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Are you looking for a historic brick property with many rooms to enjoy life in? Then this is the home for you.

Friday Front Porch Feature: The Woolen House

By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff
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HINSDALE, Mass. – Are you looking for a historic brick property with many rooms to enjoy life in? Then this is the home for you.

Our Friday Front Porch is a weekly feature spotlighting attractive homes for sale in Berkshire County. This week, we are showcasing 103 Holmes Road.  

This 1850 home has five bedrooms and two bathrooms with 3,062 square feet and less than an acre of land. The home used to belong to the Woolen Mill superintendent and is now reimagined for modern living. 

The house features wood flooring throughout, as well as fireplaces. The home features original woodwork and 16-inch brick construction. 

The kitchen is brand new with never-used stainless steel appliances, custom cabinetry, and fresh finishes perfect for its new owner who loves to be in the kitchen.

The house has a detached two-car garage and is close to Ashmere Lake and more trails.

The house is on the market for $439,999.

It is listed by Warren Dews Jr. from Keller Williams Realty.

You can find out more about this house on its listing here

*Front Porch Feature brings you an exclusive to some of the houses listed on our real estate page every week. Here we take a bit of a deeper dive into a certain house for sale and ask questions so you don't have to.

 




Tags: Real Estate,   

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Hinsdale Residents Air Policing Concerns During Information Session

By Sabrina DammsiBerkshires Staff
HINSDALE, Mass. — Broken trust, cavalier officials, no faith in the town, and the need for accountability and change were sentiments that bellowed in the town hall on Tuesday during the community information session on the police department organizational analysis. 
 
Eric Daigle, Daigle Law Group principal attorney, stood before more than 30 community members who vociferously criticized the Hinsdale Police Department and public officials' reaction to past incidents. The meeting lasted more than an hour and 40 minutes. 
 
The meeting commenced with Daigle emphasizing that the firm was retained to conduct an organizational analysis, not to investigate the fatal police shooting of 27-year-old Biagio Kauvil during a mental health crisis in January. 
 
Early on in community comments, residents made it clear that the January incident and others are deeply intertwined with the analysis.
 
"This is an organizational study on how the department is operating, where it is, and where it should be, and how they get to those areas. The incident was the catalyst for the town in retaining the consultant," Daigle said. 
 
Although the aim of hiring a consultant was not to investigate the incident, it still needs to be taken into consideration when developing solutions to improve the department, attendees said. 
 
Some attendees emphasized that people do not feel safe calling 911 if they are experiencing a mental health crisis. More often than not, incidents that police are responding to involve people in desperate need of mental health services. 
 
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