Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

History of Boston

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This diagram shows the original dimension of theShawmut Peninsula. The gray areas marked with the words "New Boston" are the product of the period ofland reclamation that began in 1803, coinciding with the first of the many commodity booms experienced by the city. The area marked Boston Common corresponds to Blaxton's original property.

The writtenhistory ofBoston begins with a letter drafted by the first European inhabitant of theShawmut Peninsula,William Blaxton. This letter is dated September 7, 1630, and was addressed to the leader of the Puritan settlement ofCharlestown,Isaac Johnson. The letter acknowledged the difficulty in finding potable water on that side ofBack Bay. As a remedy, Blaxton advertised an excellent spring at the foot of what is nowBeacon Hill and invited the Puritans to settle with him on Shawmut.

Boston was named and officially incorporated on September 30, 1630 (Old Style). The city quickly became the political, commercial, financial, religious and educational center ofPuritanNew England and grew to play a central role in thehistory of the United States.

When harsh British retaliation for theBoston Tea Party resulted in further violence by the colonists, theAmerican Revolution erupted inBoston. Colonists besieged the British in the city, fighting a famous battle atBreed's Hill in Charlestown on June 17, 1775—a battle lost by the colonists but one that inflicted great damage on British forces. The colonists later won theSiege of Boston, forcing the British to evacuate the city on March 17, 1776. However, the combination of American and British blockades of the town and its port during the conflict seriously damaged the economy, leading to theexodus of two-thirds of its population in the 1770s.

The city recovered after 1800 and re-established its role as the transportation hub for New England with a network of railroads. Beyond a renewed economic success the re-invigorated Boston became the intellectual, educational and medical center of the nation. Along with New York, Boston became the financial center of the United States in the 19th century, and the large amount of capital available for investment there was crucial in funding the expansion of a nationwide railroad.

During and before theCivil War Boston was the launching pad and funding base for many of the country'santi-slavery activities. In the 19th century city politics and society became dominated by a financial elite known as theBoston Brahmins. This entrenched power base squared off against the political challenge of more recent Catholic immigrants for the rest of the 19th century. Wealthy Irish Catholic political dynasties, typified by theKennedy Family, assumed political control of the city by 1900. This control has been substantially maintained for more than a century, however this power has swayed as Boston continues to become more diverse.

The industrial base of the region, financed by Boston capital, reached its zenith around 1950. The city went intodecline after the middle of the 20th century when thousands of textile mills and other factories were closed down as the United States began a long deindustrialization. By the early 21st century the city's economy recovered, moving from an industrial base to one centered on education, medicine, and high technology, especiallybiotechnologystartups. The many towns surrounding Boston became residential suburbs that now house the city's large population ofwhite collar workers.

Indigenous era

[edit]
A map ofBoston andBoston Harbor in 1782; the dotted features are mudflats and salt marshes that were exposed at low tide and unnavigable even at high tide.

Prior toEuropean colonization the region around modern-day Boston was inhabited by theIndigenousMassachusett people. Their habitation consisted of small, seasonal communities along what is now theCharles River. The river was accurately namedQuinobequin in theAlgonquin language of the Massachusett, and they knew it as "the meandering one". The people who lived in the area most likely moved between inland winter homes along the meanders of theCharles and summer communities on the coast. Game was most easily hunted inland during bare-tree seasons while the fishing shoals andshellfish beds on the tidal flats of Boston harbor were more comfortably exploited during the summer months.[1][2][3]

Being surrounded bymudflats andsalt marshes, theShawmut Peninsula itself was more sparsely occupied than its surroundings before the arrival of Europeans. Nevertheless, archeological excavations have revealed one of the oldestfish weirs in New England on Boylston Street. Native people constructed this weir to trap fish as early as 7,000 years beforeEuropean arrival in theWestern Hemisphere.[1][2][4]

TheShawmut Peninsula was originally connected with the mainland to its south by a narrowisthmus,Boston Neck, and was surrounded byBoston Harbor andBack Bay, anestuary of theCharles River.[5] This neck of land was surrounded by infill beginning in 1803 and expanded to dozens of times its original width by the turn of the 20th century.

Foundation by Europeans

[edit]

Blaxton Era (1624–1630)

[edit]

The first European to live in what would become Boston wasWilliam Blaxton. He was directly responsible for the foundation of Boston by Puritan colonizers in 1630. Blaxton had joined the failedFerdinando Gorges expedition to America in 1623, which never landed. He eventually arrived later in 1623, as a chaplain to the subsequent expedition of Ferdinando's son,Robert Gorges, aboard the shipKatherine. This expedition landed inWeymouth, Massachusetts, five miles south of what is now Boston.[6]

By 1625 the colony at Weymouth had failed and all of his fellow travelers returned to England. Blaxton remained, moving five miles north to a 1 mi2 rocky bulge at the end of a swampy isthmus surrounded on all sides by mudflats. Blaxton thus became the first colonist to settle in what would becomeBoston. He lived at the Western end of theShawmut Peninsula at the foot of what is nowBeacon Hill and was entirely alone for more than five years.[7]

A Britishartillery survey of Boston from 1775 showing the Mount Whoredom peak of Trimountaine just north ofBoston Common.

Puritan Era (1630–1750)

[edit]

Invitation from Blaxton

[edit]

In 1629Isaac Johnsonlanded with thePuritans in nearbyCharlestown, having leftSalem for want of food. Blaxton and Johnson had been university contemporaries atEmmanuel College, Cambridge. The rockier highlands of Charlestown lacked easily tappable wells. Knowing of this difficulty, Blaxton wrote an historic letter in September 1630 to Johnson and his group of Puritans that advertised Boston's excellent natural spring, and invited them to settle on his land. This they did over the course of September 1630.[8][9]

Renamed "Boston"

[edit]

One of Johnson's last official acts as the leader of the Charlestown community before dying on September 30, 1630, was to name the new settlement across the river "Boston." He named the settlement after hishometown in Lincolnshire, from which he, his wife (namesake of theArbella) andJohn Cotton (grandfather ofCotton Mather) hademigrated toNew England. The name of the English city ultimately derives from that town's patron saint,St. Botolph, inwhose church John Cotton served as the rector until his emigration with Johnson. In early sources the Lincolnshire Boston was known as "St. Botolph's town", later contracted to "Boston". Prior to this renaming the settlement on the peninsula had been known as "Shawmut" by Blaxton and "Trimountaine" by the Puritan settlers he had invited.[10][11][12][13][14]

Settlement on Shawmut Peninsula

[edit]

The Puritans settled around the advertised springs on the north side of what is nowBeacon Hill (at the time called "Trimountaine" from its three peaks). Blaxton negotiated a grant of 50 acres (20 ha) for himself in the final paperwork with Johnson, amounting to around 10% of the peninsula's total area. However, by 1633 the new town's 4,000 citizens made retention of such a large parcel untenable and Blaxton sold all but six acres back to the Puritans in 1634 for £30 ($5,455 in adjusted USD).Governor Winthrop, Johnson's successor as leader of the settlement, purchased the land through a one-time tax on Boston residents of 6 shillings (around $50 adjusted) per head. This land became a town commons open to public grazing. It now forms the bulk ofBoston Common, the largestpublic park in present-daydowntown Boston.[11][15][16][17]

After Johnson's death theEpiscopalian Blaxton did not get along with the Puritan leaders of the Boston church, which rapidly became radically fundamentalist in its outlook as itbegan executing religious dissidents such asQuakers. In 1635 Blaxton moved about 35 miles (56 km) south of Boston to what the Indians then called the Pawtucket River and is today known as theBlackstone River inCumberland, Rhode Island. He was that region's first European settler, arriving one year beforeRoger Williams establishedProvidence Plantations.[18]

Original topography of the peninsula

[edit]

The peninsula on which the Puritans settled was rocky scrubland with few trees. It held three major hills:Copps Hill (now theNorth End), Fort Hill (later theFinancial District), and Trimountaine (Beacon Hill). Trimountaine was the tallest of the three, with its name coming from its three separate peaks. The name was retained for the hill and in later years Trimountaine would be shortened to Tremont, for whichTremont Street was named.

