USA > New Hampshire > Cheshire County > Walpole > A history of Walpole, New Hampshire, Volume I > Part 23
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262. ARTHUR J. HANNAN: This property was out of the west end of Lot #6 in 3rd Range which Benjamin Bellows sold in 1761 to John Graves. There were mills here as early as 1775, which probably belonged to Samuel Graves, son of John. In 1781 they were known as Edgills Mills. In 1793 John Graves sold the mills, renamed Gates Mills, to Jonathan Gates (Saviah) "with millstones and irons"; 1793 to Ephraim Lane who,
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travelling on foot, stopped overnight at the tavern of Alexander Watkins. Here he made inquiry for mill property for sale and was told of this property thereafter known as Lane's Mills. On June 10, 1799, he ad- vertised: "For sale in south part of town his grist and sawmills, about 2 acres land, good dwelling house and barn . . . on a good stream of water, business not exceeded by any other in town." Abel Cheney owned the mills briefly in 1799-1800, then resold them to Lane; 1803 Lane sold to Jonathan Chase. The sawmill was on the millpond on the west side of Rt. 12, which was farther east then; the gristmill was farther downstream on the south side; the dwelling house was nearby. Chase built the house on the east side of Rt. 12, south of the crossroad. Mrs. Marion Weymouth remembered going to dances here in an ell' on the south side of the house. Only this house remains, except for the stand which Rix built at the road junction.
Chase sold in 1814 to Elisha Hooper; 1814 to Amasa Carpenter; 1816 to Hugh and John Dunshee; 1818 Hugh's share to William Dunshee; 1838 to Lewis Lane; 1868, 1872 to Levi Ross. In 1874-5 Lewis Lane again owned the mills; in 1883-5 Mary Elizabeth Hartwell (John E.) owned the house. Horace H. Hall bought the sawmill in 1875, the gristmill in 1881, and the house in 1885; 1906 the sawmill was sold to Anson Burbee; in 1887 the house and in 1889 the gristmill to Charles S. Hawks (Jennie A.); in 1907 Hawks sold his property to Cora B. Hill; in 1913 all the property was sold to John Dana; 1946 to William Lane (Gertrude B.); 1949 to Lloyd P. and Elizabeth T. Rix; 1953 to Fred D. and Mabel R. Hovey; 1956 to Maynard Allbee; 1962 to present owners of Stamford, Connecticut.
JAMES PUNT-blacksmith shop, out of next place south: In 1866 Daniel Ross sold to James Punt one-half an acre on the west side of Rt. 12, south of the road to the gristmill. A depression and clump of trees mark the spot where the blacksmith shop stood.
263. ALFRED M. HUEY: This was also part of John Graves' land; 1793 to his son Samuel; 1800 his estate to Amos Graves; 1806 to Jacob Kiblinger; 1806 to Ezekial Graves; 1807 to Ephraim Lane; 1860 to Daniel Ross; 1874 to Levi A. Ross; 1878 to Charles B. Hall; 1887 Horace H. Hall, son, to Sarah J. Hall (wife of Charles B.). Charles B. Hall, who came here from Surry about 1868, was a carpenter, blacksmith, farmer, and operated the sawmill on Great Brook until age overtook him. He was followed by his son Horace H., who operated the steam gristmill and dealt in feed and farmed until 1887, when he rented the mill to Charles Hawks and went
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to Brattleboro to the Estey Organ Works. His three brothers who worked on the railroad were all killed in railroad accidents.
In June 1901 the Charles B. Halls celebrated their fiftieth wedding anniversary at an outdoor party with one hundred guests. Charles B. Hall died in 1907 and the place was sold to Helen S. Cota; 1915 to Proctor & Buckminster for the timber; 1915 to Fred O. Lavine; 1921 to Howard M. and Doris D. Barkley; 1928 to Charles Burdick (Delia B.); 1940 to Leopold and Elida Giguere; 1945 to James E. and Ruth Brennan; 1951 to Clinton and Eloise Simmons; 1953 to Wayne Allbee (Elizabeth C.); 1956 to Maynard Allbee; 1961 to Alfred M. Huey.
