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| History of Boston, Massachusetts |

Plan, view of Boston, Boston, MA, 1722 plan
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1740 Faneuil Hall, sketch by John Smybert

The 18th-century Old State House in Boston is surrounded by tall
buildings of the 19th and 20th centuries.
The history to Boston, Massachusetts, intertwines with the history of
the United States. Boston is the capital of the Commonwealth of
Massachusetts, and the historical center of New England.
Boston was not the first significant area of European settlement in
Massachusetts - the Plymouth Colony of 1620 and Salem of 1626 preceded
it. The first settlement in the immediate area of Boston was a short way
across Boston Harbor at Charlestown. Boston's deep harbor and
advantageous geographic position helped it to become the busiest port in
the Massachusetts Bay Colony, eventually surpassing Plymouth and Salem.
Until the 1760s, Boston was America's largest, wealthiest, and most
influential city.[1]
European settlement and colonial times
The Shawmut Peninsula was originally connected to the mainland to its
south by a narrow isthmus, Boston Neck, and surrounded by (using modern
names) the waters of Boston Harbor and the Back Bay, an estuary of the
Charles River. Several prehistoric Native American archaeological sites
excavated in the city have shown that the peninsula was inhabited as
early as 5,000 BC.[2]
In 1625, William Blaxton (also spelled Blackstone) became the "first
Bostonian" (of the European settlers); at first, he lived alone on what
is now Boston Common and Beacon Hill. Settlers who had landed at
Charlestown in 1629 purchased land from Blaxton in 1630 to expand the
settlement and secure water supplies.[3]
In 1628, the Cambridge Agreement was signed in England among the
Puritans of the Massachusetts Bay Colony. These were not Separatists
like the Pilgrims, but chartered colonists. It established the colony as
a self-governing entity, answerable only to the king. John Winthrop was
its leader, and would become governor of the settlements in the New
World. Winthrop gave a famous sermon "A Model of Christian Charity",
which described the new colony as "a City upon a Hill."
In June 1630, the Winthrop Fleet arrived in what would later be called
Salem,[4] which on account of lack of food, "pleased them not."[5] They
proceeded to Charlestown, which pleased them less, for lack of fresh
water. Finally, Blackstone, the sole settler remaining from a 1622
expedition on the Shawmut Peninsula, invited the group to drink from the
waters of his spring. The Puritans settled around the spring in what
would become Boston.[6] They gave Blackstone 50 acres (20.2 ha) and made
him a member of their church; Blackstone quickly sold the land back for
30 pounds and resettled in what is now known as the Blackstone Valley.
Winthrop pledged 400 pounds to the cause and set sail on the ship the
Arbella—named after the wife of Isaac Johnson, daughter of Thomas, 5th
Earl of Lincoln. Winthrop befriended the younger Johnson (29 years old
at his death) in earlier days in England, spending many days at Isaac's
family home. The first Englishman in the Boston area, Blackstone, was a
childhood and best friend of Isaac; they attended seminary together.
Isaac's grandmother, the Lady Chatterton, was the daughter of one of the
King James Bible translators, and the Johnson family owned two
seminaries in England, one still used as a school to this day. Isaac
Johnson's family lines can be traced to the earlier Norman Conquest of
England from the Johnsons of Rouen, France, and are associated with
William "the Bastard" as well as the earlier 968 conquest of southern
England. The Johnsons, per the London Herald of Arms, took part in four
crusades and fought with Richard the Lion Heart. Winthrop on Isaac
Johnson's death put in probate a sum of over 75,000 pounds sterling.