The three peaks of Trimountaine were,

  1. Cotton Hill—named forJohn Cotton, and later renamed Pemberton Hill (nowPemberton Square),
  2. Centry or Sentry Hill—the present location of the Massachusetts State House, and
  3. Mount Whoredom—also known as Mount Vernon, now the location ofLouisburg Square, home to some of the most expensive real estate in the nation.

Over the next two centuries the three hills would be regraded and the geography of the area transformed through landfill and annexation. Beacon Hill or Trimountaine, though shortened between 1807 and 1824, remains a prominent feature of the Boston cityscape. It received its current name from the signal beacon erected on its highest peak to warn outlying towns of danger.[17][19][20][21]

Response to 1684 charter revocation

[edit]
Quitclaim obtained by Boston city fathers in 1684 from a local sachem, backdating their ownership of the Shawmut Peninsula to 1630 and the city's foundation.

In 1684, fearing that the rumored revocation of theMassachusetts Bay Colony's Charter byKing Charles II would come to pass, Boston city fathers sought to buttress their fifty year old claim to the land of the Shawmut Peninsula. To this end in early 1684 they attempted to secure legal ownership of the Shawmut Peninsula from the descendents ofChickatawbut (d. 1633), theMassachusettsachem at the time Blaxton first settled on the peninsula, fifty years prior. Such a descendent was located, a sachem named Josias Wampatuck. There is little evidence that this sachem, his grandfather Chickatawbut or any of their people ever inhabited the peninsula, however the lack of formal legal documents involving Indians during the Blaxton transactions encouraged the creation of a backdateddeed (known in Englishcommon law as a "quitclaim") which Josias duly signed on March 19, 1684 (see document at right, and its transcription). The charter was revoked as promised later that year on the advice of colonial administratorEdward Randolph.[22]

Colonial era

[edit]
The 1638 building ofHarvard College

Early colonists believed that Boston was a community with a special covenant with God, as captured in Winthrop's "City upon a Hill" metaphor. This influenced every facet of Boston life, and made it imperative that colonists legislate morality as well as enforce marriage, church attendance, education in the Word of God, and the persecution of sinners. One of the first schools in America,Boston Latin School (1635), and the first college in America,Harvard College (1636), were founded shortly after Boston's European settlement.

A South-East View of the City of Boston in North America, printed at London, c. 1730

Town officials in colonial Boston were chosen annually; positions[23] includedselectman,assay master, culler of staves,Fence Viewer,hayward,hogreeve,[24] measurer of boards,pounder,[25] sealer of leather,tithingman, viewer of bricks,water bailiff, and woodcorder.[26]

Boston's Puritans looked askance at unorthodox religious ideas, and exiled or punished dissenters. During theAntinomian Controversy of 1636 to 1638 religious dissident leaderAnne Hutchinson and Puritan clergymanJohn Wheelwright were both banished from the colony.[27] Baptist ministerObadiah Holmes was imprisoned and publicly whipped in 1651 because of his religion andHenry Dunster, the first president of Harvard College during the 1640s–50s, was persecuted for espousing Baptist beliefs. By 1679, Boston Baptists were bold enough to open their own meetinghouse, which was promptly closed by colonial authorities. Expansion and innovation in practice and worship characterized the early Baptists despite the restrictions on their religious liberty.[28] On June 1, 1660,Mary Dyer was hanged on Boston Common for repeatedly defying a law banningQuakers from being in the colony.

In 1652 during theCommonwealth of England, theMassachusetts General Court authorized Boston silversmithJohn Hull to produce coinage. In 1661 afterCharles II came to the throne, the English government considered the Boston mint to be treasonous. However, the mint continued operations until 1682. The coinage was a contributing factor to the revocation of the Massachusetts Bay Colony charter in 1684.[29]

TheBoston Post Road connected the city to New York and the major settlements in Central and Western Massachusetts. The lower route ran near present-dayU.S. 1 viaProvidence, Rhode Island. The upper route, laid out in 1673, left via Boston Neck and followed present-dayU.S. Route 20 until aroundShrewsbury, Massachusetts. It continued throughWorcester,Springfield, andNew Haven, Connecticut.

An artist's depiction of the1689 Boston revolt

From 1686 until 1689, Massachusetts and surrounding colonies were united. This larger province, known as theDominion of New England, was governed bySir Edmund Andros, an appointee ofKing James II. Andros, who supported theChurch of England in a largely Puritan city, grew increasingly unpopular. On April 18, 1689, he wasoverthrown due to a brief revolt. The Dominion was not reestablished.

Boston's first circulating library was established in 1756 which included 1,200 volumes of books. During this period, many wealthy persons amassed large libraries and loaned books within their social circles.[30]

Disasters in the 1700s

[edit]

A particularly virulent sequence of six smallpox outbreaks took place from 1636 to 1698. In 1721–1722, the most severe epidemic occurred, killing 844 people. Out of a population of 10,500, 5889 caught the disease, 844 (14%) died, and at least 900 fled the city, thereby spreading the virus.[31] Colonists tried to prevent the spread of smallpox by isolation. For the first time in America,inoculation was tried; it causes a mild form of the disease. Inoculation was itself very controversial because of the threat that the procedure itself could be fatal to 2% of those who were treated, or otherwise spread the disease. It was introduced byZabdiel Boylston andCotton Mather.[32]

In 1755, Boston endured the largest earthquake ever to hit the Northeastern United States, (estimated at 6.0 to 6.3 on theRichter magnitude scale), called theCape Ann earthquake. There was some damage to buildings, but no deaths.[33][34]

The first "Great Fire" of Boston destroyed 349 buildings on March 20, 1760. It was one of many significant fires fought by theBoston Fire Department.

Boston and the American Revolution, 1765–1775

[edit]
See also:American Revolution andAmerican Revolutionary War
A map showing theBritish Army's tactical evaluation of Boston in 1775

Boston had taken an active role in the protests against the Stamp Act of 1765. Its merchants avoided the customs duties which angered London officials and led to a crackdown on smuggling. GovernorThomas Pownall (1757 to 1760) tried to be conciliatory, but his replacement GovernorFrancis Bernard 1760–1769) was a hard-liner who wanted to stamp out the opposition voices that were growing louder and louder in town meetings and pamphlets. Historian Pauline Maier says that his letters to London greatly influenced officials there, but they "distorted" reality. "His misguided conviction that the 'faction' had espoused violence as its primary method of opposition, for example, kept him from recognizing the radicals' peace-keeping efforts.... Equally dangerous, Bernard's elaborate accounts were sometimes built on insubstantial evidence."[35] Warden argues that Bernard was careful not to explicitly ask London for troops, but his exaggerated accounts strongly suggested they were needed. In the fall of 1767 he warned about a possible insurrection in Boston any day, and his exaggerated report of one disturbance in 1768, "certainly had given Lord Hillsboro the impression that troops were the only way to enforce obedience in the town." Warden notes that other key British officials in Boston wrote London with the "same strain of hysteria."[36] Four thousand British Army troops arrived in Boston in October 1768 as a massive show of force; tensions escalated.

A map showing Boston and vicinity, including Bunker Hill, Dorchester Heights, and troop disposition of Gen.Artemas Ward during theSiege of Boston. From "Marshall's Life of Washington" (1806).

By the late 1760s, Patriot colonists focused on therights of Englishmen that they claimed to hold, especially the principle of "no taxation without representation" as articulated byJohn Rowe,James Otis Sr.,Samuel Adams and other Boston firebrands. Boston played a major role in theAmerican Revolution, including theAmerican Revolutionary War. On March 5, 1770, nine soldiers of the29th Regiment of Foot opened fire at a crowd of Bostonians which was verbally and physically harassing them; five people were killed in what came to be known as theBoston Massacre, dramatically escalating tensions.[37] The British Parliament, meanwhile, continued to insist on its right to tax the Britain's North American colonies and finally came up with a small tax on tea. Up and down the Thirteen Colonies, American colonists prevented merchants from selling the tea, but a shipment arrived in Boston Harbor. On December 16, 1773, members of theSons of Liberty, disguised as Native Americans, dumped 342 chests of tea in the harbor in theBoston Tea Party.[38] The Sons of Liberty decided to take action to defy Britain's new tax on tea, but the British government retaliated with a series of punitive laws, closing down the Port of Boston and stripping Massachusetts of its self-government.[39] The other colonies rallied in solidarity behind Massachusetts, setting up theFirst Continental Congress, while arming and training militia units. The British sent more troops to Boston, and made its commander GeneralThomas Gage the governor. Gage believed the Patriots were hiding munitions in the town of Concord, and he sent troops to capture them.Paul Revere,William Dawes, andDr. Samuel Prescott made their famous midnight rides to alert theMinutemen in the surrounding towns, who fought the resultingBattle of Lexington and Concord in April 1775. It was the first battle of the American Revolution.