264. JAMES E. BRENNAN: When the Brennans sold #263 in 1951, they reserved the southwest corner on the east side of Rt. 12 and built their new house here.
265. STANLEY A. PHELPS: This was out of the west end of Lot #7 in 3rd Range; 1807 Josiah Griswold to Hugh Dunshee; 1831 heirs to John Dunshee; 1852 Lewis H. and Caroline M. Dunshee to Amos and Cynthia Davis; 1853 to William and Achsah Wellington; 1853 to Josiah W. Batchelder; 1883 to John W. Marshall; 1925 estate to Eleanor Attwood; 1947 to Cornelius G. Attwood; 1948 to Katherine P. Keith; 1952 to Lawrence and Martha Cantliffe; 1953 to Guy W. and Louise W. Swallow; 1954 to Henry C. and Marion J. Nelson; bank took over; 1959 to present owners.
266. HERMAN L. SARGENT: This is the south part of lot above which Dun- shee probably sold to Ezra Hall sometime between 1831 and 1847, and it belonged to his farm until Martin and Leon sold it in 1945 to Herman L. and Lula M. Sargent. There was a house here in 1858; the Sargents built their house on the old cellarhole. He is a bricklayer.
267. JOHN KOLVOORD: James Russell and his wife Lucy came to Walpole from Wellington, Connecticut, at an early period, joining the church here in 1770. Their son Jeduthan bought this place from William Smeed in 1786. Of his eleven children the eighth, Priscilla, married Ezra Hall in 1814. Their oldest son, Gardner E., owned the place. He was a passenger conductor on the Cheshire and Fitchburg Railroad. In 1879 his heirs sold to William Gilson of Milford, who made over the deed a year later to Mary E., wife of Albert A. Gilson. The Gilsons lived here for many years; in 1941 they sold it to Arthur H. Chickering. Mrs. Gilson returned to Milford, where she died recently over 100 years of age. In 1943 Chickering sold to Henry E. and Clara S. Gunnerson; 1944 to
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George W. Martin and Emma D. Leon; 1946 to Eric B. and Vera Lund- berg (dealer in scientific books); 1959 to John Kolvoord.
The early history of this house is obscure. On the 1858 map there is a house on the east side of the highway, a bit to the north, which at that time belonged to E. Hall. That may have been the original Russell house. It is not clear whether the Russells had built the big house or whether Ezra Hall built it. Mrs. Gilson gleaned the following bits of information from neighbors, particularly Mrs. Josiah Batchelder, who was Ezra Hall's daughter Almira.
"The big brick house was originally only the brick section, with a small ell on the southwest, I think in stage coach days. We were told that the bricks were made across the road. The manner in which the bricks were laid and the moulder bricks at the base of the house walls has been interesting to persons who have made a study of construction.
"One of the Hall sons, who lived in the west and was, I believe, a railroad man, called and wanted to see the northeast room on the first floor. He told us that was the bar-room and said change used to be lost between floor board cracks and when a small boy he used to go down a trap door and pick up the change. In the window cas- ing of this room in the northeast window can be seen grooves where the wood was worn by the chair posts when tipped back. We did not have new casings made, when the eight windows were cut down a foot, thinking it was an interesting part of the history of the house. The cellar is not deep under this northeast room.
"When the Cheshire Railroad was built in 1847 the long addition was built. Men working on the railroad construction were fed here, much of the cooking done in the basement, large brick ovens and set kettles being used. A beautifully built dish closet with the name E. Hall plainly stamped on it is now in our possession.
"On the third floor the large hall with raised section for the musicians and the built-in benches is interesting. This hall was used for dances until about the time the Halls left town. We were told the hall was also used for Masonic meetings. One of their emblems could be found on the west wall as long as we lived there.
"It is also of interest to know that the Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of New Hampshire held services in the southeast room for a group interested in organizing before Mr. Bridge built the Episcopal Church. They appreciated the Gilson invitation for a meeting place.
"Old residents told us that it was not unusual to have several Concord coaches in the yard and there was stable room for many horses.
"There was evidence of five fire-places. Many of the floor boards are about three feet wide and were cut from the old growth pine trees on the lot which was situated on the crossroad, connecting with the river road.
