Palatka South Historic District. Know what matters before you buy.

NRHP-listed 1983 · 23 blocks, 243 historic buildings · ZIP 32177

A 23-block National Register district of 243 historic buildings — Queen Annes, Colonial Revivals and sturdy frame Victorians — bounded by the St. Johns River, Oak, South 9th and Morris Streets, walkable to downtown, the city marina and Riverfront Park, at a fraction of St. Augustine prices.

LocationNRHP-listed 1983ZIP 32177
Price~$200K-$400KTypical historic-home range
HOANoneHOA or CDD
Highlights243Contributing historic buildings
Notes23District blocks
WaterWalkableRiver, marina, downtown
SchoolsPutnam County SchoolsRobert H. Jenkins Jr. MS, Palatka HS
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The Homes

Architecture

Late-1800s to early-1900s stock: Queen Anne and Colonial Revival landmarks alongside the district's signature 2-2.5 story frame dwellings with simple, regular massing.

Condition spread

Everything from museum-grade restorations to honest fixer-uppers — condition, not style, drives price here.

Lots & streets

City lots on a walkable grid with sidewalks and mature trees; bounded by the St. Johns River, Oak, S. 9th and Morris Streets.

Tenure

Fee-simple, owner-occupied core with some investor activity — no HOA, no CDD, city code and historic guidelines only.

Costs & Governance

HOA / CDD

None. Carrying costs are city/county taxes, insurance and the upkeep a century-old house honestly demands.

Incentives

City renovation grant support (up to $50K has been cited for qualified south-district projects) and FHA 203(k) purchase-plus-rehab loans — confirm current programs and eligibility with the City of Palatka before counting on either.

Insurance

The real budget line: age of roof, wiring, plumbing and proximity to the river drive premiums. Get quotes during inspection, not after.

Amenities & Lifestyle

Walkability

Sidewalk distance to downtown shops and restaurants, the city marina and boat ramp, Riverfront Park and the Memorial Bridge boardwalk.

The river

The St. Johns forms the district's eastern boundary — river views on the easternmost blocks, public riverfront steps away for everyone else.

Ravine Gardens

Ravine Gardens State Park — the 1933 WPA-built, azalea-famous ravine park — sits minutes south and is itself NRHP-listed.

Events

Palatka's festival calendar (azaleas in spring, the Blue Crab Festival and more) happens at the district's doorstep.

Location & Nearby

Setting

Immediately south of downtown Palatka along the St. Johns, ZIP 32177 — the county seat of Putnam County.

Nearby

US-17/SR-20/SR-100 converge in town; ~45 minutes to St. Augustine, ~1 hr to Jacksonville's southside, ~50 min to Gainesville.

Hospital

HCA Florida Putnam Hospital is minutes away on the west side of town.

Public schools & ratings

The district zones to Putnam County public schools in Palatka; families here also weigh charter and choice options. Verify current zoning by address — and note that many district buyers are empty-nesters, second-home owners and remote workers for whom walkability outweighs school lines.

SchoolGreatSchoolsLinks
Palatka-area elementary (zoned — verify)Check currentGreatSchools
Robert H. Jenkins Jr. MiddleCheck currentGreatSchools
Palatka High SchoolCheck currentGreatSchools

Putnam district ratings have historically trailed state averages — check current scores and confirm zoning with the district before relying on them.

This is the cheapest genuinely walkable National Register riverfront neighborhood in Northeast Florida — 243 historic buildings across 23 blocks where $200K-$400K still buys a Victorian within strolling distance of a working downtown and the St. Johns. The trade: you are buying a century-old house in a county where insurance and renovation diligence decide whether the bargain is real.

The short version

The South Historic District in one minute: Palatka's river-port wealth built these blocks in the late 1800s; the National Register listed them in 1983; and the market still prices them like a secret — Victorian stock at a fraction of what identical architecture costs 45 minutes east in St. Augustine.

  • 23 blocks, 243 historic buildings, bounded by the St. Johns River, Oak, South 9th and Morris Streets — a defined, finite district
  • Typical historic homes trade roughly $200K-$400K with a district median recently near $249K; trophy restorations and river-view blocks run higher
  • No HOA or CDD — city code and historic-district guidelines are the rulebook
  • City renovation-grant support (up to $50K has been cited for qualified projects) plus FHA 203(k) loans make fixers financeable — confirm current programs
  • Sidewalk access to downtown, the city marina and boat ramp, Riverfront Park and the Memorial Bridge boardwalk
  • Ravine Gardens State Park — the WPA-built azalea showpiece — is minutes south
  • Insurance on century-old frame houses is the make-or-break budget line; quote it during inspection
Quick verdict: is Palatka South Historic District right for you?