Militia units across New England rallied to the defense of Boston, and Congress sent in GeneralGeorge Washington to take command. The British weretrapped in the city, and suffered very heavy losses in their victory at theBattle of Bunker Hill.Washington brought in artillery and forced the British out as the patriots took full control of Boston. The American victory on March 17, 1776, is celebrated asEvacuation Day. The city has preserved and celebrated its revolutionary past, from the harboring of theUSS Constitution to the many famous sites along theFreedom Trail.

19th century

[edit]
Historical population
YearPop.±%
172210,567—    
176515,520+46.9%
179018,320+18.0%
180024,937+36.1%
181033,787+35.5%
182043,298+28.1%
183061,392+41.8%
184093,383+52.1%
1850136,881+46.6%
1860177,840+29.9%
1870250,526+40.9%
1880362,839+44.8%
1890448,477+23.6%
1900560,892+25.1%
1910670,585+19.6%
1920748,060+11.6%
1930781,188+4.4%
1940770,816−1.3%
1950801,444+4.0%
1960697,197−13.0%
1970641,071−8.1%
1980562,994−12.2%
1990574,283+2.0%
2000589,141+2.6%
2010617,594+4.8%
2011625,087+1.2%
* = population estimate.
Source:United States census records andPopulation Estimates Program data.[40][41][42][43][44][45][46][47][48][49][50][51]

Economic and population growth

[edit]

Boston was transformed from a relatively small and economically stagnant town in 1780 to a bustling seaport and cosmopolitan center with a large and highly mobile population by 1800. It had become one of the world's wealthiest international trading ports, exporting products like rum, fish, salt and tobacco.[52] The upheaval of the American Revolution, and the British naval blockade that shut down its economy, had caused a majority of the population to flee the city. From a base of 10,000 in 1780, the population approached 25,000 by 1800. The abolition of slavery in the state in 1783 gave blacks greater physical mobility, but their social mobility was slow.[53]

Boston was part of the New England corner oftriangular trade, receiving sugar from theCaribbean and refining it intorum andmolasses, partly for export to Europe. Later, confectionery manufacturing would become another refined product made from similar raw materials. Related companies with facilities in Boston included theBoston Sugar Refinery (inventors ofgranulated sugar),Domino Sugar, thePurity Distilling Company,Necco,Schrafft's,Squirrel Brands (as the predecessor Austin T. Merrill Company of Roxbury[54]) American Nut and Chocolate (1927)[55] This legacy continued into the 20th century; by 1950, there were 140 candy companies in Boston.[55] Others were located in and some moved to nearbyCambridge. TheBoston Fruit Company began importing tropical fruit from the Caribbean in 1885; it is a predecessor ofUnited Fruit Company andChiquita Brands International.

Boston had the status of a town; it waschartered as a city in 1822.[56] The second mayor wasJosiah Quincy III, who undertook infrastructure improvements in roads and sewers, and organized the city's dock area around the newly erected Faneuil Hall Marketplace, popularly known as Quincy Market. By the mid-19th century Boston was one of the largest manufacturing centers in the nation, noted for its garment production, leather goods, and machinery industries. Manufacturing overtook international trade to dominate the local economy. A network of small rivers bordering the city and connecting it to the surrounding region made for easy shipment of goods and allowed for a proliferation of mills and factories. The building of theMiddlesex Canal extended this small river network to the larger Merrimack River and its mills, including theLowell mills and mills on theNashua River inNew Hampshire. By the 1850s, an even denser network of railroads (see alsoList of railroad lines in Massachusetts) facilitated the region's industry and commerce. For example, in 1851,Eben Jordan and Benjamin L. Marsh opened theJordan MarshDepartment store in downtown Boston. Thirty years later William Filene opened his own department store across the street, calledFilene's.

Several turnpikes were constructed between cities to aid transportation, especially of cattle and sheep to markets. A major east–west route, the Worcester Turnpike (nowMassachusetts Route 9), was constructed in 1810. Others included the Newburyport Turnpike (now Route 1) and the Salem Lawrence Turnpike (now Route 114).

Brahmin elite

[edit]

Boston's"Brahmin elite" developed a particular semi-aristocratic value system by the 1840s—cultivated, urbane, and dignified, the ideal Brahmin was the very essence of enlightened aristocracy.[57][58] He was not only wealthy, but displayed suitable personal virtues and character traits. The term was coined in 1861 by Dr.Oliver Wendell Holmes Sr.[59] The Brahmin had high expectations to meet: to cultivate the arts, support charities such as hospitals and colleges, and assume the role of community leader. Although the ideal called on him to transcend commonplace business values, in practice many found the thrill of economic success quite attractive. The Brahmins warned each other against "avarice" and insisted upon "personal responsibility." Scandal and divorce were unacceptable. The total system was buttressed by the strong extended family ties present in Boston society. Young men attended the same prep schools and colleges,[60] and had their ownway of talking. Heirs married heiresses. Family not only served as an economic asset, but also as a means of moral restraint. Most belonged to the Unitarian or Episcopal churches, although some were Congregationalists or Methodists. Politically, they were successively Federalists, Whigs, and Republicans.

A poem about Boston, attributed to various people, describes the city thus: "And here's to good old Boston / The land of the bean and the cod / Where Lowells talk only to Cabots / and Cabots talk only to God." While wealthy colonial families like the Lowells and Cabots (often called theBoston Brahmins) ruled the city, the 1840s brought waves of new immigrants from Europe. These included large numbers of Irish andItalians, giving the city a largeRoman Catholic population.

Abolitionists

[edit]
Themasthead ofThe Liberator

In 1831,William Lloyd Garrison foundedThe Liberator, anabolitionist newsletter, in Boston. It advocated "immediate and complete emancipation of all slaves" in the United States, and established Boston as the center of the abolitionist movement. While living in Boston,David Walker publishedAn Appeal to the Colored Citizens of the World.[61] After the passing of the Fugitive Slave Law of 1850, Boston became a bastion of abolitionist thought. Attempts by slave-catchers to arrest fugitive slaves often proved futile, which included the notable case ofAnthony Burns and Kevin McLaughlin. After the passage of theKansas–Nebraska Act in 1854, Boston also became the hub of efforts to send anti-slavery New Englanders to settle inKansas Territory through theMassachusetts Emigrant Aid Company.

Irish

[edit]

The earliest Irish settlers began arriving in the early 18th century. Initially, they were indentured servants who came to work in Boston and New England for five to seven years, before gaining their independence. They were mainly individuals and families, and they were forced to hide their religious roots since Catholicism was banned in the Bay Colony. Then in 1718, congregations of Presbyterians from Ulster in the north of Ireland began arriving in Boston Harbor. They were referred to as Ulster Irish but later were referred to as Scots-Irish because many of them had roots in Scotland. The Puritan leaders initially sent the Ulster Irish to the fringes of the Bay Colony, where they settled places like Belfast, Maine, Londonderry and Derry, New Hampshire, and Worcester, Massachusetts. But by 1729 they were permitted to set up a church in downtown Boston.[62]

TheBoston Irish Famine Memorial

Throughout the 19th century, Boston became a haven for Irish Catholic immigrants, especially following theGreat Famine of the late 1840s. Their arrival transformed Boston from a singular, Anglo-Saxon, Protestant city to one that has progressively become more diverse. The Yankees hired Irish as workers and servants, but there was little social interaction. In the 1850s, an anti-Catholic, anti-immigrant movement was directed against the Irish, called the Know Nothing Party. But in the 1860s, many Irish immigrants joined the Union ranks to fight in the American Civil War, and that display of patriotism and valor began to soften the harsh sentiments of Yankees about the Irish.[63] Nonetheless, as inNew York City, on July 14, 1863, a draft riot attempting to raid Union armories broke out among Irish Catholics in theNorth End, resulting in approximately 8 to 14 deaths.[64] In the1860 presidential election,Abraham Lincoln received only 9,727 votes out of 20,371 cast in Boston (or 48 percent) while receiving 63 percent of the votestatewide, and Boston Irish Catholics mostly voted against Lincoln.[65]

Even to the present day, Boston still commands the largest percentage of Irish-descended people of any city in the United States. With an expanding population, group loyalty, and block by block political organization, the Irish took political control of the city, leaving the Yankees in charge of finance, business and higher education. The Irish left their mark on the region in a number of ways: in still heavily Irish neighborhoods such asCharlestown andSouth Boston; in the name of the local basketball team, theBoston Celtics; in the dominant Irish-American political family, theKennedys; in a large number of prominent local politicians, such asJames Michael Curley, in the establishment of CatholicBoston College as a rival toHarvard University, and in underworld figures, such asWhitey Bulger.[66]

Great Fire of 1872

[edit]

TheGreat Boston Fire of 1872 started at the corner of Summer Street and Kingston Street on November 9. In two days the conflagration destroyed about 65 acres (260,000 m2) of the city, including 776 buildings in thefinancial district, totaling $60 million in damage.