Isaac's brother, Capt. James Johnson, on his arrival in 1635, was denied
his title and right to Isaac's property. With the help of Dudley and
others Winthrop kept this wealth in probate, and took fees, for over 30
years. Many documents weere destroyed in a very mysterious manner. The
documents were part of the "doomsday record" kept by the founders of
Boston. Winthrop and others accused Capt. James Johnson's wife of
adultery and placed her on gallows with the rope on her neck, only to
let her go. Capt. Johnson's only crime was to allow his wife to have
bible studies in his home with Ann Hutchinson, "a good woman of the
Christian faith" who along with the Lady Arbella Clinton-Fiennes came
from Lincolnshire, England.
Claims to inheritance were presented to the royal court in London by the
father Abraham Johnson, a Sherriff of the Queen (Rutland England). Isaac
Johnson was buried with his wife, the Lady Arbella Clinton-Fiennes of
Lincolnshire, on his land, now called King's Chapel, on Tremont Street,
Boston. A reference is made to Isaac Johnson in the first chapter of the
book "A Scarlet Letter".
Winthrop endangered his servants for the purpose of running his
enterprises and docks; "they had not clean water and many died before
Winthrop was urged to move to Boston".[1]
The settlement of Trimountaine or Trimontaine (named after the
peninsula's three hills) changed its name to "Boston" on September 7;
the settlement of Shawmut also changed its name to "Boston" on September
16. Governor Winthrop announced the foundation of the City of Boston on
September 17.[4] Boston is named after Boston, Lincolnshire, a town in
Lincolnshire, England, from which several prominent colonists emigrated.
The Massachusetts Bay Colony planted many nearby settlements in 1630 and
the years that followed.
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. These values molded an extremely stable and
well-structured society in Boston. Puritan values of hard work, moral
uprightness, and education remain a part of Boston's culture. The first
school in America, Boston Latin School (1635), and the first college in
America, Harvard College (1636), were founded shortly after Boston's
European settlement.
On June 1, 1660, Mary Dyer was hanged on Boston Common for repeatedly
defying a law banning Quakers from the colony. She is considered to be
the last religious martyr in North America. A statue of Mary Dyer now
stands in front of the Massachusetts State House.
The Boston Post Road provided connectivity with New York City and with
the major settlements in Central and Western Massachusetts. The lower
route ran near present-day U.S. Route 1 via Providence, Rhode Island.
The upper route, laid out in 1673, left via Boston Neck and followed
present-day U.S. Route 20 until around Shrewsbury, Massachusetts. It
continued through Worcester, Springfield, and New Haven, Connecticut.
In 1755, Boston endured the largest earthquake ever to hit the
Northeastern United States, (estimated at 6.0 to 6.3 on the Richter
scale), called the Cape Ann Earthquake.[7][8]
Boston in rebellion
During the early 1770s, British attempts to exert control on the
thirteen colonies, primarily via taxation, prompted an uproar in New
England. Boston played the primary role in sparking both the American
Revolution and the ensuing American Revolutionary War. The Boston
Massacre, the Boston Tea Party, and several of the early battles of the
Revolution (such as the Battle of Lexington and Concord, the Battle of
Bunker Hill, and the Siege of Boston) occurred near or in the city.
During this period, Paul Revere, William Dawes, and Dr. Samuel Prescott
made their famous midnight rides.
Today Boston is sometimes called the Cradle of Liberty. Its historic
sites remain a popular tourist draw. The city has attempted to preserve
its colonial and revolutionary past, from the harboring of the USS
Constitution to the many famous sites along the Freedom Trail.