Great if you want

  • Real Victorian architecture at working-class prices
  • Walkable to downtown, marina and riverfront — rare in NE Florida
  • Defined NRHP district protects streetscape character
  • No HOA/CDD; grant and 203(k) paths for renovators
  • Festival-town energy and a state park around the corner

Look elsewhere if you want

  • Century-old systems: wiring, plumbing, roofs need real diligence
  • Insurance premiums can rival small mortgages if unmanaged
  • Block-by-block condition variance — walk before you fall in love
  • Putnam school ratings historically below state average
  • Appreciation depends on Palatka's slower-burn revival
Project houses
~$120K-$220K

Solid bones, dated or distressed systems. The 203(k)-and-grant play — buy under market, finance the restoration, surface real equity.

Fixers · renovation financing
Move-in historic
~$220K-$350K

Updated kitchens, serviceable systems, character intact. The volume market for owner-occupants who want walkability without a project.

Updated · owner-occupant core
Showpieces & river blocks
~$350K-$500K+

Full restorations, Queen Anne landmarks and the easternmost blocks with river proximity. The district's ceiling — still below a St. Augustine entry point.

Restored · near-river premium

Bands reflect recent district listing behavior, not appraisals — condition and block move homes across them. Ask us for the live district sheet.

Recently sold in Palatka South Historic District

List prices tell you what sellers want. Closed sales tell you what buyers actually paid. We pull the verified recent solds for the exact homes and views you are weighing.

Fixer · interior block
3 bed · project condition
Sold price $100s-$200s
🔒 Unlock the real number
Updated · mid-district
3-4 bed · move-in
Sold price $200s-$300s
🔒 Unlock the real number
Restored · near river
4 bed · showpiece
Sold price $300s-$500s
🔒 Unlock the real number
Want the verified closed prices for the exact homes you care about in Palatka South Historic District?
See What Buyers Actually Paid →
DestinationApprox. distanceApprox. drive
Downtown Palatka / Riverfront Parkwalkable2-10 min on foot
City marina & boat rampwalkable5-10 min on foot
Ravine Gardens State Park~1 mi~3-5 min
HCA Florida Putnam Hospital~2-3 mi~6-8 min
St. Augustine~28 mi~45 min
Gainesville~45 mi~50-55 min
Jacksonville (southside)~55 mi~1 hr+

Drive times assume normal traffic; the Memorial Bridge and US-17 carry the regional flows.

Remote workers and St. Augustine-priced-out buyers are the growth story here — walkable river-town life with city runs under an hour.

~$249K
Recent district median list
$200K-$400K
Typical historic-home range
243
Historic buildings in 23 blocks
Up to $50K
Cited city reno grant (confirm)
● verify current program
Price tiers
Project houses
~$120K-$220K
Move-in historic
~$220K-$350K
Showpieces / river blocks
~$350K-$500K+
Bars show relative district bands from recent listing behavior — condition dominates pricing here more than in any subdivision.

Sources: recent district listing data and area buyer guides. Comp carefully: a restored sale two blocks over may say nothing about your fixer.

Want the real Palatka South Historic District comps and a full carrying-cost read, not a Zestimate?
Get Real Comparable Sales →

The 60-Second Overview

When Palatka was a river port and winter-resort town in the late 1800s, its merchants and captains built south of downtown — and those 23 blocks survived intact enough that the National Register listed the Palatka South Historic District in 1983. Within its boundaries — the St. Johns River, Oak, South 9th and Morris Streets — stand 243 historic buildings: Queen Anne and Colonial Revival landmarks among the district's signature two-story frame houses with their simple, honest massing.

What makes the district matter to buyers in 2026 is the arithmetic. The same architecture that costs $700K-$1M+ in historic St. Augustine trades here for $200K-$400K, with a recent district median near $249K — in a neighborhood where the marina, Riverfront Park, the Memorial Bridge boardwalk and a working downtown are sidewalk trips. There is no HOA and no CDD; the rulebooks are city code and the historic guidelines that protect the streetscape.

