Norwood Memorial Municipal Building
Norwood Memorial Municipal Building | |
Norwood Memorial Municipal Building | |
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Location |
566 Washington Street Norwood, Massachusetts |
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Coordinates | 42°11′41″N 71°12′2″W / 42.19472°N 71.20056°WCoordinates: 42°11′41″N 71°12′2″W / 42.19472°N 71.20056°W |
Built | 1927 |
Architect | Upham, William G.; Miner, Edward, et al. |
Architectural style | Late Gothic Revival |
NRHP Reference # | 96001086[1] |
Added to NRHP | October 10, 1996 |
Norwood Memorial Municipal Building (Norwood Town Hall) is a historic building located in Norwood, Massachusetts.
The Late Gothic Revival building was built in 1927-28, and is made of Weymouth seamed-face granite. Visitors often mistake it for a church or believe it to have been a church, but it never was; its stained-glass windows depict not saints, but local patriot Aaron Guild.
"Guild", whose name appears in local street and building names, is pronounced with a long i, like the second syllable of the word "beguiled".
Guild's significance is explained by an inscription on the Aaron Guild Memorial Stone, dedicated in 1903, which stands outside the Norwood public library. The inscription reads:
- NEAR THIS SPOT
- CAPT. AARON GUILD
- ON APRIL 19, 1775
- LEFT PLOW IN FURROW, OXEN STANDING
- AND DEPARTING FOR LEXINGTON
- ARRIVED IN TIME TO FIRE UPON
- THE RETREATING BRITISH.
Guild and his oxen are featured in the town seal.
It includes a 57-bell carillon tower housing the Walter F. Tilton Memorial Carillon, one of nine carillons in Massachusetts and the seventh-largest in the United States.
The building was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1996.[1]
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Norwood Memorial Municipal Building ("town hall")
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Church-like auditorium of Norwood town hall
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Image of Aaron Guild on exterior of town hall
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Aaron Guild Memorial Stone
See also
References
- 1 2 Staff (2008-04-15). "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service.
- ↑ It was suggested in 2006 that Guild's red coat must surely be historically inaccurate.Peter Schworm (2006-10-01). "He was a patriot, not a redcoat: Calls growing for new, accurate town seal". The Boston Globe. Retrieved 2006-10-06.: "Board chairman Jerry Kelleher said he, too, had noticed Guild's miscolored garment... He knew the red wasn't right." He said that "While the controversy has been 'mushrooming,' it's more a minor distraction than an embarrassing gaffe." Elisabeth McGregor , executive director of the Norwood Historical Society, said she found the flap "kind of comical", and noted the seal probably includes another mistake. 'It's April 19—would he really be plowing already?' she questioned. 'Seems pretty early.'"
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