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Medford, Massachusetts

Medford City Hall

Built in 1940, this Georgian Revival municipal building serves as the seat of city government. The brick structure features classical proportions and limestone detailing typical of New Deal-era civic architecture.

Classic municipal building

Phone: (781) 393-2408

Official City Website

 

Isaac Royall House

This 1732 Georgian mansion represents one of New England’s finest examples of colonial architecture. The slave quarters and outbuildings provide important historical context about 18th-century Massachusetts society and the institution of slavery.

Colonial Georgian mansion

Phone: (781) 396-9032

Royall House Association

 

Peter Tufts House

Constructed around 1677-1678, this First Period house is one of the oldest brick dwellings in New England. The structure showcases early colonial masonry techniques and represents a rare surviving example of 17th-century domestic architecture.

Historic brick colonial house

Phone: (781) 391-6290

Medford Historical Society

 

Grace Episcopal Church

This Gothic Revival church, built in 1847, features distinctive brownstone construction and pointed arch windows. The building represents mid-19th century ecclesiastical architecture and serves as a significant example of the Gothic Revival movement in suburban Boston.

Gothic Revival church with stone facade

Phone: (781) 396-1246

Grace Episcopal Church

 

Medford Public Library (Main Branch)

Established in 1873 and housed in a Classical Revival building from 1904, this Carnegie library features limestone facades and copper detailing. The structure exemplifies early 20th-century public library design with its emphasis on natural light and civic grandeur.

Classical library building with columns

Phone: (781) 395-7950

Medford Public Library

 

Old Ship Street Historic District

This residential district contains well-preserved examples of 19th and early 20th-century domestic architecture including Greek Revival, Italianate, and Colonial Revival styles. The area represents the evolution of Medford’s residential development patterns and building craftsmanship.

Historic residential street with varied architectural styles

Phone: N/A

National Register Listing

 

Medford High School (Historic Building)

Built in 1898, this Richardsonian Romanesque school building features rusticated stone masonry and round-arched windows. The structure represents late 19th-century educational architecture and demonstrates the era’s commitment to substantial public school construction.

Romanesque revival school building with stone facade

Phone: (781) 393-2168

Medford Public Schools

 

Mystic River Bridge (Wellington Bridge)

This 1930s concrete arch bridge spans the Mystic River and represents Depression-era public works engineering. The structure features Art Deco styling elements and demonstrates the period’s emphasis on both functionality and aesthetic design in infrastructure projects.

Concrete arch bridge over water

Phone: (617) 626-1000

MassDOT

 

Unitarian Universalist Church of Medford

Built in 1827, this Federal-style meetinghouse features characteristic elements including a pedimented portico and tall windows. The building represents early 19th-century religious architecture and the influence of classical revival styles on New England church design.

Federal style church with white facade and columns

Phone: (781) 396-5668

UUCM Official Site

 

Medford Square Historic District

The commercial heart of Medford contains buildings dating from the 1840s through 1920s, showcasing the evolution of small-city commercial architecture. The district includes examples of Italianate, Queen Anne, and early 20th-century commercial styles that define New England downtown areas.

Historic downtown commercial district

Phone: N/A

Community Development

 

Riverside Cemetery

Established in 1848 as a rural cemetery, this landscape features Victorian-era funerary art and monument design. The cemetery represents 19th-century burial ground planning principles and contains significant examples of carved stone monuments and mausoleums.

Historic cemetery with stone monuments

Phone: (781) 393-2487

Cemetery Department

 

Amelia Earhart Dam

Built in 1909 and later renamed, this dam structure represents early 20th-century water management engineering on the Mystic River. The concrete and stone construction demonstrates Depression-era public works projects and flood control infrastructure.

Concrete dam structure over river

Phone: (617) 626-1250

Massachusetts DCR

 

Medford Fire Station (Central)

This early 20th-century fire station features brick construction with limestone trim typical of municipal buildings from the period. The structure represents the evolution of fire department architecture and the professionalization of firefighting services in suburban communities.

Red brick fire station building

Phone: (781) 393-2323

Medford Fire Department

 

Brooks Estate Historic District

This residential area contains examples of late 19th and early 20th-century suburban development including Colonial Revival and Shingle Style houses. The district demonstrates the transition from rural to suburban land use patterns in greater Boston.

Suburban residential street with historic homes

Phone: N/A

Medford Historical Society

 

Lawrence Memorial Hospital (Historic Building)

Built in 1923, this brick medical facility represents early 20th-century hospital design with emphasis on natural light and ventilation. The Georgian Revival styling demonstrates the period’s approach to institutional architecture in healthcare settings.

Historic brick hospital building

Phone: (781) 306-6000

Lawrence Memorial Hospital

 

Medford Armory

This 1930s WPA-era armory building features Art Deco elements and robust masonry construction typical of military facilities from the period. The structure represents federal investment in local defense infrastructure during the Depression era.

Art Deco style armory building

Phone: (781) 274-8000

Massachusetts National Guard

 

Magoun Square Historic Area

This neighborhood center contains late 19th-century commercial buildings and represents the development of satellite business districts in Medford. The area showcases typical small-scale commercial architecture that served growing residential neighborhoods.

Historic neighborhood commercial buildings

Phone: N/A

Community Development

 

Convent of the Sacred Heart (Historic Building)

This Gothic Revival institutional building from the early 1900s features limestone construction and ecclesiastical architectural details. The structure represents the influence of Catholic educational institutions on local architecture and community development.

Gothic Revival institutional building

Phone: (781) 396-5111

Sacred Heart School

 

Medford Housing Authority Building

Built in the 1940s as part of federal public housing initiatives, this modernist structure represents New Deal-era social programs and their architectural expression. The building demonstrates mid-century approaches to affordable housing design and community planning.

Mid-century modernist public building

Phone: (781) 393-2151

Medford Housing Authority

 

Wellington Historic District

This residential area contains examples of early 20th-century working-class housing including triple-deckers and small single-family homes. The district represents typical New England industrial community housing patterns and architectural responses to urban density needs.

Historic working-class residential neighborhood

Phone: N/A

Medford Historical Society

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