By travelguylife.com
One notable structure is the Italian Renaissance-styled Robbins Library (1892), which houses the nation's oldest continually running free children's library.
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The Minuteman Commuter Bikeway connects this green space in Arlington, which is only a short distance from the city centre.
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The Minuteman Commuter Bikeway, which passes through Arlington, closely resembles Paul Revere's infamous Midnight Ride, which he performed to warn the American colonial militia of the arrival of British troops.
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Cyrus Edwin Dallin (1861–1944), a fascinating individual, moved to Arlington in 1900 and lived there for the remainder of his life.
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The fiercest skirmish in the opening engagement of the Revolutionary War took place on April 19, 1775, in the yard and house surrounding it.
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In 1916, using cutting-edge fire-proof building techniques, this iconic entertainment venue in the heart of Arlington was created as a vaudeville stage.
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You'll have a rare chance to see what is thought to be the oldest continually running mill in the United States in Arlington.
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This park is situated on quite a slope, with sports facilities at the top and a playground at the bottom, on former farmland that the well-to-do Robbins family donated to the city.
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This six-screen theatre in a classic movie palace from 1925 is Arlington's major location for the newest Hollywood blockbusters.
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The 65-acre reservoir built in the early 1870s to supply water to Arlignton is located on the border with Lexington.
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