Worcester Five Cents Savings Bank

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Worcester_Five_Cents_Savings_Bank an entity of type: Thing

The Worcester Five Cents Savings Bank is a historic bank building at 316 Main Street in Worcester, Massachusetts. The six story Romanesque Revival building was constructed in 1891 to a design by Stephen Earle. The building is unusual in downtown Worcester for its use of limestone and buff brick, and for its rounded corner bay. The building originally had plate glass and iron store fronts on its ground floor (the bank occupying the second floor), but this was redone in matching limestone sometime after 1949. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Worcester Five Cents Savings Bank
rdf:langString Worcester Five Cents Savings Bank
rdf:langString Worcester Five Cents Savings Bank
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xsd:date 1978-09-13
rdf:langString Stephen C. Earle
rdf:langString Romanesque
rdf:langString less than one acre
rdf:langString Worcester Five Cents Savings Bank
xsd:date 1980-03-05
xsd:integer 200
xsd:integer 316
rdf:langString Massachusetts#USA
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rdf:langString The Worcester Five Cents Savings Bank is a historic bank building at 316 Main Street in Worcester, Massachusetts. The six story Romanesque Revival building was constructed in 1891 to a design by Stephen Earle. The building is unusual in downtown Worcester for its use of limestone and buff brick, and for its rounded corner bay. The building originally had plate glass and iron store fronts on its ground floor (the bank occupying the second floor), but this was redone in matching limestone sometime after 1949. THe Worcester Five Cents Savings Bank was founded in 1854 by Reverend Edward Everett Hale and others, and originally conducted business out of the bookstore owned by its first treasurer. When the institution had this building built, it first occupied the second story, while leasing the ground floor to the Quinsigamond Bank. The latter failed in 1902, and the bank then took over the ground floor as well. By 1953 it had expanded to occupy the entire building. The bank was merged into the Bank of New England in 1988. The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1978, and was included in the Mechanics' Hall District in 1980. Some of its interior features, particularly the fine finishings of its original banking hall, have been covered over or lost. It served as the corporate headquarters of Chess King during the 1980s. It now houses professional service firms.
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xsd:gYear 1891
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