You are not buying a house here. You are buying an 1890s building, a walkable river town, and a renovation thesis — price all three.

The honest catches: these are century-old frame houses, so wiring, plumbing, roofs and insurance decide whether a bargain is real; Putnam school ratings trail the state; and the district's appreciation story depends on Palatka's downtown revival continuing its slow burn. For buyers who underwrite those facts instead of ignoring them, this is the best walkable-historic value in Northeast Florida.

The Real Cost Stack: Insurance, Systems and the Grant Math

No dues, no CDD — so the district's cost stack hides in the building itself and the policies that protect it.

Insurance is the decider. Premiums on historic frame construction swing dramatically with roof age, updated wiring and plumbing, and elevation near the river. On an unrenovated house, insurance can rival a small mortgage payment; on a documented, updated one, it normalizes. We insist clients get binding quotes during inspection — a beautiful house you cannot affordably insure is not a bargain.

The incentive layer is real but conditional. City renovation-grant support — figures up to $50,000 have been cited for qualified south-district projects — plus FHA 203(k) purchase-and-rehab financing can turn a $180K project house into a $350K home with manageable cash in. Programs change and eligibility is specific: confirm the current grant offering with the City of Palatka before underwriting around it.

The honest math: price any district home three ways — as-is value, insurance-adjusted carrying cost, and post-renovation value net of realistic construction numbers. If the deal only works in the third column, you are buying a project, not a house. That is fine — as long as you know it.

Taxes are Putnam-modest, and the absence of dues means your reserves are self-managed. Budget like the building is 130 years old, because it is.

Want the full cost picture on a district home? We will pull permits, ballpark insurance with local agents, and run the three-column math with you.

Run the cost picture

The District: 23 Blocks, Read Block by Block

The National Register boundary is precise — river to Oak to South 9th to Morris — but the experience varies block by block. The easternmost streets carry the river-proximity premium and the strongest restoration activity. The core blocks hold the deepest Victorian stock. The western and southern edges mix historic homes with infill and more deferred maintenance — which is exactly where the project-house opportunities cluster.

Walk it before you buy — at different hours. The district rewards block-level knowledge: two streets apart can mean different conditions, different neighbors and a different thesis. The constant everywhere is the grid itself: sidewalks, mature trees, porches addressing the street, and the river always a few minutes east on foot.

Around the edges sit the anchors: downtown's shops and restaurants north, the marina and Riverfront Park east, and Ravine Gardens State Park — the WPA's 1933 azalea masterpiece, NRHP-listed in its own right — minutes south. Festival weekends (azaleas in spring, blue crabs in early summer) put the whole town on the district's doorstep.

Want the block-by-block read? We will walk the district with you and tier every street honestly.

Walk the district

The Homes: 243 Buildings, No Two Alike

The district's signature is the 2-to-2.5-story frame dwelling of the late nineteenth century — simple plan, generous porch, heart-pine bones — punctuated by showpiece Queen Annes and Colonial Revivals. Originality varies: some houses keep their windows, siding and floor plans; others carry decades of well-meaning remuddling that a restoration can reverse.

Price tracks condition in three tiers. Project houses (roughly $120K-$220K) need systems and sweat — the grant-and-203(k) play. Move-in historic (roughly $220K-$350K) is the owner-occupant core: updated enough to insure and finance conventionally, character intact. Showpieces and the river blocks (roughly $350K-$500K+) are the ceiling — full restorations whose sellers can document every system.

The inspection list is its own discipline: roof age, knob-and-tube wiring, galvanized plumbing, sills and foundations, termite history. We scope historic-literate inspectors for clients — a standard new-build checklist misses what matters in 1890s construction.

The Renovation Math: Grant + 203(k), Played Straight

The district's most interesting trade is the financed restoration. The pieces: a project house bought under $200K; an FHA 203(k) loan wrapping purchase and renovation into one mortgage at 3.5% down for qualifying credit; and the city's renovation-grant support where a project qualifies. Stacked carefully, a buyer with modest cash controls a full restoration that appraises well above all-in cost.

