Visit Blackstone Valley, home of the Industrial Revolution in America

Daggett House

Slater Park, off U.S. 1-A Pawtucket, RI Phone: 401-333-1268

Built in 1685, this colonial period home contains antique furniture and needlework, in addition to china owned by General and Mrs. Nathaniel Greene and the Daggett family. Magnificent collection of colonial pewter used during the Revolutionary War. Open: June-Sept., Sat-Sun 2-5 p.m., and by appointment.

Friends Meeting House

374 Great Road Lincoln, RI Phone: 401-245-5860

New England's oldest meeting house still in use, built in 1703. The Quaker meetings are every Sunday at 10:30 am. Tours by appointment only.

Hannaway Blacksmith Shop

671 Great Road Lincoln, RI Phone: 401-333-1100 ext. 249

This restored blacksmith shop is used for demonstrations. Originally built in the late 19th century. Open April-November, one Sunday per month; for special events; or by appointment.

Historic Union Village

Great Road, Route 146 A North Smithfield, RI

This small village in North Smithfield was the site of the first bank in Northern Rhode Island, opened in 1805. For that reason it was originally named Bank Village. A scenic drive-through or walk-through provides views of numerous privately owned historic homes.

Job Armstrong Store

1181 Main Street, Route 44 Chepachet, RI Phone: 401-568-1866

Home of the Glocester Heritage Society and Visitor Center, this store was built in 1827 and sold dry goods. Now a museum, featuring demonstrations of colonial crafts such as weaving and quilting. Open Sat only, noon-4 pm.

Moshassuck Cemetery

Lonsdale Avenue Central Falls, RI Phone: 401-723-1087

As part of the labor unrest during the Great Depression, the cemetary was the site of a battle between United Textile Workers and the National Guard in 1934. Open year round.

Nine Men's Misery

Edward J. Hayden Library, Diamond Hill Road Cumberland, RI Phone: 401-333-6293

The oldest known monument to veterans in the U.S. Erected in memory of the colonists killed in Pierce's Fight during King Phillips War in 1676. Only one survived. Open Year-round.

North Gate Toll House

Old Louisquisset Pike, Route 246 Lincoln, RI Phone: 401-725-2847

This former toll-gate house was built in 1807 and later became a hotel (after numerous additions). The library here contains many historical documents pertinent to the Blackstone Valley, in addition to a conert hall stage with an unusually decorated curtain and period furnishings. Open for special events and by appointment only.

Pierce Park and Riverwalk

High Street Central Falls, RI Phone: 401-727-7480

An important battle in King Phillips War took place on this site in 1676. The Natives met a colonial army under the command of Captain Michael Pierce, resulting in the deaths of 100 Indians and 70 colonists. The battle was a massacre for the colonists, of whom only one survived. Open year-round, dawn to dusk.

Slater Memorial Park Carousel

Newport Avenue (Route 1A) Pawtucket, RI 02861 Phone: 401-728-0500 ext. 252

The stately grounds of this park include an early carousel by Danish immigrant Charles I. D. Looff. The carousel boasts 42 horses, three dogs, and a lion, camel, and giraffe; they are some of the earliest examples of Looff’swork. Rides are a mere 25 cents. Open during warm weather: Saturday and Sunday, 11 a.m.–5 p.m. Call ahead for changes in hours.

Slater Mill Historic Site

67 Roosevelt Avenue Pawtucket, RI 02862 Phone: 401-725-8638

Open: December, January, and February for scheduled group visits only; December 26-31, 11 a.m.-3 p.m.; March 4-November, Saturday and Sunday, 11 a.m.-3 p.m.

Site of several colonial structures, including Slater Mill (1793), birthplace of American industry, the Sylvanus Brown House (1758), and Wilkinson Mill (1810), home to an authentic 19th century machine shop. The site also features a eight-ton working water wheel, constructed in 1826, and regular demonstrations of early textile machinery, hand-spinning, and weaving. Cost: Adults $9; seniors (65 and older), $8; children age 6-12, $7.

Slatersville Village Green

Off Route 146 North Smithfield, RI

Slatersville is one of the country's oldest mill villages, and this typical New England village green is surrounded by a meeting house and numerous homes from the 17th and 18th centuries. Open year-round.

Smith-Appleby House

220 Stillwater Road Smithfield, RI Phone: 401-231-7363

A restored farmhouse, built in 1696, is a 12-room structure near Georgiaville Pond and is registered on the National Register of Historic Places. Tours by appointment only, May 1-December 30.

Swamp Meadow Covered Bridge

Central Pike, over Hemlock Brook Foster, RI

The only remaining covered bridge in Rhode Island, this bridge was completed in 1994 and is a reproduction of an early 19th century covered bridge. The lumber for the bridge was donated and cut from local forests.

Town House

180 Howard Hill Road Foster, RI Phone: 401-392-9200

This is the oldest town house in the nation. It's still in use today for town meetings--a form of democracy started in New England and still in use throughout most of the region. Tours by appointment only.

Western Hotel

Route 7, 610 Douglas Pike Burrillville, RI Phone: 401-568-6253

Built as a hotel in 1774, this site also was a boarding house, tavern, and a stage coach stop. The second floor contained a dance hall and a stage.

White Mill Park

Route 100 Pascoag, RI Phone: 401-568-4300

The mill on this site was finished in 1834. The original structure burned to the ground, and rebuilt in 1895. Fine example of the 19th century water-powered mills that formed the backbone of the New England economy more than a century ago.

William Blackstone Monument

Broad Street Cumberland, RI Phone: 401-334-7773

Memorial to Reverend William Blackstone, an Anglican priest who settled in Rhode Island in 1635--the first European to do so. The memorial is on the site thought to be Blackstone's grave.

Arnold House

487 Great Road Lincoln, RI Phone: 401-728-9696

Open year round, Saturdays and Sundays;
tours on the hour, 11 a.m.-5 p.m.

In 1693, Eleazer Arnold built his imposing house along the Great Road. Two stories high, with a pilastered chimney, the home dominated the modest dwellings of nearby farmers. With its massive chimney end wall, the house is a rare survivor of a building type known as a stone ender. Visitors find evidence of 17th-century construction methods, 18th-century additions, 19th-century graffiti, and 20th-century preservation.
Admission: $5; seniors, $4; students and children, $2.50.

Bridgeton Car Barn

Bridgeton Square Burrillville, RI Phone: 401-568-0247

Built in 1902 to house electric cars then used as a major means of mass transit. The cars stopped running in 1928. Open year round.

Brown and Hopkins Country Store

1179 Putnam Pike, Route 44 Chepachet, RI Phone: 401-568-4830

While the building was built in 1799, the store itself began operating in 1809 and has continued, uninterrupted, to the present day. Visitors can find a large assortment of country goods, gourmet groceries, antiques, refreshments, and penny candy.

City Hall

169 Main Street Woonsocket, RI Phone: 401-767-9205

19th century building, originally founded as the Harris Institute. In 1860, Abraham Lincoln campaigned for the presidency on this spot. Open: Mon-Fri, 8:30 am-4 pm.

Cogswell Tower

Broad Street Central Falls, RI Phone: 401-727-7480

Site of an Indian observation point in use during King Phillips War in 1676. The tower was built in 1904 as part of the last will and testament of Caroline Cogswell.

Congregation B'Nai Israel

224 Prospect Street Woonsocket, RI Phone: 401-762-3651

This historic synagogue houses stained glass windows created by an understudy of artist Marc Chagall, in addition to a hand-blown chandelier from Milan, Italy. Group tours are available. Open: Mon-Thurs 1:30-5 pm, Fri 12-3:30 pm, Sat-Sun mornings.