Scollay Square, Boston, in 1897

High culture

[edit]
Idealized illustration ofCopley Square from an 1890s clothing catalog, prominently featuringH. H. Richardson'sTrinity Church

From the mid-to-late-19th century, the Boston Brahmins flourished culturally—they became renowned for its rarefied literary culture and lavish artistic patronage. Literary residents included, among many others, writersNathaniel Hawthorne,Henry Wadsworth Longfellow,Oliver Wendell Holmes Sr.,James Russell Lowell, andJulia Ward Howe, as well as historiansJohn Lothrop Motley,John Gorham Palfrey,George Bancroft,William Hickling Prescott,Francis Parkman,Henry Adams,James Ford Rhodes,Edward Channing andSamuel Eliot Morison. Also there were theologians and philosophers such asWilliam Ellery Channing,Ralph Waldo Emerson andMary Baker Eddy. WhenBret Harte visited Howells, he remarked that in Boston "it was impossible to fire a revolver without bringing down the author of a two-volume work." Boston had many great publishers and magazines, such asThe Atlantic Monthly (founded 1857) and the publishersLittle, Brown and Company,Houghton Mifflin, andHarvard University Press.[67]

Higher education became increasingly important, principally at Harvard (based across the river in Cambridge), but also at other institutions. TheMassachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) opened in the city in 1865. The first medical school for women, The Boston Female Medical School (which later merged with theBoston University School of Medicine), opened in Boston on November 1, 1848. The Jesuits openedBoston College in 1863;Emerson College opened in 1880, andSimmons College for women in 1899.

The Brahmins were the foremost authors and audiences of high culture, despite being a minority. Emerging Irish, Jewish, and Italian cultures made little to no impact on the elite.[68]

To please a different audience, the firstvaudeville theater opened on February 28, 1883, in Boston. The last one, the Old Howard inScollay Square, which had evolved from opera to vaudeville to burlesque, closed in 1953.

The public Boston Museum of Natural History (founded in 1830 and renamed the New England Museum of Natural History in 1864, and theBoston Museum of Science in the mid-twentieth century), was run by the Boston Society of Natural History. It served the function of public and professional education in natural history, including ocean life, geology and mineralogy. Around the end of the 19th century a scientific library and children's rooms were added. In addition, the private Warren Museum of Natural History at Boston operated 1858–1906. It was acquired by the American Museum of Natural History in New York City in 1906.[69]

Transportation

[edit]
Boston'sTremont Street Subway is the oldest subway tunnel in North America

As the population increased rapidly,Boston-area streetcar lines facilitated the creation of a profusion ofstreetcar suburbs. Middle-class businessmen, office workers and professionals lived in the suburbs and commuted into the city by subway.[70] Downtown congestion worsened, prompting the opening of the firstsubway in North America on September 1, 1897, theTremont Street Subway. Between 1897 and 1912, subterranean rail links were built to Cambridge and East Boston, and elevated and underground lines expanded into other neighborhoods from downtown. Today, the regional passenger rail and bus network has been consolidated into theMassachusetts Bay Transportation Authority. Two union stations,North Station andSouth Station were constructed to consolidate downtown railroad terminals.

Censorship

[edit]

From the late 19th century until the mid-20th century, the phrase "Banned in Boston" was used to describe a literary work, motion picture, or play prohibited from distribution or exhibition. During this time, Boston city officials took it upon themselves to "ban" anything that they found to be salacious, immoral, or offensive: theatrical shows were run out of town, books confiscated, and motion pictures were prevented from being shown—sometimes stopped in mid-showing after an official had "seen enough". The phrase "banned in Boston" came to suggest something sexy and lurid; some distributors advertised that their products had been banned in Boston, when in fact they had not.

20th century

[edit]
An illustration of the city in 1905
Child labor in Boston, 1917. Photo byLewis Hine.

Early decades

[edit]

In 1900,Julia Harrington Duff (1850–1932) became the first woman from theIrish Catholic community to be elected to theBoston School Committee. Extending her role as teacher and mother she became an ethnic spokesperson as she confronted the power of the Yankee Protestant men of the Public School Association. She worked to replace 37-year-old textbooks, to protect the claims of local Boston women for career opportunities in the school system, and to propose a degree-granting teachers college. In 1905, the 25 member committee was reduced to five, which blocked women's opportunities for direct participation in school policies.[71]

Around the start of the 20th century, caught up in theautomobile revolution, Boston was home to the Porter Motor Company,[72] headquartered in the Tremont Building, 73 Tremont Street.[73]

On January 15, 1919, theGreat Molasses Flood occurred in theNorth End. Twenty-one people were killed and 150 injured as an immense wave of molasses, which rushed through the streets at an estimated 35 miles per hour (56 km/h), crushed and asphyxiated many of the victims to death. It took over six months to remove the molasses from the cobblestone streets, theaters, businesses, automobiles, and homes. Boston Harbor ran brown until summer.[74]

During the summer of 1919, over 1,100 members of theBoston Police Department went on strike. Boston fell prey to several riots as there were minimal law officers to maintain order in the city.Calvin Coolidge, then governor of Massachusetts, garnered national fame for quelling violence by almost entirely replacing the police force. The1919 Boston Police Strike would ultimately set precedent for police unionization across the country.

The most infamous swindler was from Boston in the 1920s. "Charles Ponzi, a dapper, five-foot-two-inch rogue who in 1920 raked in an estimated $15 million in eight months by persuading tens of thousands of Bostonians that he had unlocked the secret to easy wealth. Ponzi's meteoric success at swindling was so remarkable that his name became attached to the method he employed," the "Ponzi scheme."[75] "Charles named his concern the Securities Exchange Company"[76] on 27 School Street inBoston, Massachusetts.[77]

On August 23, 1927, Italian anarchistsNicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti were sent to the electric chair after a seven-year trial in Boston. Their execution sparked riots in London, Paris and Germany, and helped to reinforce the image of Boston as a hotbed of intolerance and discipline.

Mid-century transportation and urban renewal

[edit]
TheOld John Hancock Tower and Boston skyline, as it appeared in 1956
1955 Yellow Book plan for the Boston-area highway system.

TheI-695 Inner Belt shown on this map was never built.I-95 is shown here approaching the urban core from the southwest, but it was never built beyond the outer loop shown on this map (which was built asRoute 128 and which I-95 was later re-routed over).

In 1934, theSumner Tunnel created the first direct road connection under Boston Harbor, between theNorth End andEast Boston.

In May 1938, the first public housing project,Old Harbor Village was opened inSouth Boston.[78]

By 1950, Boston was slumping. Few major buildings were being built anywhere in the city. Factories were closing and moving their operations south, where labor was cheaper. The assets Boston had—excellent banks, hospitals, universities and technical know-how—were minimal parts of the U.S. economy. To combat this downturn, Boston's politicians enactedurban renewal policies, which resulted in the demolition of several neighborhoods, including the New York Streets district in theSouth End, theold West End, a largely Jewish andItalian neighborhood, andScollay Square. In their places went a new headquarters for theBoston Herald, the Charles River Park apartment complex, additions toMassachusetts General Hospital, andGovernment Center. These projects displaced thousands, closed hundreds of businesses, and provoked a furious backlash, which in turn ensured the survival of many historic neighborhoods.