Played straight, three rules apply. First, verify the grant before you count it — funding cycles and criteria change, and only the City of Palatka's current answer matters. Second, bid the construction realistically: historic restoration runs over time and over budget when scoped optimistically, and 203(k) draws demand discipline. Third, protect insurability — sequence roof, wiring and plumbing first, because they unlock the policy that unlocks everything else.

Thinking about the restoration play? We will model a real project with current program guidance, local contractor reality and honest comps.

Model my project

Schools: Check Current, and Know the Buyer Pool

District homes zone to Putnam County schools in Palatka — Jenkins Middle and Palatka High among them — and the county's ratings have historically run below state averages. Families should pull current GreatSchools numbers and confirm zoning by address, and weigh the charter and choice options Palatka parents actually use. It is equally honest to note who buys here: a large share of district purchasers are empty-nesters, restorers, second-home owners and remote workers, for whom the walkable river town is the point and school lines are not the binding constraint.

Schools in your equation? We will pull current ratings and zoning for any address — and tell you what local families actually do.

Get the school picture

What It Is Actually Like to Live Here

Porch culture, river light, festival weekends, and neighbors who know the history of your house better than you do. What new owners ask us most:

Is downtown actually usable day to day?

Increasingly yes — restaurants, coffee, the riverfront and events cover the daily-pleasure layer, while big-box runs go to the US-17 corridor minutes away. It is a working small downtown, not a boutique district — and improving each year.

How is safety in the district?

Block-dependent, like most revival districts. Owner-occupied blocks are stable and tight-knit; transitional edges deserve evening walk-throughs before you commit. We talk specifics street by street rather than averages.

Can I run a short-term rental?

Some owners do, and festival demand exists — but verify current City of Palatka rules before underwriting STR income. We will pull the current ordinance position for any address.

What is the social fabric?

Old-house people: restoration advice flows over fences, the historical society is active, and the festival calendar does the rest. If you want neighbors who care about your porch brackets, you have found them.

The Five Expensive Mistakes Buyers Make Here

Historic-district mistakes compound, because the fixes are regulated and the buildings do not forgive shortcuts.

1

Quoting insurance after closing

On 1890s frame construction, the premium can remake the budget. Binding quotes during inspection — non-negotiable.

2

Underwriting the grant before verifying it

Cited programs change with funding cycles. The city's current written answer is the only number that belongs in your math.

3

Comping across condition tiers

A restored sale does not price your fixer, and vice versa. Condition-adjusted comps only — the spread between tiers is six figures.

4

Inspecting like it is a 2005 house

Knob-and-tube, galvanized lines, sill rot and termite history hide from standard checklists. Use historic-literate inspectors.

5

Planning exterior changes without the guidelines

Windows, siding and additions go through district review. Designing first and asking later costs months and money.

Buying in the district? We run all five checks before you are emotionally committed.

Run the five checks

Block Quality: What Moves Price in the District

Same architecture, different blocks, different money. The tiers we see in practice, best to entry-level.
Easternmost blocks — river proximity, restored streetscapes
Core district blocks — deep Victorian stock, stable
Transitional edges — mixed condition, upside plays
Heavy-project houses — systems gone, thesis required

Relative value illustration from observed district behavior, not an appraisal scale — individual condition moves homes sharply between tiers.

Wondering where a specific house sits? Send the address — we will tier it honestly with the comps to back it.

Tier this house

The District Buyer Checklist

  • Bind insurance quotes during inspection. Roof, wiring, plumbing documentation in hand first.
  • Verify the city grant program in writing. Current funding, criteria and process — from the city, not a blog.
  • Use condition-adjusted comps only. Tier the house, then comp inside the tier.
  • Hire a historic-literate inspector. Scope for 1890s frame construction explicitly.
  • Read the historic guidelines before planning exteriors. Windows and siding decisions live there.
  • Walk the block at night and on a weekend. Block-level reality beats district averages.
  • Pull the permit history. What was done right, wrong, or without asking.
  • Confirm STR rules if income matters. Current ordinance position, in writing.
Jon Brooks · Co-Founder, Momentum Realty

I tell clients the South Historic District is the last honest arbitrage in our markets: St. Augustine architecture at Palatka prices, with a riverfront you can walk to. The arbitrage exists because the diligence is real — insurance, systems, block selection — and most buyers will not do it.

Do it, and you own something genuinely scarce: a National Register Victorian on a walkable river grid, bought below replacement cost. That is a position, not just a purchase.

