Dorchester Illustration of the Day no. 1788 Donna Summer

Dorchester Illustration of the Day no. 1788

 

Disco singer Donna Summer passed away on Thursday.

Donna Summer won five Grammys and sold more than 130 million records worldwide. Her career took off in the mid 1970s, and she became known as the Queen of Disco. Throughout her career, Summer had 32 hit singles on the Billboard Hot 100, including four No. 1s.  Her last studio album, “Crayons” in 2008, produced three dance club hits with “I’m a Fire,” “Stamp Your Feet” and “Fame.”  In 2009, Summer sang at the Nobel Peace Prize concert in Norway in 2009 in honor of Nobel laureate U.S. President Barack Obama. Her most recent hit was the 2010 single “To Paris With Love.”

Councillor Charles C. Yancey Remembers Donna Summer

Friday, 18 May 2012 14:36 | Written by GNN Post

Boston City Hall (May 17, 2012) – Boston City Councillor Charles C. Yancey today reminisced growing up with singer, actress, and five-time Grammy Award winner, Donna Summer, who succumbed to cancer today in Florida at the age of 63.  Summer, whose older sister married one of Councillor Yancey’s brothers in the 1960s, was a close friend of the Yancey family.

Summer, who was born as LaDonna Adrian Gaines to Andrew and Mary Gaines on December 31, 1948 in Boston, graduated from the Jeremiah E. Burke High School in Dorchester. She perfected her vocal talent by singing gospel music at the Grant African Methodist Episcopal Church in Boston.

Summer relocated to Europe in 1968 and took part in the German productions of several musicals, including Haare, Porgy and Bess, and Godspell.

Summer, in 1975, recorded “Love To Love You Baby”, which transformed her into an international star and earned her the title Queen of Disco. She went on to score four number one singles, fourteen top ten hits, three platinum albums, five Grammy awards, and twelve other Grammy nominations.

Summer won Best R&B Vocal Performance Female for Last Dance in 1978, Best Rock Vocal Performance Female for Hot Stuff in 1979, Best Inspirational Performance for He’s A Rebel in 1983, Best Inspirational Performance for Forgive Me in 1984 and Best Dance Recording for Carry On in 1997. She also picked up 3 American Music Awards in 1979, the NAACP Image Award in 1980, and a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 1992.

Councillor Yancey, on July 12, 2008, presented Summer with a City Council resolution commending her successful career and her generosity to humanitarian needs. Summer contributed much of her time and money to such organizations as UNICEF, Music Cares, The Gay Men’s Health Crisis, Race to Erase MS, the Juvenile Diabetes Foundation, and the National Colorectal Cancer Research Alliance.

“We’re very proud of her international presence and her philanthropy. She was down to earth in spite of her fame and wealth,” Yancey said.

Summer, who has appeared in eight movies, was the first female artist to have three number one solo singles in one year, the first female artist to use synthesizers, and the first artist to create an extended play song for use in dance clubs.

“Donna Summer will be solely missed by my family and the entire City of Boston. We are proud of the fact that she was a daughter of Boston,” Yancey said.

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Dorchester Illustration of the Day no. 1787 World War I Monument

Dorchester Illustration of the Day no. 1787

 

Sometimes when we drive around Dorchester we concentrate so much on the traffic that we don’t see the monuments and the artwork displayed on our streets.  Today we have the World War I monument at Kane Square, the intersection of Bowdoin and Hancock Streets.

Dedicated by Francis G. Kane Post 60, American Legion, in memory of the heroes of Dorchester who made the supreme sacrifice in the World War. Erected by the people of Dorchester.

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Dorchester Illustration of the Day no. 1786 Endicott School

Dorchester Illustration of the Day no. 1786

 

Endicott School Building

The Bridge Boston Charter School will occupy the former Endicott School Building, beginning this summer. The new school will serve 108 students in pre-K through first grade and add one grade per year until it reaches grade 8 with a total of 335 students.

Located at 2 McLellan Street the school building was opened in 1906.  It was named for
William Endicott (1842-1903), who served for 40 years in the Boston Schools. He was Master of the Christopher Gibson School. Born in Canton, Mass., he served in the Civil War; then he began teaching in the Christopher Gibson School in Dorchester in 1866.

