Dorchester Illustration of the Day no. 1798 17 Playstead Road

Dorchester Illustration of the Day no. 1798

 

Today we have a stereoview of a scene at Savin Hill – note that the picture itself says “Savern Hill.”  Stereoview cards were placed in a holder with lenses, so that when the viewer looked through them, the pictures would merge, producing a 3-d effect.

The house is the 1855 Daniel Denny House at 17 Playstead Road.

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Dorchester Illustration of the Day no. 1797 Miss Ryan

Dorchester Illustration of the Day no. 1797

 

It seems that the blurring of the boundary lines between Dorchester and the rest of Boston began as early as the 19th century.  Today we have a photograph of Miss Ryan at the Retreat for the Insane, Dorchester, Mass., March 5, 1889.  [can’t tell if she was on the staff or one of the patients]

Apparently the Retreat for the Insane was the beginnings of the Boston State Hospital at 591 Morton Street.  The problem is that that side of Harvard Street was West Roxbury and not Dorchester (and not Mattapan which was part of Dorchester).

Even The Annual Report of the City Auditor, May  1888 – April 1889. Boston, 1889 identifies its location as Dorchester:

Retreat for Insane, Dorchester

The site purchased by the City for a Home for the Poor contains about 50 acres, and is bounded on the easterly side by Back Street, on the southerly side by Morton Street, on the westerly side by Canterbury Street, and on the northerly side by Austin Terrace, so called, and is now occupied as a retreat for chronic and mild cases of insane persons transferred from Boston Lunatic Hospital.  On this estate are a house, barn with silo of a capacity of 325 tons, ice-houses and sheds.

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Dorchester Illustration of the Day no. 1796 Henry Crane Stable

Dorchester Illustration of the Day no. 1796

 

Another photo from Bob Rugo possibly shows the Henry Crane stable that stood at 1167 Washington Street prior to 1890 in the same spot as the building we saw in yesterday’s illustration. 

Looks as if the driver in the photo is all ready for the Super Dorchester Tour.

Super Dorchester Trolley Tour – Sunday June 24

Begins at 12 noon sharp and will take about 2 ½ hours

A box lunch will be provided on the trolley

$35 per person – this is not a fundraiser, just covering the cost of the trolleys and lunch

Meet at 195 Boston Street before noon 

Join us for a guided trolley tour from the north to the south, winding our way from the Dorchester Historical Society, through Upham’s Corner, Jones Hill, Savin Hill, Meetinghouse Hill, Field’s Corner, Harrison Square-Clam Point, Melville Avenue-Wellesley Park, Codman Square, Ashmont Hill, Ashmont-Adams, Adams Corner, Lower Mills, Port Norfolk and back to the Dorchester Historical Society.

For Tickets: go to www.dorchesterhistoricalsocietyblog.org or call Earl Taylor 617 293-3052 or email him at ERMMWWT@aol.com

 

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If you value receiving the DIOTD, please express your appreciation by making a donation to the Dorchester Historical Society, either by regular mail at 195 Boston Street, Dorchester, MA 02125, or through the website at www.DorchesterHistoricalSociety.org

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Dorchester Illustration of the Day no. 1795 1167 Washington Street

Dorchester Illustration of the Day no. 1795

 

Yesterday we saw a bit of Lower Mills from a bird’s-eye view.  There was a building about where the Spukie’s pizza store is located today.  Today’s illustration is a photo from Bob Rugo showing that building and at the right a building where the convenience store Metamorphosis is located today.

The alley to the left is Miller’s Lane, now essentially a driveway for the parking area for the Baker Chocolate apartments.  The main building in the photo at 1167 Washington Street was built in 1889 or 1890.  It replaced a stables owned by the Crane family.  This building still shows up in the 1933 atlas.  Does anyone know when it was demolished?

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Dorchester Illustration of the Day no. 1794 Lower Mills

Dorchester Illustration of the Day no. 1794

Today we have a detail from the 1890 bird’s-eye view of Lower Mills.  Although the print shows mostly the Dorchester side of the river, the title is: Milton Lower Mills, Massachusetts. Boston: O.H. Bailey & Co., Lith. & Pub., 1890.

The building squarely in the middle is Young’s Hotel.  To the left down the alley is the Stone Mill building of the Baker Chocolate Company-no. 16.  The Webb Mill of the Baker Chocolate Company is on the Milton side of the river. In the upper left you can see the Village Congregational Church, no. 6.  Across the street you can see the Stoughton School building.  The Baker Chocolate Administration Building has not been built; neither have the two Baker Chocolate buildings on the same side closer to the river: the Baker and Forbes mills.

In the illustration the numbers indicate:

6 Village Congregational Church

11 Odd Fellows Hall

14 15 16 W Baker & Co.’s Chocolate Mills

25 E.R. Wendemuth Block, Dry Goods, Millinery, Boots and Shoes, Milton School of Music, R. W. Lanigan

26 J.C. Talbot, Importer General Grocer

28 J. Edwin Swan Stores, Kitchen Furnishings, Plumbing, etc.

39 Henry Crane and Son, Lower Mills Stable (sort of where Spukie’s Pizza is)

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Dorchester Illustration of the Day no. 1793 Mary Tolman certificate

Dorchester Illustration of the Day no. 1793

 

Today’s illustration is an early 19th-century certificate for good behavior for Miss Mary E. Tolman from her school teacher.