The District vs. the Alternatives

District shoppers usually weigh new-build Palatka, other historic districts, and the lake country. The honest comparison:

South Historic DistrictNobles CrossingDavis Shores
Product1880s-1920s VictoriansNew gated Century buildsMid-century island stock
Typical price~$200K-$400KEntry new-construction $200Ks$400Ks-$1M+
WalkabilityDowntown + riverfront on footDrive-everywhereBridge walk to old city
MaintenanceCentury-old systems, real diligenceWarranty-newFlood-zone era stock
Best forRestorers, walkability buyersEasy-button new homeSt. Augustine island life

The verdict: Nobles Crossing wins on zero-maintenance simplicity, Davis Shores wins on St. Augustine address strength — and the district wins whenever architecture, walkability and price per character-foot drive the decision.

Cross-shopping old and new? We will price both paths for your budget, honestly.

Compare my paths

The Honest Pros & Cons

What the district gets right

  • Real Victorian stock at NE Florida's lowest historic prices
  • Walkable downtown, marina and riverfront
  • NRHP protection of the streetscape investment
  • Grant + 203(k) paths for financed restoration
  • No HOA/CDD; fee-simple simplicity
  • Ravine Gardens and the festival calendar next door

What to go in eyes-open about

  • Insurance on old frame houses can remake budgets
  • Century-old systems demand real inspection rigor
  • Block-by-block variance in condition and feel
  • School ratings historically below state average
  • Appreciation tied to Palatka's gradual revival
  • Exterior changes run through district review

Our District Offer Playbook

Thin inventory, wide condition spread — preparation wins. How we run district offers:

  • Tier first, then comp. Condition tier decides the comp set before any number gets written.
  • Offer with insurance reality priced in. Quotes in hand convert to negotiating leverage on systems.
  • Make sellers document systems. Permits and updates surfaced now, not discovered in week three.
  • Sequence renovation financing early. 203(k) and grant timelines run parallel to the contract, not after it.
  • Mine the off-market layer. District owners talk — estate and pre-list opportunities surface through the old-house network.

Questions We Ask Before You Offer

Six questions we put to every district listing — answered before you commit:

  • What is the roof's documented age, and what will an insurer say about it?
  • Wiring and plumbing: what generation, what updates, what permits?
  • Which condition tier is this house, and which comps actually match it?
  • What would the historic guidelines say about the changes you are imagining?
  • What does the block tell us at 8am, 6pm and Saturday night?
  • If the renovation thesis matters, do the grant and 203(k) numbers survive current-program reality?

Is the South Historic District Right for You?

The honest fit test — the district rewards a specific buyer and punishes the wrong one:

Consider elsewhere if you want

  • Warranty-new construction and zero projects
  • Predictably low insurance without homework
  • Top-rated schools as a given
  • HOA-enforced uniformity
  • Suburban retail at the doorstep
  • A hands-off, maintenance-free lifestyle

The district fits if you want

  • Real Victorian architecture you can afford
  • River, marina and downtown on foot
  • A restoration project with financing paths
  • Fee-simple freedom with streetscape protection
  • Old-house neighbors and festival-town life
  • A value thesis on Palatka's revival

Get the inside read on Palatka South Historic District

We know these 23 blocks house by house. Tell us what you are weighing and a Momentum founder will send true condition-adjusted comps, insurance and renovation guidance, and listings before the portals — no pressure, no spam.

We respond personally, usually the same day. Your information is never sold.

You are all set.

A Momentum Realty Palatka South Historic District specialist will reach out personally, usually the same day.

Momentum listings (YTD)
97.98%
Sold-to-list ratio across our markets for our agents, sellers keeping more of their price.
Market average (YTD)
96.73%
The broader metro average sold-to-list ratio over the same period.
Momentum days on market
64 days
Median days on market for our listings, faster sales mean less carrying cost and stronger leverage.
Market days on market
72 days
The broader metro median over the same period.

Sold-to-list and days-on-market figures reflect Momentum Realty listings versus the metro average, year to date. Your home's result depends on pricing, condition, lot, view, and preparation.

Your buyer is probably coming from St. Augustine prices

The district's deepest buyer pool is people priced out of historic St. Augustine who discover the same architecture here for half the money. We market directly into that arbitrage — and we pre-package the systems documentation that keeps their lender comfortable.

