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Franklin Square opened in 1849 and Blackstone Square subsequently opened in 1855. The St. James Hotel, now the Franklin Square House Apartments, served as the exterior backdrop of the popular 1980's NBC hospital drama series, St. Elsewhere. [5] In 1979, after years of neglect, local resident Brian Davidson began an effort to clean up the squares.
View of Franklin Street, Boston, an 1855 illustration demonstrating the street's bustle of carriages and pedestrians. Franklin Place, designed by Charles Bulfinch and built in Boston, Massachusetts, in 1793–95, included a row of sixteen three-story brick townhouses that extended in a 480-foot [1] curve, a small garden, and four double houses.
Franklin Park, a partially wooded 527-acre (2.13 km 2) parkland bordered by the Jamaica Plain, Roxbury, and Dorchester neighborhoods of Boston, Massachusetts, is maintained by the City of Boston Parks and Recreation Department. It is Boston's biggest park and the site of Franklin Park Zoo.
The Franklin Square Salon Gallery, located on the second floor, features art exhibits organized by ArtsWorcester. The theatre, under the name Poli's Palace Theater, was added the National Register of Historic Places in January 2011. [3] The Hanover Theatre Conservatory for the Performing Arts was added in 2016.
View history; Tools. Tools. move to sidebar ... Franklin and Blackstone Squares ... Maverick Square; N. North Square (Boston) Nubian Square; P. Park Square (Boston ...
Franklin Square Historic District (Baltimore, Maryland), a park in Baltimore, Maryland; Franklin Square Hospital Center, a hospital in Rossville, Maryland; Franklin and Blackstone Squares in Boston, Massachusetts; Franklin Place in Boston, Massachusetts; Franklin Square (Manhattan), a former square in Lower Manhattan, demolished in 1950
Illustrations from NEC's second home at the former St. James Hotel in Franklin Square. NEC was located there from 1882–1902. Tourjée continued establishing his public presence within the musical community in Boston by initiating the first national conference of music teachers, which met in Boston as the National Music Congress in 1869. [7]
Court Street (est. July 4, 1788) is located in the Financial District of Boston, Massachusetts. Prior to 1788, it was called Prison Lane (1634–1708) and then Queen Street (1708–1788). [ 1 ] In the 19th century it extended beyond its current length, to Bowdoin Square .