In 1948,William F. Callahan had published the Master Highway Plan for Metropolitan Boston. Parts of the financial district, Chinatown, and the North End were demolished to make way for construction. By 1956, the northern part of theCentral Artery had been constructed, but strong local opposition resulted in the southern downtown portion being built underground. TheDewey Square Tunnel connected downtown to theSoutheast Expressway. In 1961, theCallahan Tunnel opened, paralleling the older Sumner Tunnel.

By 1965, the firstMassachusetts Turnpike Extension was completed from Route 128 to nearSouth Station. The proposedInner Belt in Boston, Cambridge, Brookline, and Somerville was canceled due to public outcry. In 1971, public protest canceled the routing ofI-95 into downtown Boston. Demolition had already begun along theSouthwest Corridor, which was instead used to re-route theOrange Line andAmtrak'sNortheast Corridor.

World War II and later

[edit]

On November 28, 1942, Boston's Cocoanut Grovenightclub was the site of theCocoanut Grove fire, the deadliest nightclub fire in United States history, killing 492 people and injuring hundreds more.

During the war years, antisemitic violence escalated in Boston. Gangs largely composed of Irish Catholic youths desecrated Jewish cemeteries and synagogues, vandalized Jewish stores and homes, and physically assaulted Jews in the streets. The Boston police force, which was made up largely of Irish Catholics, seldom intervened.[79]

In 1950, theGreat Brink's Robbery was committed; at the time it was the largest bank robbery in the United States, with the thieves stealing $2.775 million.

In 1953, theColumbia Point public housing projects were completed on the Dorchester peninsula. There were 1,502 units in the development on 50 acres (20 ha) of land. In 1966, the Columbia Point Health Center opened and was the first community health center in the country.

On January 15, 1961,American Nazi Party founderGeorge Lincoln Rockwell and a fellow Nazi Party member attempted topicket the local premiere of the filmExodus at theSaxon Theatre onTremont Street inDowntown Boston while staying at theHotel Touraine across the street. AfterBoston MayorJohn F. Collins (1960–1968) declined to deny Rockwell the right to picket, members of the localJewish Defense League chapter organized a counterdemonstration of 2,000 Jewish protestors in response on the corner of Tremont andBoylston Streets on the day of the premiere, which forced police to converge on the theater and force Rockwell into apolice cruiser that took him toLogan International Airport where Rockwell was then boarded onto a flight toWashington, DC.[80]

Between June 14, 1962, and January 4, 1964, as many as thirteen single women between the ages of 19 and 85 were murdered in Boston by the infamousBoston Strangler. (The actual number remains in dispute.)

In March 1965, an investigative study ofproperty taxassessment practices published by theNational Tax Association of 13,769 properties sold within the City of Boston from January 1, 1960, to March 31, 1964, found that the assessed values in the neighborhood ofRoxbury in 1962 were at 68 percent of market values while the assessed values inWest Roxbury were at 41 percent of market values, and the researcherscould not find a nonracial explanation for the difference.[81][82] In 1963,Boston MayorJohn F. Collins andBoston Redevelopment Authority (BRA) executiveEdward J. Logue organized a consortium ofsavings banks,cooperatives, and federal and statesavings and loan associations in the city called the Boston Banks Urban Renewal Group (B-BURG) that wouldreverse redline parts of Dorchester,Roxbury, and Mattapan along Blue Hill Avenue.[83] Despite the passage of legislation by the156th Massachusetts General Court banning racial discrimination or segregation in housing in 1950, as well as the issuance ofExecutive Order 11063 by PresidentJohn F. Kennedy in 1962 requiring all federal agencies to prevent racial discrimination in all federally-fundedsubsidized housing in the United States, theBoston Housing Authority (BHA) Board activelysegregated the public housing developments in the city during the Collins administration as well, with BHA departments engaging in bureaucratic resistance against integration through at least 1966 and the Board retaining control over tenant assignment until 1968.[84]

Local universities likeMIT were important to the emergence of Boston's tech industry

In the 1970s, after years of economic downturn, Boston boomed again. Financial institutions were granted more latitude, more people began to play the market, and Boston became a leader in themutual fund industry. Health care became more extensive and expensive, and hospitals such asMassachusetts General Hospital,Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, andBrigham and Women's Hospital led the nation in medical innovation and patient care. Higher education also became more expensive, and universities such asHarvard,MIT,Boston College,BU andTufts attracted hordes of students to the Boston area; many stayed and became permanent residents. MIT graduates, in particular, founded many successfulhigh-tech companies, which made Boston second only toSilicon Valley as a high-tech center.

On April 1, 1965, a special committee appointed byMassachusetts Education Commissioner Owen Kiernan released its final report finding that more than half of black students enrolled inBoston Public Schools (BPS) attended institutions with enrollments that were at least 80 percent black and thathousing segregation in the city had caused theracial imbalance.[85][86][87] From its creation under theNational Housing Act of 1934 signed into law by PresidentFranklin D. Roosevelt, theFederal Housing Administration used its officialmortgage insuranceunderwriting policy explicitly to prevent school desegregation.[88] The Boston School Committee denied racial segregation existed within Boston schools provoking protests by parents, community activist, and Boston clergy. The Racial Imbalance Act was signed into law by Governor Volpe on August 20, 1965. Rev.Vernon E. Carter picketed outside the Boston School Committee building from April 28, 1965, until August 20, 114 days. A few thousand joined him in challenging de facto segregation. Massachusetts GovernorJohn Volpe then went on to file a request for legislation from the state legislature that defined schools with non-white enrollments greater than 50 percent to be imbalanced and granted the State Board of Education the power to withhold state funds from anyschool district in the state that was found to have racial imbalance, which Volpe would sign into law the following August.[86][89][90]

From September 1974 through September 1976,at least 40 riots occurred in the city following the Phase I and Phase II rulings byMassachusetts U.S. District Court JudgeW. Arthur Garrity Jr. inMorgan v. Hennigan that ordereddesegregation busing to integrate the city's public schools. Racially motivated violence erupted in several neighborhoods (many white parents resisted the busing plan). Public schools—particularly public high schools—became scenes of unrest and violence. Tension continued throughout the mid-1970s, reinforcing Boston's reputation for discrimination. A famous photograph,The Soiling of Old Glory, was taken in front of Boston City Hall, viscerally depicting the conflict.

The Columbia Point housing complex deteriorated until only 350 families remained living there in 1988. In 1984, the city of Boston gave control of the complex to a private developer, Corcoran-Mullins-Jennison, who re-developed and re-vitalised the property into a residential mixed-income community called Harbor Point Apartments. It is a very significant example of revitalisation and re-development and was the first federal housing project to be converted to private,mixed-income housing in the USA. Harbor Point has won much acclaim for this transformation, including awards from theUrban Land Institute, theFIABCI Award for International Excellence, and theRudy Bruner Award for Urban Excellence.[91][92][93][94] It was used as a model for the federal HUDHOPE VI public housing program begun in 1992.[95]

On March 18, 1990, the largestart theft in modern history occurred in Boston. Twelve paintings, collectively worth over $100 million, were stolen from theIsabella Stewart Gardner Museum by two thieves posing as police officers. The paintings were not recovered.[citation needed]

Big Dig and public transit in the 2000s

[edit]
Boston'sRose Fitzgerald Kennedy Greenway is a result of the Big Dig.

In 2007, the Central Artery/Tunnel project was completed. Nicknamed theBig Dig, it had been planned and approved in the 1980s under Massachusetts governorMichael Dukakis. With construction beginning in 1991, the Big Dig moved the remainder of the Central Artery underground, widened the north–south highway, and created local bypasses to prevent east–west traffic from contributing to congestion. TheTed Williams Tunnel became the third highway tunnel to East Boston andLogan International Airport as part of the project. The Big Dig also produced the landmarkZakim Bunker Hill Bridge, and will create over 70 acres (280,000 m2) of public parks in the heart of the city. The project as a whole has eased (but not eliminated) Boston's notorious traffic congestion; however, it is the most expensive construction project in United States history.[96]

The city also saw other transportation projects, including improvement and expansion to its mass transit system, notably to its commuter rail system to southeastern Massachusetts and the development of abus rapid transit (BRT) system dubbed "The Silver Line." The maritimePort of Boston andLogan International Airport were also developed.