Map showing all ground in Boston occupied by buildings in 1880. From
U.S. Census Bureau.
After the revolutionary war, the city became one of the world's
wealthiest international trading ports, exporting products like rum,
fish, salt and tobacco.[9] It was chartered as a city in 1822,[10] and
by the mid-1800s it 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. Later, an even
denser network of railroads (see also List of railroad lines in
Massachusetts) facilitated the region's industry and commerce. A major
east-west route, the Worcester Turnpike (now Massachusetts Route 9), was
constructed in 1810.

Scollay Square, Boston, in the 1880s.
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 the Boston Brahmins) ruled the city, the 1840s brought waves of
new immigrants from Europe. These included large numbers of Irish and
Italians, giving the city a large Roman Catholic population. It is
currently the third largest Catholic community in the United States
(after Chicago and Los Angeles).
In 1831, William Lloyd Garrison founded The Liberator, an abolitionist
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. 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 of Anthony Burns and Kevin
McLaughlin.
The first medical school for women, The Boston Female Medical School
(which later merged with the Boston University School of Medicine),
opened in Boston on November 1, 1848.
The Great Boston Fire of 1872 started at the corner of Summer Street and
Kingston Street on November 9, and in two days destroyed about 65 acres
(260,000 m²) of city, 776 buildings, much of the financial district and
caused US$60 million in damage. The first "Great Fire" of Boston
destroyed 349 buildings on March 20, 1760.
In 1879, Mary Baker Eddy founded the Church of Christ, Scientist in
Boston.
From the mid-to-late-nineteenth century, Boston flourished culturally —
it became renowned for its rarefied literary culture and lavish artistic
patronage. "As a literary centre Boston was long supreme in the United
States and still disputes the palm with New York," says Baedeker's
United States (1893). "A list of its distinguished literary men would be
endless; but it may not be invidious to mention Hawthorne, Emerson,
Longfellow, Holmes, Lowell, Everett, Agassiz, Whittier, Motley,
Bancroft, Prescott, Parkman, Ticknor, Channing, Theodore Parker, Henry
James, T. B. Aldrich and Howells among the names more or less closely
associated with Boston." When Bret 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." Most of the great publishing
houses of Boston have been acquired or moved, leaving little but the
magazine The Atlantic Monthly (founded 1857) and the publisher Houghton
Mifflin to bear witness to Boston's former publishing glory. Despite
this, many renowned authors continue to live and work in Boston.
The first vaudeville theater opened on February 28, 1883, in Boston. The
last one, the Old Howard in Scollay Square, which had evolved from opera
to vaudeville to burlesque, closed in 1953.
As the population increased rapidly, Boston-area streetcar lines
facilitated the creation of a profusion of streetcar suburbs. Downtown
congestion worsened, prompting the opening of the first subway in North
America on September 1, 1897, the Tremont 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 the Massachusetts Bay Transportation
Authority. Two union stations, North Station and South Station were
constructed to consolidate downtown railroad terminals.
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". Consequently, Boston, arguably the cultural center of the
United States since its founding, came across as less sophisticated than
many less cultured cities without stringent censorship practices.
Another is that the phrase "banned in Boston" became associated in the
popular mind with something sexy and lurid; many distributors were happy
when their works were banned in Boston. It gave them more appeal
elsewhere. Some distributors advertised that their products had been
banned in Boston when in fact they had not to increase their appeal.
20th century
Early decades
On January 15, 1919, the Boston Molasses Disaster occurred in the North
End. Twenty-one people were killed and 150 injured as an immense wave of
molasses 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.
During the summer of 1919, over 1100 members of the Boston 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. The
1919 Boston Police Strike would ultimately set precedent for police
unionization across the country.
On August 23, 1927, Italian anarchists Nicola 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.
Transportation and urban renewal

1955 Yellow Book plan for the Boston-area highway system. The I-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 as Route 128
and which I-95 was later re-routed over).
In 1934, the Sumner Tunnel created the first direct road connection
under Boston Harbor, between the North End and East Boston.
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 that 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
enacted urban renewal policies, which resulted in the demolition of
several neighborhoods, including the Old West End, a largely Jewish and
Italian neighborhood, and Scollay Square. In their places went the
Charles River Park apartment complex, additions to Massachusetts General
Hospital and Government 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 the Central Artery had been constructed, but strong
local opposition resulted in the southern downtown portion being built
underground. The Dewey Square Tunnel connected downtown to the Southeast
Expressway. In 1961, the Callahan Tunnel opened, paralleling the older
Sumner Tunnel.
By 1965, the first Massachusetts Turnpike Extension was completed from
Route 128 to near South Station. The proposed Inner Belt in Boston,
Cambridge, Brookline, and Somerville was canceled due to public outcry.
In 1971, public protest canceled the routing of I-95 into downtown
Boston. Demolition had already begun along the Southwest Corridor, which
was instead used to re-route the Orange Line and Amtrak's Northwest
Corridor.

Boston's Zakim Bunker Hill Bridge is a result of the Big Dig.
As of 2006, the city is in the final stages of the Central Artery/Tunnel
project, nicknamed the Big Dig. Planned and approved in the 1980s under
Massachusetts governor Michael 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. The Ted Williams
Tunnel became the third highway tunnel to East Boston and Logan
International Airport as part of the project. The Big Dig also produced
the landmark Zakim 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 now the most expensive construction project
in United States history, and is currently the most expensive
construction project in the world.[11]
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 a bus rapid
transit (BRT) system dubbed "The Silver Line." The maritime Port of
Boston and Logan International Airport were also developed.
WWII and later
On November 28, 1942, Boston's Cocoanut Grove nightclub was the site of
the deadliest nightclub fire in United States history, killing 492
people and injuring hundreds more.
Between June 14, 1962, and January 4, 1964, thirteen single women
between the ages of 19 and 85 were murdered in Boston by the infamous
Boston Strangler.