"For years a hollow-log watering trough has been located opposite the house where the never-failing water supply has refreshed the weary traveler and his horse and in time of drought has furnished the entire neighborhood their supply. A mineral spring in the edge of the woods on the crossroad at the right after crossing the railroad track was considered to have medicinal value and people used to go to this spring to fill their jugs."
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268. MAURICE E. ROBBINS: In 1952 Robbins bought a house lot south of #267. The north house he built in 1960 and lives here. He is a carpenter.
269. CLIFFORD A. FOSTER: The south one of the two houses Robbins built and occupied, selling in 1959 to the present owner and his wife Ethel E., who has since died.
270. RENSE A. KOLVOORD-OLD SETTLER BOOKSHOP: Sometime prior to 1770 William Smeed bought from Benjamin Bellows a strip between Boggy Meadow Farm and Andrew Spear's land 135 rods wide from the river to the 3rd Range. Of the land next to the east he sold the north part in 1784 to Jeduthan Russell; 1786 land next south (551/4 acres) to Aquila Russell; 1792 to Aaron Allen.
According to AH these Allens ". .. were Baptists in religious views, and consequently very little can be gathered from the church records in town, for they had no sympathy with the church here." In 1800 James Allen, probably son of Aaron Allen on the River Road, had a mill on the brook not far from what were later the Smalley buildings, on land belonging to Aaron Allen. In 1802 Aaron Allen (gentleman) sold to James Allen (husbandman) the land (45 acres) where the Old Settler Bookshop is now. "He was a mechanic and had a shop near by his house on the sand knoll where he made wheels for woolen and linen."
In 1813 James deeded the farm to Ariel (Royal) Allen with the agree- ment that the deed would stay in force as long as Ariel provided for his Hon. Father James Allen and sister Lydia Allen good and sufficient victuals, drink, clothing, washing, lodging, comfortable house room and necessary fires suitable to their several situations together with necessary doctoring and nursing during their natural lives and at their decease give them decent burial. This agreement was made November 20, 1813, and James died eight days later, aged 73 years. His wife had died Feb- ruary 2, 1812 aged 62 years. There is no other mention of Lydia.
In the Cheshire Gazette, February 10, 1826, Ariel Allen advertised as follows: "The subscriber offers for private sale a convenient farm situated in Walpole, three miles south of the village, half a mile south of Dun- shee's Mills and about half a mile from Connecticut River. Said farm contains 52 acres of land divided into commodious pasturing, ploughing and mowing lots, together with woodland, a house 30 x 40, a barn of the same dimensions and other outbuildings thereon." On February 20th he sold the farm to his nephews John and William Dunshee and removed to Osselock, New York.
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In 1828 William sold his half to John; 1857 Lewis H. (son of John) and Caroline M. Dunshee to Charles R. Hall of Westminster, Vt .; 1871 John D. Richardson (heir of Hall?) to Henry H. Fletcher; 1899 to Alice (Mrs. William, his daughter-in-law) Fletcher; 1903 the house on the east side and the barn on the west side of highway with some land to Marcella Mellish; 1918 to Mary J. Grenier; 1921 to Edwin W. Royce. He moved to Mt. Holly, Vt., and made over the property to the town to pay for care during his illness; in 1931 Louise E. Baker (widow) acquired the property and sold it in 1943 to the present owners from Windsor, Vt.
While the Fletchers owned the property, they had a meat market in the basement and a barn and a slaughter-house on the west side of the road. Kolvoord, who operates the Old Settlers' Bookshop here, has added to the house. The buildings on the west side of the road are gone.
271. GALEN TIFFANY: This was not a farm unit until about 1814. Samuel Martin had then bought from Ariel Allen and Amos Graves two plots totalling 12 acres; 1815 to Alvan Fletcher; 1817 to Edward Watkins. In 1821 Alfred Flint of Westmoreland (did he inherit from Watkins?) sold the land with buildings to Leonard Stone (Phebe); 1822 to John Turner; 1833 to Joel Aldrich; 1837 to Levi Burt, who built the present house in 1868-70 at a cost of $3379.14; the barn in 1878 for $1087.82; and the shop in 1838 for $147.28. This was probably a cobbler's shop, judging by the scraps of leather and pegs that have been found around the premises. Grenier used it as a barber shop.
