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- : Examples of Holyoke churches, the Sacred Heart Church , the Catholic parish which gave the Churchill neighborhood its namesake; the Second Baptist Church, used by other Evangelical groups, presently vacant; St. Patrick's Chapel of St. Jerome's Parish; the First Lutheran Church, identified by its preceding building as the German Lutheran Church; United Congregational Church of Holyoke, before the addition of Skinner Chapel, formerly known as Second Congregational Church (en)
- Rigali Block at 341-343 High Street; built by fruit store owner Louis Regali in 1887, and designed by George P. B. Alderman, it was later sold to Caesar Equi who operated his store there in the 20th century . Equi's would be the first such store to operate in the city with its own soda fountain, selling its own ice cream (en)
- Mater Dolorosa Parish , Pulaski Park , and the old Polish Ward One neighborhood in 1937, prior to its redevelopment in the late 20th century; a 1942 Holyoke Gas & Electric ad for Mazda lamps in Polish, from Gwiazda, The Polish Weekly Star (en)
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- Sacred Heart Church in 19th century, Holyoke, Massachusetts.png (en)
- First Lutheran Church .JPG (en)
- Holyoke Gas & Electric, Polish Advertisement .png (en)
- Rigali Block, Holyoke, Massachusetts.jpg (en)
- Second Baptist Church Holyoke.JPG (en)
- Jewish History Exhibit For 75th Anniversary Of Holyoke (1948), taken from Holyoke Transcript-Telegram negative (en)
- Exterieur van de Second Congregational Church te Holyoke Second Cong. Church , RP-F-2001-7-1059-13.jpg (en)
- Saint Patrick Chapel, Saint Jerome Church, Holyoke, Massachusetts.JPG (en)
- Pulaski Park and old Ward 1 of Holyoke, Massachusetts during Flood of 1936.jpg (en)
- Equi%27s_Store,_Holyoke,_Massachusetts_circa_1910.jpg (en)
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