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Corbett and Hanson describe it as blonde brick with granite and brick trim and an example of Commercial Style architecture. Adjoining it is the three-story Gallert Block, which the application says was built in 1912 to replace wooden stores that had burned in 1911. Next west is the 1890 “Romanesque Revival style Masonic Block,” a four-story brick and granite building. Built four stories tall in 1897, after a 1942 fire destroyed the top three stories only one was rebuilt.
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It adds a summary of the separate Lockwood Mill Historic District, across the intersection of Spring and Bridge streets at the north end of Water Street (see also the May 7, 2020, issue of The Town Line.)Ĭontinuing with Matthew Corbett and Scott Hanson’s 2012 application for the Waterville downtown historic district, on the south side of Common Street, the building at the east end (closest to Water Street) is the brick Haines Building at 6-12 Common Street. This week’s description of Waterville’s Main Street Historic District begins where last week’s left off, with the Common Street buildings on the south side of Castonguay Square, and continues down the east side of Main Street. Corner of Main and Common streets by Mary Grow