Burt was quite a carpenter. In the ell of the house, upstairs, he had a dance hall. The ceiling went up into the peak of the roof from which there were hanging lamps, one still remaining. More recently a stairway has been put up to the middle of this hall, and a room partitioned off at the south end.
The place remained in the Burt family until 1933, when it was sold after the death of Mary Jane Grenier (daughter of Levi Burt) to Guy E. and May E. Blood of Grafton, Vt .; 1937 to George and Galen Tiffany.
272. GALEN TIFFANY-CELLARHOLE OPPOSITE TIFFANY HOUSE: This place included land in the west end of Lots #8 and #9 in the 3rd Range and land between there and Route 12. It is possible that Aquilla Russell built the house about 1800. AH says he ". . . married Abigail, daughter of William Glazier, and had eight children, which number he deemed not sufficient for a poor man, but adopted two more . . . "; 1808 to Eli Rus- sell; to Lydia, widow of John Graves Jr. She made over the place the
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same day to her youngest son, Amos, but he leased to her for one kernel of wheat as annual rent; 1810 to Jeduthan Russell; 1815 to Samuel Mar- tin; 1823 to Enoch Gale (hence the name, the Gale Lot); 1826 to Israel Fletcher. Though there was still a house here in 1858, it was probably gone by 1872. It is now a part of the Tiffany place and the cellarhole has been filled recently.
"At one time Hannah Fletcher (Luke) lived in a little one-story house that stood some fifty rods south of Henry Fletcher's (Old Settler Bookshop). (Probably cellarhole #272.) She is said to have been intellectually vigorous. She got into some controversy at one time with one Bailey, a Baptist clergyman living in Westmoreland, on some religious points, and wrote a long disquisition in the form of a dialogue, defending her position, and got Henry Fitch to revise it for publication; but the cost of publica- tion was not within her means, and it never took form in printer's ink-a great dis- appointment to many of her friends."
273. RAYMOND L. FLETCHER: On December 31, 1781, Jonathan Fletcher bought 40 acres of land from Benjamin Bellows for £100,
" .. . built himself a cabin in the wilderness and lived on the same place 73 years, where he died having attained to the unusual age of 100 years 5 months 4 days. He was in build a slender man, rather undersized, with a thin chest and somewhat stoop- ing in carriage towards the close of life. He was out a short time in the Revolutionary struggle but never in any engagement. He was industrious when it was day, frugal in expenditure, temperate in habits, unobtrusive in demeanor, kind in his family and cheerful in disposition.
"He voted at every presidential election, and was punctual at town meetings, and in later years was honored with a seat in the desk, near the town officials, on account of impaired hearing. He was fond of reading and read much, having read the Bible through 29 times in 27 years, as he told his son. Watts' hymns were frequently read and from some of them he derived much consolation. He retained his faculties, with the exception of hearing, to the last, and was as well as usual the day before lie died. In the evening, while the family were unconscious of any special change, he calmly, peacefully and without a struggle passed away."
He was succeeded on the place by his son Israel who added to the farm; 1872 heirs to Jonathan C. Fletcher. After her husband's death, Mrs. Jonathan Curtis Fletcher became acquainted with Rev. Daniel Fox who was living at the Churches over on the Wentworth Road, where she went to help in the work. They were married and lived on Middle Street.
In 1908 Mrs. Fox and Mrs. Seward (daughter) sold the farm to Mary Jane Grenier; 1921 to Joseph A. Plant; 1928 to William H. Fletcher; 1935 heirs to Raymond Fletcher, another heir and son.
The original house, similar to that of Allen Holmes on Wentworth
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Road, stood so close to the railroad that one could reach out of the window with a broom and touch a passing train. It burned on October 5, 1913 when Higgins, an employee of Grenier, resided here. Grenier built the present house for Charles and Jennie Ramsay, but they never lived here. Galen Tiffany works the land of this farm.
