Dorchester Illustration 2224 Ashmont Market

2224 Ashmont store designed by W Whitney LewisDorchester Illustration no. 2224

Architect W. Whitney Lewis designed two suburban stores in the 1880s: the market at Ashmont that became O’Brien’s Market and another market at Bowdoin Station at 200 Washington Street.  Elevations of the two markets were featured in a double-page spread in American Architect and Building News in the issue of July 24, 1886.  The buildings were both designed with brick arches at the ground level with residential apartments above.  The market at Bowdoin Station has one more story than the market at Ashmont.

In his book Ashmont, Paul Douglass Shand-Tucci said: “… it was not until 1884 that Messrs. Jacques and Griffin began to build for their new market the building we now know as O’Brien’s Market … which takes its name from George O’Brien, who started as a clerk in 1895 in this store that a century later is now named for him, O’Brien having eventually bought the business.  A red brick ground-story market with shingled upper residential stories, where at first, as was the custom of the day, the proprietors lived, each in his own four-room suite, no building could have set a better tone for the village center it inaugurated, Victorian fantasy!  There is “checkerboard” brick patterning, formed by the interplay of receding and projecting bricks so as to animate the facade, especially in raking light; rough-faced red sandstone, worked particularly in the buttress offsets into robust shouldering profiles; decorative shingling in varying patterns; clapboards and stucco and fanciful “rock” scrollwork designs set in the stucco and centering on the numerals 1884 (the year the foundation stone was laid); all crowned by steeply pitched roofs and curiously shaped dormers and tall chimney stacks with picturesque chimney pots and a wonderful terra-cotta cresting that is almost the profile of frosting on a wedding cake.

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If you value receiving the illustration, 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 2223 Dorchester wins baseball trophy

2223 baseball award ceremony Dorchester victorious

Dorchester Illustration no. 2223

Photo of an award ceremony from 1920s or 1930s.  Boston baseball trophy award ceremony (Boston Twilight League?).  The two teams pictured are Dorchester and the South Boston All Stars.  Dorchester took the trophy.

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The Dorchester Illustration is sent occasionally. If you receive this e-mail by mistake, please reply to be taken off the e-mail list. If you know others who would like to receive the daily e-mail, please encourage them to join the group by going to http://groups.google.com/group/dorchester-historical-society. You may contact Earl Taylor at ERMMWWT@aol.com

If you value receiving the illustration, 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 2222 Camp McKay

Dorchester Illustration no. 2222

Photograph of Camp McKay on Columbia Point, Dorchester.  This World War II prisoner of war camp housed Italian prisoners.

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If you value receiving the illustration, 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 2221 Morton Street

Dorchester Illustration no. 2221

Photograph of Morton Street from the railroad bridge next to police station looking toward Selden Street in 1927.

The three-deckers on the right were built beginning in 1925.  This line of three-deckers begins with no. 899 permitted in August 1925, then 903 permitted in September 1925, then 907 permitted in October 1925,  and 911 permitted in December 1925.  The police station on the left, which was permitted in April 1915, was recently taken down in July 2013.  The masonry commercial strip on the left was lengthened at the far end within a year or two after this photo was taken.

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The Dorchester Illustration is sent occasionally. If you receive this e-mail by mistake, please reply to be taken off the e-mail list. If you know others who would like to receive the daily e-mail, please encourage them to join the group by going to http://groups.google.com/group/dorchester-historical-society. You may contact Earl Taylor at ERMMWWT@aol.com

If you value receiving the illustration, 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 lllustration 2220 Strand Theatre program 1929

Dorchester Illustration no. 2220 Strand Theatre program 1929

Clara Bow appears in The Saturday Night Kid, November, 1929, at the Strand Theatre.

The Strand Theatre was constructed on the site of the former Dyer mansion.

The Strand opened on November 11, 1918, as Dorchester’s NewMillionDollarPhotoplayPalace, one of the first designed specifically for motion pictures, and hailed as New England’s most beautiful theatre.  The Strand opened the same day that the news of the Armistice, which ended World War I, reached Boston.  The Theatre would go on to host movies, stage plays, concerts and political meetings.

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The Dorchester Illustration is sent occasionally. If you receive this e-mail by mistake, please reply to be taken off the e-mail list. If you know others who would like to receive the daily e-mail, please encourage them to join the group by going to http://groups.google.com/group/dorchester-historical-society. You may contact Earl Taylor at ERMMWWT@aol.com

If you value receiving the illustration, 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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2015 November 8, 2 pm Dorch Hist Soc program at All Saints Church

Dorchester and the American Pipe Organ: Restoring E.M. Skinner’s Opus 708 for All Saints, Ashmont

Sunday, November 8, 2015, 2 p.m.

