The Worcester of eighteen hundred and ninety-eightFifty years a city . d, assured by certain restrictionsin building and preventive conditions against contaminating projectors of this enterprise were William A. Warden and Willis , both natives of Worcester. This suburb contains about seventynew homes at the present time. William A. Warden, son of John and Narcissa (Davis) Warden, was bornilarch 2, 1852. He was educated in the public schools of this city. At theage of twenty he entered into business for himself as a dealer in fancy goodsin the city of Lynn, and later in t
The Worcester of eighteen hundred and ninety-eightFifty years a city . d, assured by certain restrictionsin building and preventive conditions against contaminating projectors of this enterprise were William A. Warden and Willis , both natives of Worcester. This suburb contains about seventynew homes at the present time. William A. Warden, son of John and Narcissa (Davis) Warden, was bornilarch 2, 1852. He was educated in the public schools of this city. At theage of twenty he entered into business for himself as a dealer in fancy goodsin the city of Lynn, and later in the crockery business, first at 338 andafterwards at 546 Main street in this city. This business he sold out in1885 to engage in the renting and care of several large estates, and inconnection with this charge he carried on a general brokerage business inbuying and selling real estate. In i88g he formed a copartnership withMr. Phelps, and they began to develop suburban property, first on Shrews-bury street, near Bloomingdale; later on Eastern avenue, north of Belmont. WILLIAM A. WARDEN. 428 The Worcester of 1898.
Size: 1418px × 1761px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No
Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookidworcesterofeight00ricefra