No. 6 Is the Town House, built in 1851, by a carpenter architect named Bond of Boston, whom Cheney the Bank Cashier who was popularly supposed to have the most architectural knowledge of any Concord citizen, and was always chosen Chairman of all building Committees, invariably employed, and so the town got a plain brick box with neither beauty nor convenience for the $30,000 they spent. It was poorly finished inside, the chimneys were bad the roof leaky the plastering cheap & the whole arrangement unsuitable for the purpose. AG Fay as Selectman spent over $3000 on it in one year of his Selectmanship in repairs and improvements, and finally after much controversy & many meetings the Town got an addition on the east that made the hall much more acceptable and comfortable. The lower story first a school room is now the Armory.