A talk by Skinner organ expert Jonathan Ambrosino and a demonstration of the organ by All Saints’ Organist Andrew Sheranian.

All Saints chose to bring home to Dorchester a product of Dorchester: a historic E.M. Skinner organ, built in 1928 for a church that closed some years ago. Established on Crescent Avenue in 1901 and remaining in that location through 1968, the Skinner and later Aeolian-Skinner Organ Company built the most important organs of their time. Come hear how this little Skinner was saved and restored, and listen to a demonstration of its characteristic sounds.

****Note location for this event is:  Parish of All Saints, Ashmont, 209 Ashmont Street, Dorchester, MA 02124

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Dorchester Illustration 2219 intersection of Gallivan and Morton

Dorchester Illustration no. 2219 Intersection of Gallivan Boulevard and Morton Street

Until the late 1920s Codman Street served traffic from Morton Street to Adams Village.  When Gallivan Boulevard was created, much of the land near the intersection of Morton Street and the new Gallivan Boulevard (Codman St) was still unimproved. This photo of the street improvements was taken  in November of 1927.  At the time this stretch of road was called the Southern Artery. The sign says: Southern Artery, Boulevard constructed by J.C. Coleman & Sons Co., Expert Road Builders, Estimates Provided – 1620 Tremont Street, Boston.

The three family home on the left still stands.  The reconfiguration of the intersection and the construction of the fire station at the point of land between Gallivan and Morton are seen in the current photo.

From wikipedia: Southern Artery was originally part of historic New England Route 6 of the New England Interstate road marking system developed in the 1920s.[8] The section of NE6 from Jamaica Plain through Dorchester into Quincy was called Southern Artery by the Massachusetts Highway Commission.[9] Large portions of the route retained the original street names such as Morton Street and Codman Street (now Gallivan Boulevard) through Boston along the route now designated Route 203,[9] as did the portion along Hancock Street in Quincy. The street called Southern Artery was newly constructed in 1926 and retains the highway name.

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The Dorchester Illustration is sent occasionally. If you receive this e-mail by mistake, please reply to be taken off the e-mail list. If you know others who would like to receive the daily e-mail, please encourage them to join the group by going to http://groups.google.com/group/dorchester-historical-society. You may contact Earl Taylor at ERMMWWT@aol.com

If you value receiving the illustration, 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 2218 Syria Temple

 

Dorchester Illustration no. 2218 St. Matthew’s Church

In 1888 Father Fitzpatrick of St. Gregory’s bought a lot of land at the corner of Norfolk and Darlington Streets, and two years later opened a temporary church on the site at 89 Norfolk Street. It opened on Christmas Day, 1890, and remained as a ward of St. Gregory’s until it became St. Matthew’s Parish in 1900. When the new Saint Matthew’s building on Stanton Street was ready for use in 1923, the building pictured here was used for a time as the church school.   It later became the Syria Temple No. 31, Prince Hall, Ancient Egyptian Arabic Order Nobles of the Mystic Shrine.

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The Dorchester Illustration is sent occasionally. If you receive this e-mail by mistake, please reply to be taken off the e-mail list. If you know others who would like to receive the daily e-mail, please encourage them to join the group by going to http://groups.google.com/group/dorchester-historical-society. You may contact Earl Taylor at ERMMWWT@aol.com

If you value receiving the illustration, 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 2217 Upham’s Corner

Dorchester Illustration no. 2217 Upham’s Corner

Today we have a view of Upham’s Corner showing Winthrop Hall on the left.  The Dorchester Savings Bank building replaced Winthrop Hall.

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If you value receiving the illustration, 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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October 18, 2015 Archaeology of Dorchester’s Industrial School for Girls

A Pleasant Home for the Neglected: The Archaeology of Dorchester’s Industrial School for Girls.

October 18, 2015, 2 pm, at the William Clapp House, 195 Boston Street

City Archaeologist, Joe Bagley, shares early results from his team’s archaeological survey behind the Centre Street institution.  From the search for and discovery of the school’s out house, to the recovery of thousands of personal items, including hundreds of dolls, Bagley will explore the new history and surprising insights revealed about the daily lives of the disadvantaged and immigrant girls who lived in the School from 1859 to 1900.

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