The original line between Walpole and Westmoreland may have been the north line of the Burt farm on the River Road. In 1781 a road was surveyed from the road on the north side of Jonathan Hall's land to the Westmoreland Road, the south terminus being about at Galen Tif- fany's #271, in line with the old Burt line on the River Road. There are numerous references to this "Westmoreland Road", but no record of its having been built. Perhaps Westmoreland built it early, but didn't keep it up after it became a part of Walpole.
274. CELLARHOLE AND OLIVER SMITH: Sometime prior to 1800 Benjamin Bellows sold the 42 acres next south of #273 to Samuel Wiers and Moses Burt, who owned land on the River Road. After Samuel Wiers died, his son John sold the south 21 acres to John Marshall (1806 and 1811). This included the site of the Philip Lock house in 1788 near the northwest corner of the Robert Wier farm (see Wentworth Road); 1819 to David Clark; 1834 to Benjamin Floyd. Joseph Schneff is said to have occupied this house. There was no house here on the 1858 map. The house stood in the field below the overpass near the red gate, well down toward the old grade crossing, three or four rods west of the railroad. This was near the northwest corner of Lot #11 in the 3rd Range. Many of the stones from the foundations of this house were carted away to be used in the Smalley barn. In 1888 Joseph Schneff sold land here to John Blanchard; 1907 to Charles E. Seward; 1945 to George B. Tiffany, to Galen G. Tif- fany; 1961 Oliver and Patricia Smith bought land here and are building a house on the north side of the new crossroad.
275. CELLARHOLE UNDER HIGHWAY: The north part of the lot (see #274) Moses Burt kept, except for a corner on the west side of the road, one- quarter of an acre, which he sold in 1816 to Adolphus and Cynthia Fletcher, who were probably related to Jonathan Fletcher. They may have built a house and resided here; about 1817, they sold to Thomas Russell. When Thomas died in 1845, he left to his son, Thomas Jr. ". . . the dwelling house and land where he now lives, it being the same land I purchased of Adolphus Fletcher ... also proceeds of one cow I let him have; also one cooking stove he now has in his possession. . . . "
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That same year the Cheshire Railroad paid damages of $200 to Thomas Russell. Compared to other damages paid in the neighborhood, this was a large amount considering the size of the plot, but it probably ruined the location for a home. In December, Thomas sold to his brother David; 1848 to Israel Fletcher; 1867 heirs to Levi Burt the one-eighth of an acre west of the railroad "being same lot on which house in which Thomas Russell formerly lived stood." The house is not shown on the 1858 map, so it must have been gone before that.
This north part of the original lot is known as the Gates Lot.
The last remains of the cellarhole with its rose bushes were covered by the fill for the overpass.
276. FRANK KAY: According to the land records, Benjamin H. Floyd bought in 1798 40 acres of the west end of Lot #11 in 3rd Range from Stephen Holman, and 20 acres to the west from Benjamin Bellows. There are indications that he was here earlier. As early as 1800, he had a black- smith shop on the west side of the road and north of the Genzer crossroad. His first house seems to have stood west of the shop, with a barn opposite on the south side of the road. Benjamin H. Floyd died in 1815. Floyd built the present house #276.
Mrs. Benjamin H. Floyd (Elizabeth) later married David Aldrich; 1863 to her daughter Eliza, who willed about 1887 to Joseph Schnepf, a German; 1888 to John Blanchard; 1907 to Charles E. Seward; 1928 the buildings and a small amount of land to William Earl Geoghegan of New York City; 1934 to Mary Hughes Geoghegan; 1934 to Clark A. and Emma L. Kathan.
In 1949 the Kathans sold a lot to Frank and Lura M. Kathan Kay south of the family home, where they built a house.
In 1936 Elmore Kathan (Joan E.) bought from Arthur H. Chickering Jr. 20 acres on the west side of the then Route 12, out of what had been Floyd land; 1952 to Earl and Elizabeth Kathan, who built a house; 1958 all but the house lot to Charles A. Blackwell. The house is now owned by Earl Kathan.
In 1960, after the death of Clark A. Kathan, the home place went to Frank and Lura Kay, with reservation of life use to Emma Kathan.
