Erected by the City of Chelsea to commemorate the service of her citizens in the World War and to hereby inscribe forever the names of these, her honored dead — — Map (db m66870) WM
Six hundred feet from this point is the mansion built by Governor Richard Bellingham in 1659, rebuilt and enlarged by Samuel Cary in 1791. Here Washington stationed the last outpost of the left wing of the Continental Army besieging Boston. — — Map (db m48829) HM
[Note: Inscriptions modified from original text for easier reading.]
[Left plaque]
This library building, erected by the Board of Control in 1909 and dedicated to the service of the citizens of Chelsea in 1910, was the gift of . . . — — Map (db m198171) HM
Dedicated November 22, 1931, by the Polish people of Chelsea to General Casimir Pulaski, gallant son of Poland, soldier and patriot, whose sword helped to establish the American Republic and whose devotion to the cause of human freedom was sealed . . . — — Map (db m54233) HM