Aerial view of the Back Bay and Cambridge
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 the mutual fund industry.
Health care became more extensive and expensive, and hospitals such as
Massachusetts General, Beth Israel Deaconess, and Brigham and Women's
led the nation in medical innovation and patient care. Higher education
also became more expensive, and universities such as Harvard, MIT, BU
and Tufts attracted hordes of students to the Boston area; many stayed
and became citizens. MIT graduates, in particular, founded many
successful high-tech companies, which made Boston second only to Silicon
Valley as a high-tech center.
In 1974, the city dealt with a crisis when a federal district court
judge, W. Arthur Garrity, ordered desegregation 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.
On March 18, 1990, the largest art theft in modern history occurred in
Boston. Twelve paintings, collectively worth over $100 million, were
stolen from the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum by two thieves posing as
police officers. As of 2007 these paintings have not been recovered.
21st century

Downtown Boston as seen from Cambridge
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 the more BosWash megalopolis. Examples include: the
acquisition of the Boston Globe by The New York Times; the loss of
Boston-headquartered publishing houses (noted above); the acquisition of
the century-old Jordan Marsh department store by Macy's; the increasing
rarity of ice-cream shops using cone-shaped scoops; the financial crisis
currently being experienced by the Massachusetts Horticultural Society;
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 as
Charlotte-based Bank of America acquired FleetBoston Financial, and P&G
has announced plans to acquire Gillette.
Despite these losses, Boston's ambiance remains unique among world
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 tackle
gentrification issues and rising living expenses. According to Money
Magazine, Boston is one of the world's 100 most expensive cities.[12]
Boston was the host city of the 2004 Democratic National Convention. The
city also found itself at the center of national attention in early 2004
during the controversy over same-sex marriages. After the Massachusetts
Supreme Judicial Court ruled that such marriages cannot banned under the
state's constitution, opponents and supporters of such marriages
converged on the Massachusetts State House as the state 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.
Geographic expansion
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 by land
reclamation, specifically by filling in marshes and mud flats and by
filling gaps between wharves along the waterfront, a process Walter Muir
Whitehill called "cutting down the hills to fill the coves." The most
intense reclamation efforts were in the 1800s. Beginning in 1807, the
crown of Beacon Hill was used to fill in a 50-acre (20 hectares) mill
pond that later became the Bulfinch Triangle (just south of today's
North Station area). The present-day State 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. After The 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 1800s. Almost six hundred acres (240 hectares) of
brackish Charles River marshlands west of the Boston Common were filled
in with soil brought in by rail from the hills of Needham Heights.
Boston also grew by annexing the adjacent communities of East Boston,
Roxbury, Dorchester, West Roxbury (including Jamaica Plain and
Roslindale), South Boston, Brighton, Allston, Hyde Park, and
Charlestown, some of which were also augmented by landfill reclamation.
Annexations and Landfill, 1804-1912. (some dates approximate, due to
time lag between approval and completion.)
Timeline of annexations, secessions, and related developments
(incomplete):
1705 - Hamlet of Muddy River split off to incorporate as Brookline
1804 - First part of Dorchester by act of the state legislature[13]
1851 - West Roxbury (including Jamaica Plain and Roslindale) is split
off from Roxbury as an independent municipality.
1855 - Washington Village, part of South Boston, by act of the state
legislature[13]
1868 - Roxbury
1870 - Last part of Dorchester
1873 - Brookline-Boston annexation debate of 1873 (Brookline was not
annexed)
1874 - West Roxbury, including Jamaica Plain and Roslindale (approved by
voters in 1873)[13]
1874 - Town of Brighton (including Allston) (approved by voters in
1873)[13]
1874 - Charlestown (approved by voters in 1873)[13]
1912 - Hyde Park[14]
1986 - Vote to create Mandela from parts of Roxbury, Dorchester, and the
South End passes locally but fails city-wide.
Timeline of land reclamation (incomplete):
1857 - Filling of the Back Bay begins
1882 - Present-day Back Bay fill complete
1890 - Charles River landfill reaches Kenmore Square, formerly the
western end of the Back Bay mill pond
1900 - Back Bay Fens fill complete
Links
-
The Boston Historical Society
-
City of Boston Archaeology Program and Lab - The City of Boston has
a City Archaeologist on staff to oversee any lots of land to be
developed for historical artifacts and significance, and to manage the
archaeological remains located on public land in Boston, and also has a
City Archaeology Program and an Archaeology Laboratory, Education and
Curation Center.
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