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- Q4745871 subject Q15333922.
- Q4745871 subject Q15350648.
- Q4745871 subject Q8486797.
- Q4745871 subject Q8519320.
- Q4745871 abstract "Ames Hill/Crescent Hill District is an historic district in Springfield, Massachusetts, bounded by sections of Central, Maple, Mill, and Pine Streets, Crescent Hill, Ames Hill Drive, and Maple Court. This section of Springfield was the city's first "Gold Coast," built primarily during the early Industrial Revolution, from approximately 1812-1850. The Ames Hill/Crescent Hill Historic District includes Mulberry Street, the upper-class street made famous by Dr. Seuss's first children's book, And to Think That I Saw It on Mulberry Street, (1937.) Dr. Seuss's grandparents lived on Mulberry Street. This National Historic District overlaps somewhat with both the Ridgewood and Maple Hill Historic Districts designated by the City of Springfield.Ames Hill was named for the Ames Family of Springfield. David Ames, Jr., a Springfield paper manufacturer, was the son of Colonel David Ames, the first superintendent of the Springfield Armory. The David Ames Jr. House, at 241 Maple Street, on Ames Hill in Springfield, was built in 1826-7 and was the work of Chauncey Shepard, a prominent local architect and builder. In 1867, Solomon J. Gordon, a New York City lawyer, purchased the property and Shepard was hired to remodel the house he had built forty-one years earlier. Gordon lived in the house until his death in 1891. Today the house is known as Young House and is part of the campus of the MacDuffie School.Crescent Hill continues along the steep trajectory of Maple Street, which snakes up along a bluff overlooking the scenic Connecticut River and Connecticut River Valley. Crescent Hill also features many of Springfield's largest mansions, most of which date from the mid-19th century. Unfortunately, the Ames Hill/Crescent Hill Historic District was devastated during the June 1, 2011 Great Springfield Tornado.".
- Q4745871 added "1974-05-01".
- Q4745871 location Q49158.
- Q4745871 nrhpReferenceNumber "74000368".
- Q4745871 thumbnail SpringfieldMA_MapleStreetMansion_3.jpg?width=300.
- Q4745871 wikiPageWikiLink Q1193204.
- Q4745871 wikiPageWikiLink Q15333922.
- Q4745871 wikiPageWikiLink Q15350648.
- Q4745871 wikiPageWikiLink Q2269.
- Q4745871 wikiPageWikiLink Q298685.
- Q4745871 wikiPageWikiLink Q379648.
- Q4745871 wikiPageWikiLink Q4621984.
- Q4745871 wikiPageWikiLink Q49158.
- Q4745871 wikiPageWikiLink Q6721867.
- Q4745871 wikiPageWikiLink Q6859942.
- Q4745871 wikiPageWikiLink Q6933832.
- Q4745871 wikiPageWikiLink Q6976240.
- Q4745871 wikiPageWikiLink Q6977514.
- Q4745871 wikiPageWikiLink Q8486797.
- Q4745871 wikiPageWikiLink Q8519320.
- Q4745871 wikiPageWikiLink Q864476.
- Q4745871 yearOfConstruction "1812".
- Q4745871 added "1974-05-01".
- Q4745871 built "1812".
- Q4745871 location Q49158.
- Q4745871 name "Ames Hill/Crescent Hill District".
- Q4745871 refnum "74000368".
- Q4745871 point "42.09 -72.57694444444445".
- Q4745871 type Place.
- Q4745871 type ArchitecturalStructure.
- Q4745871 type Building.
- Q4745871 type Location.
- Q4745871 type Place.
- Q4745871 type Thing.
- Q4745871 type SpatialThing.
- Q4745871 type Q41176.
- Q4745871 comment "Ames Hill/Crescent Hill District is an historic district in Springfield, Massachusetts, bounded by sections of Central, Maple, Mill, and Pine Streets, Crescent Hill, Ames Hill Drive, and Maple Court. This section of Springfield was the city's first "Gold Coast," built primarily during the early Industrial Revolution, from approximately 1812-1850. The Ames Hill/Crescent Hill Historic District includes Mulberry Street, the upper-class street made famous by Dr.".
- Q4745871 label "Ames Hill/Crescent Hill District".
- Q4745871 lat "42.09".
- Q4745871 long "-72.57694444444445".
- Q4745871 depiction SpringfieldMA_MapleStreetMansion_3.jpg.
- Q4745871 name "Ames Hill/Crescent Hill District".