04″W |
Lincoln | Now a site on the Blackstone River Bikeway State Park | |
16 | Pullen Corner School | August 30, 1984 (#84002039) |
Angell and Whipple 41°53′44″N 71°28′06″W |
Lincoln | ||
17 | Sassafras Site, RI-55 | November 1, 1984 (#84000360) |
Between Albion Rd. and the Blackstone River[5] 41°57′08″N 71°27′03″W |
Lincoln | ||
18 | Saylesville Historic District | August 30, 1984 (#84002049) |
Roughly bounded by Memorial Ave., Scotts Road, Industrial Circle, Smithfield Ave., and Woodland Court 41°53′33″N 71°24′37″W |
Lincoln | ||
19 | Saylesville Meetinghouse | November 28, 1978 (#78000008) |
Smithfield Ave. 41°54′02″N 71°25′06″W |
Lincoln | ||
20 | Whipple-Cullen House and Barn | November 14, 1991 (#91001647) |
Old River Rd. south of its junction with George Washington Highway 41°55′49″N 71°26′31″W |
Lincoln |
See also
References
- "National Register of Historic Places: Weekly List Actions". National Park Service, United States Department of the Interior. Retrieved on January 29, 2021.
- Numbers represent an alphabetical ordering by significant words. Various colorings, defined here, differentiate National Historic Landmarks and historic districts from other NRHP buildings, structures, sites or objects.
- "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. March 13, 2009.
- The eight-digit number below each date is the number assigned to each location in the National Register Information System database, which can be viewed by clicking the number.
- Barber, Russell J. "Quartz Technology at the Sassafras Site". In Quartz Technology in Prehistoric New England, Russell J. Barber, ed. Cambridge: Peabody Museum, Harvard University, 1981, 53.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.