What is your Palatka South Historic District home worth?

Get a no-obligation home value based on real comparable sales in Palatka South Historic District matched to your condition, lot, and view, not an automated guess. Tell us about your home and we will personally prepare your numbers and a pricing strategy. No obligation, no spam.

Real comps, not a Zestimate. Prepared personally, never sold.

Thank you.

We will prepare your Palatka South Historic District home value from real comparable sales and reach out personally.

Frequently Asked Questions

What exactly is the Palatka South Historic District?
A 23-block National Register district listed on November 17, 1983, containing 243 historic buildings between downtown Palatka and the St. Johns River — bounded by the river, Oak, South 9th and Morris Streets. It is Palatka's signature concentration of late-1800s and early-1900s architecture.
What do homes cost here?
Most historic homes trade between roughly $200K and $400K, with a recent district median near $249K. Project houses start lower; full restorations and the blocks nearest the river push past $400K. Condition drives price more than style or size.
Is there an HOA?
No HOA and no CDD. The rulebooks are City of Palatka code and historic-district guidelines for exterior changes. Budget your own maintenance reserves — nobody bills you dues, and nobody fixes your porch either.
What is the $50K grant I have heard about?
City renovation-grant support of up to $50,000 has been cited for qualified projects in the south district. Programs, funding and eligibility change — confirm the current offering directly with the City of Palatka before you underwrite a purchase around it, and we will help you ask the right questions.
Can I finance a fixer-upper here?
Yes — FHA 203(k) loans bundle purchase and renovation into one mortgage (3.5% down for qualifying credit), and conventional renovation products exist too. The combination of low entry prices and renovation financing is exactly why investors and first-time restorers target this district.
What does insurance cost on a century-old house?
It varies enormously with the roof's age, updated wiring and plumbing, and elevation. On unrenovated frame houses, premiums can be the deciding budget line. Get binding quotes during your inspection period — we connect buyers with agents who actually write historic Palatka.
Are there restrictions on renovating?
Exterior changes in the district go through historic guidelines — the point is protecting the streetscape that underpins everyone's value. Interiors are generally yours. Plan window, siding and addition decisions with the guidelines in hand; we will walk you through the process.
Is the district walkable in practice?
Genuinely. Downtown shops and restaurants, the city marina and boat ramp, Riverfront Park and the Memorial Bridge boardwalk are all sidewalk trips. It is one of very few NE Florida neighborhoods where river, downtown and home connect on foot.
What is Ravine Gardens?
Ravine Gardens State Park, minutes south of the district — a dramatic ravine park built by the WPA in 1933, famous for its azalea displays and itself listed on the National Register. It anchors Palatka's spring Azalea Festival.
Do homes here have river views?
The easternmost blocks approach the St. Johns and some homes catch views; most of the district trades on river proximity rather than frontage. True riverfront ownership in Palatka is a different (and pricier) search — we cover both.
What about schools?
The district zones to Putnam County schools in Palatka — historically below state averages, so check current ratings and confirm zoning by address. A large share of district buyers are empty-nesters, second-home owners and remote workers for whom walkability is the draw.
Is Palatka actually coming back?
The honest answer: slowly and unevenly, with real momentum downtown and along the riverfront. Buy because the lifestyle and the architecture pencil today — treat district-wide appreciation as the upside case, not the base case.
Who buys in the district?
Restorers and old-house people, St. Augustine-priced-out buyers chasing the same architecture for half the money, remote workers wanting walkable river-town life, and investors running the grant-and-203(k) play on project houses.
What are the big inspection items?
Roof age, knob-and-tube or aluminum wiring, galvanized or polybutylene plumbing, foundation and sill condition on frame construction, and termite history. We scope historic-literate inspectors — a standard checklist inspection misses what matters in 1890s housing.
How does it compare to St. Augustine's historic districts?
Same eras, similar architecture, a working downtown instead of a tourist economy — at roughly a third to half the price. You trade tourist-town amenity density and stronger appreciation history for affordability and a quieter river town.
How do I start?
Tell us your budget and tolerance for renovation. We will send the live district sheet — every active and coming listing, condition-tiered — plus insurance ballparks and current grant/203(k) guidance, and walk the blocks with you.

Weighing other Putnam options or historic alternatives? Start here.

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