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Railroad Hotel

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Built
  
1831

NRHP Reference #
  
86001868

Opened
  
1831

MPS
  
Newton MRA

Designated CP
  
March 16, 1990

Added to NRHP
  
4 September 1986

Railroad Hotel

Location
  
1273–1279 Washington StreetWest Newton, Massachusetts

Part of
  
West Newton Village Center Historic District (#90000017)

Architectural styles
  
Greek Revival architecture, Federal architecture

Similar
  
United Parish of Auburndale, Beaver Brook Reservation, Jackson Homestead, Brae Burn Country Club, Crystal Lake

The Railroad Hotel (Seth Davis Tavern) is a building that served as an historic hotel at the triangular lot where Washington Street joins Watertown Street (Route 16) in the West Newton section of Newton, Massachusetts. Built in 1831, it is the only early building still standing in West Newton's village center. The Railroad Hotel is on the National Register of Historic Places and is a contributing property to the West Newton Village Center Historic District.

Contents

o scale model railroad hotel with full detail and full interior


History

The hotel was built in 1831 in a Greek Revival/Federal style by local teacher and developer Seth Davis to serve at first as a lodging stop along a stagecoach line that ran from Boston to Worcester. When the Boston and Worcester Railroad reached West Newton in April 1834, the hotel served as the line's first terminal, and as a transfer point to stagecoaches until the railroad was extended to Worcester the next year. It was known as the Railroad Hotel and Terminal Hotel thereafter, even after the B&W built a dedicated station nearby.

It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1986. The building currently houses retail shops and no longer serves as a hotel. It is the only early building still standing in West Newton's village center.

References

Railroad Hotel Wikipedia


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