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Church Green Buildings Historic District is a historic district at 101-113 Summer Street in Boston, Massachusetts. It was built on the site of New South Church, which had been designed by Charles Bulfinch, following the destruction of the church in the Great Boston Fire of 1872. The building was originally used by trade association offices and ...
The name "Combat Zone" was popularized through a series of exposé articles on the area Jean Cole wrote for the Boston Daily Record in the 1960s. [1] The moniker described an area that resembled a war zone both because of its well-known crime and violence, and because many soldiers and sailors on shore leave from the Charlestown (Boston) Navy Yard frequented the many strip clubs and brothels ...
Historic American Engineering Record (HAER) No. MA-41, "Summer Street Retractile Bridge, Spanning Fort Point Channel at Summer Street, Boston, Suffolk County, MA", 22 photos, 33 data pages, 4 photo caption pages, 1982. HAER No. MA-135, "Summer Street Bridge, Spanning Reserved Channel, Boston, Suffolk County, MA", 31 photos, 14 data pages, 3 ...
Find out what the biggest stars of the '90s were up to with throwback photos from Hollywood's bygone era ... less eventful episode of the long-running sketch comedy show on Sept. 29, 1990. ...
This file has an extracted image: Summer Street between Arch and Otis Streets, Boston (Smith Patterson Co. Building).tif. Licensing This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 2.0 Generic license.
The Boston Athletic Association (1887–1936), lost clubhouse amidst the Great Depression, continues to exist as a society organizing races, including the Boston Marathon The Boston City Club (1906) The Badminton & Tennis Club (1908)
Boston Young Men's Christian Union. December 9, 1980 48 Boylston St. ... 101–113 Summer St. ... April 19, 1990
The Roxbury murders also known as “The Stride Rite Murders” (because the first two victims were discovered dismembered in their plastic trash bags) occurred between January and May 1979 when eleven Black women and one White woman were murdered within several miles of one another in the Roxbury neighborhood on the south side of Boston, Massachusetts.