21st century

[edit]
The Boston skyline fromChelsea, Massachusetts

Recently, Boston has experienced a loss of regional institutions and traditions, which once gave it a very distinct social character, as it has become part of thenortheastern megalopolis. Examples include: the acquisition of theBoston Globe byThe New York Times; the loss of Boston-headquartered publishing houses (noted above); the acquisition of the century-old Jordan Marsh department store byMacy's; and the loss to mergers, failures, and acquisitions of once-prominent financial institutions such as Shawmut Bank, BayBank, Bank of New England, and Bank of Boston. In 2004, this trend continued asCharlotte-basedBank of America acquiredFleetBoston Financial, andP&G has announced plans to acquireGillette.

Despite these losses, Boston's ambiance remains unique amongworld cities and, in many ways, has improved in recent years—racial tensions have eased dramatically, city streets bustle with a vitality not seen since the 1920s, and once again Boston has become a hub of intellectual, technological, and political ideas. Nevertheless, the city had to tacklegentrification issues and rising living expenses. According toMoney Magazine, Boston is one of the world's 100 most expensive cities.[97]

Boston was the host city of the2004 Democratic National Convention. The city also found itself at the center of national attention in early 2004 during the controversy oversame-sex marriages. After theMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court ruled that such marriages cannot be banned under the state's constitution, opponents and supporters of such marriages converged on theMassachusetts State House as thestate legislature voted on a state constitutional amendment that would define marriage as only between a man and a woman. Much attention was focused on the city and the rest of Massachusetts when marriage licenses for same-sex couples were issued.

Also in 2004, theBoston Red Sox won their firstWorld Series in 86 years, following it up three years later with a victory in 2007, another in 2013, and another World Series win in 2018. Boston sports continue to dominate.

On April 15, 2013,two bombs were detonated during the Boston Marathon, killing three people and injuring hundreds.

On August 20, 2017, the.boston top-level internet domain (GeoTLD) officially started taking registrations.[98]

Geographic expansion

[edit]
1880 census map showing landfill and annexations up until that year.

The City of Boston has expanded in two ways—through landfill and through annexation of neighboring municipalities.

Between 1630 and 1890, the city tripled its physical size byland reclamation, specifically by filling in marshes and mud flats and by filling gaps between wharves along the waterfront, a processWalter Muir Whitehill called "cutting down the hills to fill the coves." The most intense reclamation efforts were in the 19th century. Beginning in 1807, the crown of Beacon Hill was used to fill in a 50-acre (20 ha) mill pond that later became theBulfinch Triangle (just south of today's North Station area). The present-dayState House sits atop this shortened Beacon Hill. Reclamation projects in the middle of the century created significant parts of the areas now known as the South End, West End, Financial District, and Chinatown. AfterThe Great Boston Fire of 1872, building rubble was used as landfill along the downtown waterfront.

The most dramatic reclamation project was the filling in of the Back Bay in the mid to late 19th century. Almost six hundred acres (240 hectares) of brackish Charles River marshlands west of the Boston Common were filled in with gravel brought in by rail from the hills ofNeedham Heights.

Boston also grew by annexing the adjacent communities ofEast Boston,Roxbury,Dorchester,West Roxbury (includingJamaica Plain andRoslindale),South Boston,Brighton,Allston,Hyde Park, andCharlestown, some of which were also augmented by landfill reclamation. Several proposals to regionalize municipal government failed due to concerns about loss of local control, corruption, and Irish immigration, including:[99]

  • 1896 – "County of Boston" proposal in the state legislature
  • 1910 – "Real Boston" proposal by Edward Filene to create a regional advisory board
  • 1912 – "Greater Boston" proposal by Daniel J. Kiley that would have enlarged the City of Boston to include all 32 municipalities within 10 miles
  • 1919 – Annexation proposal by Boston Mayor Andrew Peters

The state government has regionalized some functions in Eastern Massachusetts, including theMassachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (public transit), theMassachusetts Water Resources Authority (water and sewer), and theMetropolitan District Commission (parks, later folded into the statewide Department of Conservation and Recreation).

Annexations and Landfill, 1804–1912. (Some dates approximate, due to time lag between approval and completion.)

Timeline of annexations, secessions, and related developments (incomplete):

Timeline ofland reclamation (incomplete):

  • 1857 – Filling of theBack Bay begins
  • 1882 – Present-day Back Bay fill complete
  • 1890 – Charles River landfill reachesKenmore Square, formerly the western end of the Back Bay mill pond
  • 1900Back Bay Fens fill complete
  • Original Boston shoreline vs. 1903
    Original Boston shoreline vs. 1903
  • Boston in 1630 vs. 1880. The original area of the Shawmut Peninsula was substantially expanded by landfill.
    Boston in 1630 vs. 1880. The original area of the Shawmut Peninsula was substantially expanded by landfill.
  • Boston in 1772 vs. 1880
    Boston in 1772 vs. 1880
  • Greater Boston in 1850 (Middlesex Canal highlighted)
    Greater Boston in 1850 (Middlesex Canal highlighted)
  • A larger view of Boston in 1888 (see also Colonial wide-area view, 1814 map, 1842 map, 1880 railroad map, 1903 map)
    A larger view of Boston in 1888 (see alsoColonial wide-area view,1814 map,1842 map,1880 railroad map,1903 map)

