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Roslindale's original Engine Company 45, was deactivated on April 10, 1981, due to budget cuts. Roslindale was once called the "garden suburb" of Boston. [1] The portion of the Arnold Arboretum south of Bussey Street is located in Roslindale. Six miles south-southwest of downtown Boston, Roslindale was originally part of the town of Roxbury. In ...
Ann Street (North Street) Hanover Street; North End, Boston. Roslindale. Roslindale Square; Roxbury. Egleston Square [22] Fort Hill; Franklin Park (extends into Jamaica Plain and Dorchester) Nubian Square (formerly Dudley Square) Roxbury Crossing; South Boston. Andrew Square (extends into Dorchester) D Street; Dorchester Heights / Telegraph ...
Roslindale Village station is an MBTA Commuter Rail station on the Needham Line, located in the Roslindale Square business district of the Roslindale neighborhood in Boston, Massachusetts. The station has a single side platform serving the line's single track, with a mini-high platform for accessibility .
The Roslindale Substation is a historic electrical substation building at 4228 Washington Street in the center of the Roslindale village of Boston, Massachusetts. The brick Classical Revival building was constructed in 1911 by the Boston Elevated Railway (BERy), a predecessor to today's MBTA. The monumental building is 80 feet (24 m) long, 50 ...
West Roxbury seceded from Roxbury in 1851, and was annexed by Boston in 1874. The town included the neighborhoods of Jamaica Plain and Roslindale. West Roxbury's main commercial thoroughfare is Centre Street. West Roxbury Main Streets is a local non-profit that works to enhance and promote the business district. The neighborhood has some two ...
They comprise four service greenhouses totaling 3,744 square feet (347.8 square metres), the headhouse with offices, cold rooms, storage areas, and a classroom. Adjacent to the greenhouse is a shade house of 3,150 square feet (293 square metres), a 12,600 cubic feet (360 m 3 ) cold storage facility, and three irrigated, inground nurseries ...
Cornhill, from School Street to Dock Square; The future Washington St. shown in blue on a pre-Revolutionary British map of Boston. Nine months later the name "Washington Street" was extended again. On May 9, 1825 the roads connecting Boston's town line to present-day Roxbury Street in Dudley Square were consolidated into Washington Street. This ...
Adams Square c. 1905, looking south. The rear of the Ames Building is visible on the right. Adams Square (1879–1963) was a square in downtown Boston, Massachusetts. Now demolished, it was formerly located on the site of the current Boston City Hall in Government Center.