This is probably Mary Elizabeth Tolman born April 10, 1809, to Robert P. & Mary Tolman.  The instructor, J. Pierce, has not been identified.

Girls began to attend public schools in Dorchester in 1784.

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Dorchester Illustration of the Day no. 1792 Meeting House Hill

Dorchester Illustration of the Day no. 1791

 

Today we have another Dorchester photo published in 1895 in Picturesque Roxbury, Jamaica Plain, West Roxbury, Dorchester and Vicinity. The main features of the photo are the Soldiers Monument, First Church and Lyceum Hall.  Notice the girl leaning against the pole.

From the text accompanying the photo:

Meeting House Hill—Dorchester

The first meeting house of Dorchester did not stand on Meeting House Hill, for as the settlement of the town began at Allen’s Plain and Savin Hill, the site of the first church was a point in that vicinity, close to the corner of Pleasant and East Cottage Streets.  It was a log cabin [not!], surrounded by a high stockade, and it combined the functions of a house of worship, a block house, a town house, and a “safe deposit vault.” 

A “town meeting” was held every Monday. 

Cannon were mounted on the roof, and a sentinel was kept constantly on guard, for this was a veritable “fort,” and was utilized as a power house and an arsenal.

Every evening it became a “safe deposit vault,” as the townsmen then conveyed their valuables there for safe keeping.  [never heard of this] 

This meeting house was replaced in 1645 by a much larger and better on which, in 1670, was removed to Meeting House Hill, and in 1743 was succeeded by a new house so much larger and more elaborate that its cost was 3,500 pounds, while the one it replaced cost but 250 pounds. 

This meeting house was enlarged just a hundred years ago—in 1794—and might be standing to-day were it not so injured by a great storm in 1815 as to necessitate the construction of a new building. 

This was dedicated in December, 1816, and is the church which crowns Meeting House Hill to-day.  [too bad it burned in 1896]

Its bell was presented to the society by the Dorchester proprietors, in 1751, and has been in use ever since, with the exception of an interval when it was being recast on account of a crack which appeared in it after service of more than a century.

The Soldier’s monument, which stands on the Square near by, is not only a memorial of bravery and devotion to country but marks the site of the meeting house which the present one replaced, while an elm some thirty feet north of the monument, stands on the spot where the pulpit was placed.

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Dorchester Illustration of the Day no. 1791 Upham’s Corner

Dorchester Illustration of the Day no. 1791

 

Amos Upham opened his store in the 1820s on the corner of Columbia Road (then still named Boston Street and Dudley Street.  In the mid-19th century the company was renamed for Amos’ son James H. Upham. Today’s was published in 1895 in Picturesque Roxbury, Jamaica Plain, West Roxbury, Dorchester and Vicinity.

The following comments come from a history of the Freemasons:

James H. Upham was born in the town of Dorchester, Massachusetts, September 25, 1820. His education was obtained principally at the town school (now (1892) the Everett school) of Dorchester, until at the age of fourteen his father, Amos Upham, for business reasons, took him from school and placed him in his own grocery store at Upham’s Corner, where for more than half a century his face has been as familiar as the old sign, behind which the business of father and son was continued. As a citizen, no man has had the confidence of his fellow-citizens and more immediate neighbors to a greater extent than he. The settlement of estates, the division of property, the trusts and duties of executor and administrator have been frequently committed to him. He has also held many official positions in his native town, and to the discharge of these duties he invariably brought to play his best energies and business skill. On the 19th of June 1845, BROTHER UPHAM married Mary Bird, also of Dorchester, and a schoolmate.

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Dorchester Illustration of the Day no. 1790 Crescent Market

Dorchester Illustration of the Day no. 1790

 

Crescent Market, 757 Dudley Street, Upham’s Corner.

Crescent Market, dealers in Fresh and Salt Meats of every description, Choice Fruit, Vegetables, etc., No. 757 Dudley Street, Upham’s Corner is an excellent place at which to trade if  you don’t want to be called upon to help pay other people’s bills, for the business is conducted on a cash basis and you pay for you get—no more and no less.  This is a strictly first-class family market.  The stock includes fresh and salt meats of every description, choice fruits, vegetables, dairy products, canned goods, teas and coffees and staple groceries.  Every article you buy here is guaranteed to prove as represented; every article is sold at the lowest market rates—quality considered; and the stock is so large and complete that all tastes and all purses can be suited.  This business was founded in 1882, and the proprietor is Mr. L. E. Felton, who is a native of Boston, and has had long and large experience in the provision trade.  He employs five assistants, utilizes three teams and proposes to make the service as nearly perfect as possible.  Of course mistakes occur sometimes, for “accidents will happen, even in the best regulated families,” but they are cheerfully and promptly corrected, and if care will prevent their repetition they will not happen again.  A good business is done; it is steadily increasing, and it certainly deserves success, for it is founded upon the bedrock principle of fair dealing with all.

From: Picturesque Roxbury, Jamaica Plain, West Roxbury, Dorchester and Vicinity. New York: Mercantile Illustrating Co., 1895.

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Dorchester Illustration of the Day no. 1789 Baker Chocolate

Dorchester Illustration of the Day no. 1789

View of Baker Chocolate Stone Mill from Milton side of Neponset River.

Photograph with label on back: Adams Street & Baker’s Court. Walter Baker Stone Mill (right), Cook & Scott Woolen Cleansing Mill, Talbot’s Old Store, afterward Gramer Furniture Store (left)

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