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^abMarx, Walter H. (December 29, 1988)."Native Americans in Jamaica Plain".Jamaica Plains Historical Society.Archived from the original on December 10, 2017. RetrievedSeptember 21, 2021.
  2. ^ab"The Native Americans' River".Harvard College.Archived from the original on July 11, 2015. RetrievedSeptember 21, 2021.
  3. ^Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations (January 1891).Sixth Annual Report of the State Board of Agriculture. Providence, RI: E. L. Freeman & Son.
  4. ^"Chickataubut".The Massachusett Tribe at Ponkapoag. 2018.Archived from the original on June 11, 2019. RetrievedSeptember 21, 2021.
  5. ^"Archaeology of the Central Artery Project: Highway to the Past".Commonwealth Museum – Massachusetts Historical Commission. 2008. RetrievedApril 6, 2007.
  6. ^Banks, Charles Edward (1937).Topographical dictionary of 2885 English emigrants to New England, 1620–1650. The Bertram Press. p. 96.
  7. ^Friends of the Public Garden and Common; Moore, Barbara W.; Weesner, Gail; Lee, Henry; McIntyre, A. McVoy; Webster, Larry."History of Boston Common"(PDF).City of Boston. RetrievedOctober 19, 2022.
  8. ^Morison, Samuel Eliot (1932).English University Men Who Emigrated to New England Before 1646: An Advanced Printing of Appendix B to the History of Harvard College in the Seventeenth Century. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. p. 10.
  9. ^Morison, Samuel Eliot (1963).The Founding of Harvard College. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.ISBN 978-0-674314504.{{cite book}}:ISBN / Date incompatibility (help)
  10. ^Goodwin, Gordon (1892)."Johnson, Isaac" .Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 30. p. 15.
  11. ^abWeston, George F. (1957).Boston Ways: High, By & Folk. Beacon Hill, Boston: Beacon Press. pp. 11–15.
  12. ^"Archives Guide ~ Town of Boston".City of Boston. Archived fromthe original on April 20, 2013. RetrievedMarch 20, 2013.
  13. ^Kay, Jane Holtz (2006).Lost Boston. Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press. p. 4.ISBN 978-1-558495272.
  14. ^Thurston, H. (1907)."St. Botulph".The Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company. RetrievedJune 17, 2014 – via New Advent.
  15. ^"Boston Common".The Freedom Trail. RetrievedOctober 19, 2022.
  16. ^Shurtleff, Nathaniel B. (1871).A Topographical and Historical Description of Boston. Boston: Noyes, Holmes, & Co.
  17. ^abBacon, Edwin M., ed. (March 1891)."I. A Glance At Its History".Boston Illustrated: Containing Full Descriptions of the City and its Immediate Suburbs, its Public Buildings and Institutions, Business Edifices, Parks and Avenues, Statues, Harbor and Islands, etc., etc. With Numerous Historical Allusions. Houghton, Mifflin and Company. RetrievedOctober 3, 2012.
  18. ^Horsford, Eben Norton (1886).The Indian Names of Boston, and their Meaning. Cambridge, MA: John Wilson and Son.
  19. ^MHC Reconnaissance Survey Town Report: Boston(PDF) (Report). Massachusetts Historical Commission. January 1981. RetrievedAugust 23, 2009.
  20. ^"Boston Charter Day".Bostoncharterday.org. 2007. RetrievedSeptember 25, 2008.
  21. ^Whitehill, Walter Muir (1968).Boston: A Topographical History (2nd ed.). Cambridge, Mass: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press. pp. 3–4,105–109.
  22. ^Supple, Carrie (September 2006)."Deed for Boston, 19 March 1685".Massachusetts Historical Society.
  23. ^Seybolt, Robert Francis (1939).The Town Officials of Colonial Boston, 1634–1775. Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press.
  24. ^"Hogreeve: "chiefly in New England and south-eastern Canada: a person appointed to impound stray pigs, and to prevent or assess any damage caused by them."".Oxford English Dictionary (3rd ed.). 2010.
  25. ^"Pounder: "a person whose occupation it is topound cattle or other livestock."".Oxford English Dictionary (3rd ed.). 2010.
  26. ^"Woodcorder: "a town official responsible for stacking cut wood for sale into standard 'cords' piles."".Oxford English Dictionary (3rd ed.). 2010.
  27. ^Battis, Emery (1962).Saints and Sectaries: Anne Hutchinson and the Antinomian Controversy in the Massachusetts Bay Colony. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. pp. 149–225.
  28. ^Ryder, Milton P. (March 2002). "Swimming Against the Current: The Strange Therapy of Persecution; The Price Paid for Religious Liberty by Some Early Massachusetts Baptists and the First Baptist Church of Boston".American Baptist Quarterly.21 (1):11–27.
  29. ^Barth, Jonathan Edward (2014). ""A Peculiar Stampe of Our Owne": The Massachusetts Mint and the Battle over Sovereignty, 1652–1691".The New England Quarterly.87 (3): 514.doi:10.1162/TNEQ_a_00396.hdl:2286/R.I.26592.JSTOR 43285101.S2CID 57571000.
  30. ^Taylor, Dale (1997).The Writer's Guide to Everyday Life in Colonial America. Cincinnati, Ohio: Writer's Digest Books. p. 217.ISBN 978-0-89879-772-5.
  31. ^Campbell, Ballard C., ed. (2008).American Disasters: 201 Calamities That Shook the Nation. New York City: Campbell Books. pp. 21–22.ISBN 978-0-816066032.
  32. ^Winslow, Ola Elizabeth (1974).A Destroying Angel: The Conquest of Smallpox in Colonial Boston. Boston, MA: Houghton Mifflin.ISBN 978-0-395184530.
  33. ^Ebel, John E. (2009)."The Cape Ann earthquake of November 1755: A historical perspective on its 250th anniversary".Seismological Research Letters.77 (1):74–86.
  34. ^Campbell, Ballard C., ed. (2008).American Disasters: 201 Calamities That Shook the Nation. New York City: Campbell Books. pp. 28–30.ISBN 978-0-816066032.
  35. ^Maier, Pauline (1973).From Resistance to Revolution: Colonial Radicals and the Development of American Opposition to Britain, 1765–1776. W.W. Norton. pp. 151–152.ISBN 978-0-393308259.
  36. ^Warden, G. B. (1970).Boston 1689–1776. Boston, MA: Little, Brown & Company. pp. 213–214.
  37. ^Zobel, Hiller B. (1970).The Boston Massacre. New York City: W.W. Norton.ISBN 978-0-393053760.
  38. ^"Coming of the American Revolution 1764 to 1776: The Boston Tea Party".Massachusetts Historical Society. RetrievedDecember 28, 2013.
  39. ^Roza, Greg (2006).Analyzing the Boston Tea Party: Establishing cause and effect relationships. New York: The Rosen Group.
  40. ^"Total Population (P1), 2010 Census Summary File 1".American FactFinder, All County Subdivisions within Massachusetts. United States Census Bureau. 2010.
  41. ^"Massachusetts by Place and County Subdivision - GCT-T1. Population Estimates". United States Census Bureau. RetrievedJuly 12, 2011.
  42. ^"1990 Census of Population, General Population Characteristics: Massachusetts"(PDF). US Census Bureau. December 1990. Table 76: General Characteristics of Persons, Households, and Families: 1990. 1990 CP-1-23. RetrievedJuly 12, 2011.
  43. ^"1980 Census of the Population, Number of Inhabitants: Massachusetts"(PDF). US Census Bureau. December 1981. Table 4. Populations of County Subdivisions: 1960 to 1980. PC80-1-A23. RetrievedJuly 12, 2011.
  44. ^"1950 Census of Population"(PDF). Bureau of the Census. 1952. Section 6, Pages 21-10 and 21-11, Massachusetts Table 6. Population of Counties by Minor Civil Divisions: 1930 to 1950. RetrievedJuly 12, 2011.
  45. ^"1920 Census of Population"(PDF). Bureau of the Census. Number of Inhabitants, by Counties and Minor Civil Divisions. Pages 21-5 through 21-7. Massachusetts Table 2. Population of Counties by Minor Civil Divisions: 1920, 1910, and 1920. RetrievedJuly 12, 2011.
  46. ^"1890 Census of the Population"(PDF). Department of the Interior, Census Office. Pages 179 through 182. Massachusetts Table 5. Population of States and Territories by Minor Civil Divisions: 1880 and 1890. RetrievedJuly 12, 2011.
  47. ^"1870 Census of the Population"(PDF). Department of the Interior, Census Office. 1872. Pages 217 through 220. Table IX. Population of Minor Civil Divisions, &c. Massachusetts. RetrievedJuly 12, 2011.
  48. ^"1860 Census"(PDF). Department of the Interior, Census Office. 1864. Pages 220 through 226. State of Massachusetts Table No. 3. Populations of Cities, Towns, &c. RetrievedJuly 12, 2011.
  49. ^"1850 Census"(PDF). Department of the Interior, Census Office. 1854. Pages 338 through 393. Populations of Cities, Towns, &c. RetrievedJuly 12, 2011.
  50. ^"1950 Census of Population"(PDF). 1: Number of Inhabitants.Bureau of the Census. 1952. Section 6, Pages 21–7 through 21-09, Massachusetts Table 4. Population of Urban Places of 10,000 or more from Earliest Census to 1920. RetrievedJuly 12, 2011.{{cite journal}}:Cite journal requires|journal= (help)
  51. ^"Table 3. Annual Estimates of the Resident Population for Incorporated Places in Massachusetts: April 1, 2010 to July 1, 2011 (SUB-EST2011-03-25)".U.S. Census Bureau. Archived fromthe original on March 9, 2013. RetrievedJanuary 18, 2013.
  52. ^"Colonial Boston".University Archives. Archived fromthe original on February 7, 2009.
  53. ^Carr, Jacqueline Barbara (December 2000). "A Change 'as Remarkable as the Revolution Itself': Boston's Demographics, 1780–1800".New England Quarterly.73 (4):583–602.
  54. ^Moravek, Natalie (2011)."Candy Land: The History of Candy Making in Cambridge, MA - Squirrel Brand Nuts".Cambridge Historical Society. Archived fromthe original on February 21, 2015. RetrievedJuly 10, 2014.
  55. ^ab"Our History".American Nut & Chocolate Co.
  56. ^"History of Boston, Massachusetts".US History.com.
  57. ^Story, Ronald (1985).Harvard and the Boston Upper Class: The Forging of an Aristocracy, 1800–1970. Irvington, NY: Wesleyan University Press.
  58. ^Goodman, Paul (September 1966). "Ethics and Enterprise: The Values of a Boston Elite, 1800–1860".American Quarterly.18 (3):437–451.doi:10.2307/2710847.JSTOR 2710847.
  59. ^Holmes entitled the first chapter of his 1861 novelElsie Venner "The Brahmin caste of New England"; he had long been writing about the group without using the term "Brahmin."
  60. ^Story, Ronald (Fall 1975). "Harvard Students, The Boston Elite, And The New England Preparatory System, 1800–1870".History of Education Quarterly.15 (3):281–298.doi:10.2307/367846.JSTOR 367846.
  61. ^Walker, David (1829).""Walker's Appeal, in Four Articles; Together with a Preamble, to the Colored Citizens of the World, but in Particular, and Very Expressly, to Those of the United States of America, Written in Boston, State of Massachusetts, September 28, 1829"".
  62. ^Quinlin, Michael (2013).Irish Boston: A Lively Look at Boston's Colorful Irish History. Globe Pequot Press. Archived fromthe original on August 13, 2013.
  63. ^O'Connor, Thomas H. (1995).The Boston Irish: A Political History. Boston, MA: Northeastern University Press. Chapter 3.
  64. ^Tager, Jack (2001).Boston Riots: Three Centuries of Social Violence. Boston:Northeastern University Press. pp. 135–139.ISBN 978-1-555534615.
  65. ^Tager, Jack (2001).Boston Riots: Three Centuries of Social Violence. Boston:Northeastern University Press. p. 134.ISBN 978-1-555534615.
  66. ^O'Connor, Thomas H. (1995).The Boston Irish: A Political History. Boston, MA: Northeastern University Press. Chapter 9.
  67. ^Brooks, Van Wyck (1955).The Flowering of New England. New York: Dutton.
  68. ^Baltzell, E. Digby (1979).Puritan Boston and Quaker Philadelphia. Transaction Publishers. pp. 286, 430.ISBN 978-1-412832571.
  69. ^DiMaggio, Paul (1991). "Cultural Entrepreneurship in Nineteenth-Century Boston". In Mukerji, Chandra & Schudson, Michael (eds.).Rethinking Popular Culture: Contemporary Perspectives in Cultural Studies. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press. pp. 374–.
  70. ^Warner, Sam Bass (1978).Streetcar Suburbs: The Process of Growth in Boston, 1870-1900. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
  71. ^Kaufman, Polly Welts (1990)."Julia Harrington Duff: An Irish Woman Confronts the Boston Power Structure, 1900–1905"(PDF).Historical Journal of Massachusetts.18 (2):113–137.
  72. ^"Porter Motor Co".Stanley Steamer Online. Archived fromthe original on December 4, 2008. RetrievedMarch 9, 2008.
  73. ^Clymer, Floyd (1950).Treasury of Early American Automobiles, 1877–1925. New York: Bonanza Books. p. 13.
  74. ^Park, Edwards (November 1983)."Without Warning, Molasses in January Surged Over Boston".Smithsonian.14 (8). Smithsonian Institution:213–230. RetrievedDecember 16, 2006 – via Eric Postpischil.
  75. ^Darby, Mary (December 1998)."In Ponzi We Trust".Smithsonian.
  76. ^"Fraud Resources".Association of Certified Fraud Examiners.
  77. ^"SEC Enforcement Actions Against Ponzi Schemes".U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. July 11, 2019.
  78. ^Vale, Lawrence J. (2000).From the Puritans to the Projects: Public Housing and Public Neighbors. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
  79. ^Norwood, Stephen H. (2003). "Marauding Youth and the Christian Front: Antisemitic Violence in Boston and New York during World War II".American Jewish History.91 (2):233–267.doi:10.1353/ajh.2004.0055.S2CID 162237834.
  80. ^Levine, Hillel; Harmon, Lawrence (1992).The Death of an American Jewish Community: A Tragedy of Good Intentions. New York:Free Press. pp. 260–266.ISBN 978-0-029138656.
  81. ^Oldman, Oliver; Aaron, Henry (1965). "Assessment-Sales Ratios Under the Boston Property Tax".National Tax Journal.18 (1).National Tax Association:36–49.doi:10.1086/NTJ41791421.JSTOR 41791421.S2CID 232213907.
  82. ^Rothstein, Richard (2017).The Color of Law: A Forgotten History of How Our Government Segregated America. New York:Liveright Publishing Corporation. pp. 170–171.ISBN 978-1-631494536.
  83. ^Levine, Hillel; Harmon, Lawrence (1992).The Death of an American Jewish Community: A Tragedy of Good Intentions. New York:Free Press. pp. 167–299.ISBN 978-0-029138656.
  84. ^Vale, Lawrence J. (2000).From the Puritans to the Projects: Public Housing and Public Neighbors.Cambridge, MA:Harvard University Press. pp. 301–320.ISBN 978-0-674025752.
  85. ^Because It Is Right Educationally (Report).Massachusetts Department of Elementary and Secondary Education. 1965. p. viii. RetrievedApril 3, 2021.
  86. ^abLevine, Hillel; Harmon, Lawrence (1992).The Death of an American Jewish Community: A Tragedy of Good Intentions. New York:Free Press. pp. 212–213.ISBN 978-0-029138656.
  87. ^Formisano, Ronald P. (2004) [1991].Boston Against Busing: Race, Class, and Ethnicity in the 1960s and 1970s.Chapel Hill, NC:University of North Carolina Press. p. 34.ISBN 978-0-807855263.
  88. ^Rothstein, Richard (2017).The Color of Law: A Forgotten History of How Our Government Segregated America. New York:Liveright Publishing Corporation. pp. 64–67.ISBN 978-1-631494536.
  89. ^Formisano, Ronald P. (2004) [1991].Boston Against Busing: Race, Class, and Ethnicity in the 1960s and 1970s.Chapel Hill, NC:University of North Carolina Press. pp. 35–36.ISBN 978-0807855263.
  90. ^"The Racial Imbalance Act of 1965".University of Massachusetts Boston. RetrievedApril 3, 2021.
  91. ^"Rudy Bruner Award for Urban Excellence".Bruner Foundation. Archived fromthe original on September 14, 2013. RetrievedSeptember 3, 2013.
  92. ^Kamin, Blair (Summer 1997)."Rethinking Public Housing".Blueprints.XV (3). Washington, D.C.:National Building Museum: 4. Archived fromthe original on October 11, 2007.
  93. ^Roessner, Jane (2000).A Decent Place to Live: From Columbia Point to Harbor Point. Boston, MA: Northeastern University Press. Archived fromthe original on September 19, 2006.
  94. ^"Boston War Zone Becomes Public Housing Dream".The New York Times. November 23, 1991.
  95. ^Cf. Roessner, p.293. "The HOPE VI housing program, inspired in part by the success of Harbor Point, was created by legislation passed by Congress in 1992."
  96. ^Moir, Susan."Big Dig".Electronic Library of Construction Occupational Safety and Health. Archived fromthe original on October 6, 2011.
  97. ^"World's most expensive cities".CNN Money. June 22, 2005. RetrievedJune 30, 2005.
  98. ^Bray, Hiawatha (August 10, 2017)."The dot-Boston domain is now open".Boston Globe. RetrievedFebruary 18, 2018.The .boston domain was initially awarded to the city of Boston and the Boston Globe in 2012, but the media company sold off nearly all its interests in the venture to Minds + Machines Group Limited, a company specializing in the operation of Internet domains. The Globe retains a small ownership percentage in the new domain and will receive some revenue from the sale of .boston addresses.
  99. ^Marstall, Chris (January 22, 2012)."Welcome to Megaboston".Boston Globe. RetrievedJanuary 22, 2012.
  100. ^abcdeBacon, Edwin M., ed. (March 1891)."VII. New Boston and the Suburbs".Boston Illustrated: Containing Full Descriptions of the City and its Immediate Suburbs, its Public Buildings and Institutions, Business Edifices, Parks and Avenues, Statues, Harbor and Islands, etc., etc. With Numerous Historical Allusions. Houghton, Mifflin and Company.
  101. ^Lewis, Geoff; Avault, John; Vrabel, Jim (November 1999).History of Boston's Economy, Growth and Transition 1970–1998(PDF) (Report). Boston, Massachusetts: Boston Redevelopment Authority. p. 31. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on June 16, 2007.

References

[edit]

Further reading

[edit]
Further information:Bibliography of Boston

External links

[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related toHistory of Boston.
Topics
Attractions
Business
districts
Government
Neighborhoods
Sports
Boston African American community prior to the Civil War
Prominent individuals
Relevant topics and
associated individuals
Black nationalism
Legal cases
History of slavery
Organizations
Abolitionism
Education
Religion
Other
Historic sites
or neighborhoods
Influential publications
Related
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=History_of_Boston&oldid=1282797093"
Category:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp