Routen Vereinigte Staaten MassachusettsNewton
Charles River

Newton, Massachusetts, Vereinigte Staaten

Charles River

17
 reviews
Länge3.8 km
Schritte5500
Routen Details
Charles River ist eine 3.8 km (5.500-stufige) Route in der Nähe von Newton, Massachusetts, Vereinigte Staaten. Diese Route hat einen Höhenunterschied von ca. 0 m und wird mit beginner bewertet. Weitere Routen dieser Art findest du in der Pacer-App.

Browne House

Historisch
The Abraham Browne House (built c. 1694–1701) is a colonial house located at 562 Main Street, Watertown, Massachusetts, US. It is now a nonprofit museum operated by Historic New England and open to the public two afternoons per year.The house was originally a modest one-over-one dwelling, probably with a minor dependency to one side.

Watertown Dam

Wasser
The Watertown Dam spans the Charles River 980 feet (300 m) upstream from the Watertown Bridge near Watertown Square in Watertown, Massachusetts. The dam is located where the Charles River tidal estuary historically ended (the tides no longer reach this point because of the downstream Charles River Dam).

CatholicTV

Platz
The CatholicTV Network, commonly known as CatholicTV, is a Catholic television network based in Watertown, Massachusetts. CatholicTV first launched locally in Boston in 1955, making it the oldest Catholic television network in the United States. Today, it is distributed on cable television systems, internet television, and broadcast stations in sixteen U.

Bemis (Watertown, Massachusetts)

Platz
Bemis is a neighborhood located in the southwest corner of Watertown, Massachusetts, United States. It is bounded by Main Street to the north, the Charles River to the south, and the City of Waltham to the west. The neighborhood derives its name from Seth Bemis (1775–1851), who ran mills on both sides of the river near Bridge Street, including the Bemis Mill, which is located just across the Charles River at 1–3 Bridge Street, in Newton, and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

Evangelical Baptist Church (Newton, Massachusetts)

Gebäude
The Evangelical Baptist Church is an historic church located at 23 Chapel Street, in the village of Nonantum in Newton, Massachusetts. Built in 1873 in Gothic Revival style, it was designed by noted Boston architect Charles Edward Parker, who had in 1853 designed what today is the Architects Building of the Boston Society of Architects at 52 Broad Street, Boston.

Mayor Edwin O. Childs House

Platz
The Mayor Edwin O. Childs House is a historic house at 340 California Street in Newton, Massachusetts. It is a stucco-clad two story wood frame structure with a side gable roof and a three-bay shed-roof dormer. The centered entrance is sheltered by a square portico supported by paired square columns and topped by a balustrade.

Watertown Square station

Platz
Watertown Square is the main square of Watertown, Massachusetts, located at the confluence of North Beacon Street and Main Street (US-20), Mt. Auburn Street (MA-16), Pleasant Street, Arsenal Street, and Charles River Road. The Armenian Library and Museum of America is located in the square; Watertown Dam is 1,000 feet (300 m) to the west.

Nonantum, Massachusetts

Platz
Nonantum (from a Native American Algonquian word meaning "blessing or prayer") is one of the thirteen villages of Newton, Massachusetts, also known as Silver Lake or The Lake. The lake in question was filled with construction rubble and built over from the 1930s until its total demise in 1971. The neighborhood kids cleared the snow each winter and played hockey on it through the 1950s.

Riverwalk

Touristenattraktion

Dealtry Memorial Pool

Park
Reviews
4.5
(17)
lauramgodfrey
2024/07/07
Cindy
2024/04/23
mjrock104
2024/04/18
Cara
2023/05/06
Kathleen
2023/02/14
Rick
2022/10/07
lowellh07
2022/02/13
adayda8125
2021/09/27
Lara
2021/08/26
Fantastic walk
Rubina
2020/08/09
yandelcarias
2020/07/26
Tom
2020/07/26
PacerPal
2020/07/24
Nevena
2020/06/06
Florenca
2020/05/11
cara02472
2020/04/01
Tom Fitzgerald
2020/04/01
Routen Details

Länge

3.8 km

Schritte

5500
In App öffenÖffnen