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Home > Boston's Neighborhoods
> West End
Learn
more about your ancestor's neighborhood through the
timeline, find more information in the Further Reading
section, or use the links to experience life in that
community today.
Timeline
- 1733: Spring Street is laid out.
- 1763: Noted architect, Charles Bullfinch (1763-1844) is born
in the Bullfinch House.
- 1772: The Brattle Square Church is designed by Thomas Dawes.
- 1792: Charles Bullfinch designs Joseph Coolidge's house on Bowdoin
Square that is destroyed in 1843.
- 1796: Charles Bullfinch designs and builds the Otis House on
Cambridge and Lynde Streets for Harrison Gray Otis
(1765-1848).
-
1801: Charles Bullfinch designs the Leverett
Street Almshouse.
- 1804: Charles Bullfinch designs the Kirk Boodt House named after
the canal and mill business magnate of Lowell and
Boston.
- 1806: The Old West Church is built using a design of Asher Benjamin
(1773-1845)
- 1815: Charles Bullfinch builds the Blake-Tuckerman House for
Samuel Parkman.
- 1817: Bullfinch designs the Massachusetts General Hospital on
Fruit Street.
- 1824: The Massachusetts Charitable Eye and Ear Infirmary is founded
by Drs. John Jeffries and Edward Reynolds.
- 1826: The Green Street Church built next to the Melvill House.
- 1831: Samuel Stillman Pierce (1807-1881) operates the leading
gourmet food store in Boston located on Tremont and
Court Streets. Later S.S. Pierce becomes a Boston
institution until the early 1960's
- 1840: The Bowdoin Square Baptist Church is constructed.
- 1846: Mass General's first surgery conducted on October 16, when
Dr. John C. Warren (1778-1856) operates on Gilbert
Abbott using William Morton's (1819-1868) recent discovery
of ether to dull pain.
- 1851: Gridley J.F. Bryant designs the Charles Street Jail that
replaces the Almshouse. The Union Boat Club is founded
on the Charles River.
-
1860: Birth of Irish ward boss Martin Lomasney
(1860-1933) who rules the West End for more than thirty
years.
- 1861: Nathaniel J. Bradlee designs the Wendell Phillips School, named
after the abolitionist publisher. The school is located
on Phillips and Anderson Streets.
- 1868: The Wells School is built.
- 1885: The Winchell School, designed by Arthur H. Vinal, is built
on Blossom and Parkman Streets.
- 1893: Jews from Vilna, Lithuania create an informal place of
worship, landsmanschaft, in the West End.
- 1896: The Elizabeth Peabody House is dedicated to the founder
of the first kindergarten in Boston.
- 1897: The Mayhew School is constructed, designed by John L. Faxon.
It closes in 1959.
- 1910: The Peter Faneuil School is built on Joy Street. It is
designed by Kelley and Graves. Also North Station
opens.
- 1914: The Chassidic congregation of Grand Rabbi Pinchas D. Horowitz
is created on Poplar Street.
- 1916: The William Blackstone School, named after Rev. William
Blackstone, opens on Blossom Street designed by Harrison
Atwood.
-
1919: The Anshe Vilna temple
is built for Lithuanian Jews.
- 1926: The Hatch
Shell is given to the city by Maria Hatch.
- 1949: Boston Housing Authority administers funds for urban renewal
under the Housing Act at the direction of Mayor John
B. Hynes.
- 1958-1960: West End is developed
under the supervision of the Boston Redevelopment
Authority.
- 1961-1968: A new shopping center and housing for upper income
Bostonians is built. Massachusetts General Hospital
expands.
- 1960-66:
Scollay Square is raised for Government Center, including
a new City Hall and the John F. Kennedy Federal Building.
Government Center is designed by I.M. