[2] An iron truss bridge was in place around the turn of the 20th century, replacing a structure that dated to 1846.
[3] The original wooden 1811 NYA school building was removed to the adjacent Bridge Street "just below the residence of the late Charles O. Rowe," the father of William Hutchinson Rowe,[1] roughly where number 28 Bridge Street, built in 1860, is today.
[5] Crossing the river, directly across from the Sparhawk Mill tower is 80 Bridge Street, which was built as the office for the above business in the early 1880s.
[3] The 1840-constructed former home of George G. Loring, built by mill-owner Phillip H. Kimball,[6] stands on the hill overlooking the falls at 100 Bridge Street.
[7] The run-down building at 148 Bridge (at its intersection with Willow Street) has been vacant since the early 2000s.