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Dorchester Illustration of the Day no. 1785 Power House

Dorchester Illustration of the Day no. 1785

 

In the era of trolley cars, the building occupied by Yale Electric today was once the power house for the Boston Elevated Railway Company.

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Dorchester Illustration of the Day no. 1784 Richard Clapp House

Dorchester Illustration of the Day no. 1784

 

Today we have a photo of Richard Clapp’s house, which was located on Columbia Road approximately where the Russell School is today across from the Blake House.

The following is from The Clapp Memorial. Record of the Clapp Family in America … Ebenezer Clapp, compiler.  Boston: David Clapp & Son, 1876

Richard, son of Lemuel and Rebecca (Dexter) Clapp, and brother of the preceding (William), was born in Dorchester, July 24, 1780, and died Dec. 16, 1861, aged 81 years.  He was a tanner by trade, and his yard was only a few rods south of his brother William’s [on Boston Street].  At one time in early life he was engaged pretty extensively in brick-making, the business being carried on upon lands of his own in South Boston.  Bricks there made were used in 1812, in the construction of the house he afterwards occupied, now standing on Pond Street [now mostly merged into Columbia Road], near the Five Corners [Edward Everett Square].  A few feet east from this house is the site of the one in which Rev. Richard Mather lived, and in which his son President Increase Mather was born. 

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Dorchester Illustration of the Day no. 1783 Savin Hill Depot

Dorchester Illustration of the Day no. 1783

 

Postard circa 1910 of Savin Hill Depot.  The illustration of the blimp in the sky seems to be printed on the card but printed in a different way than the rest of the card is printed.  At first I thought it was a drawing in ink, but it seems too fine for that.  So why was there a blimp over Savin Hill?

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Dorchester Illustration of the Day no. 1782 Footwarmer

Dorchester Illustration of the Day no. 1782

 

Today’s illustration is a copy of an advertisement for a Henderson Footwarmer from 1912.  The Dorchester Pottery company was founded in 1895 by George Henderson to produce commercial and industrial stoneware.  Its first big hit was the stoneware hot water bottle known as the Henderson Footwarmer.  It was used to keep feet warm in a cold automobile and also to warm hospital beds.  It later became known as the porcelain pig.  In the early years the opening in the bottle was closed with a cork stopper, but within a few years Henderson patented a metal fitting with a screw cap.

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Dorchester Illustration of the Day no. 1781 Handstand

Dorchester Illustration of the Day no. 1781

 

Photograph of man doing handstand on MDC sign on Malibu Beach ca. 1950

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Dorcheser Illustration of the Day no. 1780 St. Mark’s Episcopal Church

Dorchester Illustration of the Day no. 1780

 

Last evening the Boston Landmarks Commission approved the nomination of St. Mark’s Episcopal Church to the National Register of Historic Places based on the contribution of the church complex to the local architectural history of Boston. 

The nomination was presented to the Commission by Timothy Orwig, a consultant, who has successfully nominated more than two dozen sites to the National Register of Historic Places.  The St. Mark’s complex comprises 3 shingle buildings: the chapel, a parish house and a rectory.  In today’s postcard, postmarked in 1908, we see the chapel building.   The architectural design was by Edmund Quincy Sylvester, and the cornerstone was laid in 1904.  St. Mark’s was begun as a mission of St. Mary’s Episcopal Church.  Note the steeply pitched roof and the projecting entry porch with elements of half-timbering.

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Dorchester Illustration of the Day no. 1779 view of Savin Hill

Dorchester Illustration of the Day no. 1779

 

Yesterday, we saw a painting of Savin Hill, and today we have an electro-type version of that painting from Antique Views of Ye Towne of Boston by James Henry Stark.  First published in 1882.  This page may have been from a turn-of-the century edition.  The engraving is from a painting made in 1830.

The Stark family emigrated from England to Boston, Massachusetts, in the mid-19th century, eventually settling in Dorchester, Massachusetts. James Henry Stark attended Boston schools including the Boston Latin School, but he left school in 1864 to learn the trade of stereotyping and electrotyping, which he pursued until 1900, when he opened a real estate office. He was president of the Photo Electrotype Co., and he was the publisher of the book Antique Views of Ye Towne of Boston.  An avid yachtsman, he founded several local yacht clubs and helped organize the Savin Hill Yacht Club. He helped organize and later served as vice president of the Dorchester Historical Society and authored several guide books and historical works, including The Loyalists of Massachusetts.

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