277. GENZER CELLARHOLE: In 1788 it was voted: "to open a road through Robert Wiers' (on Wentworth Road) to road by Samuel Wiers' " (River Road). There was no survey. In 1801 a road was laid from the (Old Set- tler Bookshop) south to (Kathan's), then westerly some 115 rods, then
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southerly down over the bank to Houghton Brook to Lock's sawmill and gristmill, on the east line of the old Holmes farm. In 1817 the road was continued westerly along the top of the bank to the River Road. Near the west end of the road, the course has been completely washed out. On the north side of this old road, in the southeast corner of Sawyer's big field at the top of a sandbank, there is the old Genzer cellarhole, nicely walled. It is small, and lilacs grow nearby.
In 1800 John Martin bought 70 acres here. In 1815 he was living in a house on the north side of the crossroad, where the 1801 road turned down the bank, west of the Genzer cellarhole. His property included the mills on the brook, later Philip Lock's, then Samuel Martin's, and still later John Wiers' (gone by 1816). In 1815 Martin sold to Jonas Stickney; he to Adolphus Fletcher, who acquired a good part of the Martin hold- ings; 1819 to James Hooper; 1821 to John Dunshee; 1822 to Levi Lyman. The old Martin house was probably gone. In 1853 Lyman sold to Joseph and Francis Jonkers (or Zonkers or Zankers); 1855 to Lorenz Genzer (Frederika); 1896 widow made it over to the town for past and future support; 1897 to Jessie L. Chickering; 1900 to Lovisa J. Chickering; 1910 to Arthur H. Chickering; to Arthur Jr. as a part of the Holmes farm. The Genzer house was taken down and put up again in Westmoreland, then moved again when Rt. 12 was changed. It now stands east of Skunk's Misery on south side of highway.
278. DOG ISLAND: Benjamin Bellows sold 50 acres abutting the 3rd Range to Increase Blake in 1785 (Floyd owned property to the north then). He sold in 1807. In 1809, after belonging to Bellows & Grant, Archelaus Temple, and David Mack, half of the property came to Lemuel Blan- chard; in 1814 Ebenezer Ash owned it; 1817 to Matthew Dickey; 1821 to John Messenger; 1821 to Stephen Britton Jr. It remained in the Britton family until Stephen G. sold it in 1854 to Joseph Sponsel; 1857 to John Sponsel (Magdalena); 1860 to Solon Chickering (Daphne); 1861 to Henry K. White (Rachel) of Westmoreland; 1864 to Warren Burr (Sarah); 1868 to Charles B. Hall; 1887 to Alma Hawks; 1908 her widower William to Everett L. Houghton, having removed to Kirkland, New York; 1908 to Margaret J. Aldham (Herbert); 1913 to William A. Miller of Orange, Mass .; 1914 to A. Foster Hamilton; 1915 to George W. Smith; 1921 to Horace Holbrook, reserving to Charles H. Slade the lumber (Tom Graves and Harold Elkins hauled the logs to Slade's Mill in winter of 1922); 1927 heirs of Holbrook to Arthur Chickering; 1955 to Samuel Jr. and Arthur Chickering as part of Holmes place on the River Road.
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The buildings are all gone. The house, which had become dilapidated, was taken down and the good part used by Ruth Chickering Baldwin to build the house in Westmoreland near the depot.
The property was bought in 1956 by O. Tubio Giovannangeli and Stanley R. Payne, the gravel used for the new Rt. 12.
WENTWORTH ROAD (IN 1783 KNOWN AS QUEEN ANNE ROAD)
279. AGNES BUNKER-CELLARHOLE-LOT #4 IN 4TH RANGE: In 1773 Moses Brown, husbandman, for £80 sold to Benjamin Bellows the 53 acres on the east side of Wentworth Road, "land I now live on". The cellarhole and well are still here. This was willed to his daughter Abigail (married Hunt first, then Richardson-see Bellows Gen., pp. 77-81). On the south side of this lot there was in 1781 a road from the meeting house to Went- worth Road. Theodore Bellows had that part of the lot on the west side of Wentworth Road.
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