When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: map of copley square boston

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Copley Square - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copley_Square

    Copley Square / ˈkɒpli / [1] is a public square in Boston's Back Bay neighborhood, bounded by Boylston Street, Clarendon Street, St. James Avenue, and Dartmouth Street. The square is named for painter John Singleton Copley. Prior to 1883 it was known as Art Square due to its many cultural institutions, some of which remain today.

  3. Trinity Church (Boston) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trinity_Church_(Boston)

    The church is situated in Copley Square, and since the 1970s, in the shadow of the John Hancock Tower. Having been built in Boston's Back Bay , which was originally a mud flat , Trinity rests on some 4,500 wooden piles, each driven through 30 feet of gravel fill , silt , and clay , and constantly wetted by the water table of the Back Bay as ...

  4. Copley Place - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copley_Place

    Copley Place is an enclosed shopping mall in the Back Bay neighborhood of Boston, Massachusetts. It is named after the nearby Copley Square, and is connected to the Prudential Center shopping mall via a skybridge over Huntington Avenue. It features direct indoor connections to several nearby destinations including four office towers, and the ...

  5. Old South Church - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_South_Church

    Old South Church in Boston, Massachusetts, also known as New Old South Church or Third Church, is a historic United Church of Christ congregation first organized in 1669. Its present building was designed in the Gothic Revival style by Charles Amos Cummings and Willard T. Sears, completed in 1873, and amplified by the architects Allen & Collens between 1935–1937.

  6. Museum of Fine Arts, Boston - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Museum_of_Fine_Arts,_Boston

    It was located in Copley Square at Dartmouth and St. James Streets. [3] It was built almost entirely of brick and terracotta, which was imported from England, with some stone about its base. [4] After the MFA moved out in 1909, this original building was demolished, and the Copley Plaza Hotel (now the Fairmont Copley Plaza) replaced it in 1912. [5]

  7. Back Bay, Boston - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Back_Bay,_Boston

    73001948 [1] Added to NRHP. August 14, 1973. Back Bay is an officially recognized neighborhood of Boston, Massachusetts, [2] built on reclaimed land in the Charles River basin. Construction began in 1859, as the demand for luxury housing exceeded the availability in the city at the time, and the area was fully built by around 1900. [3]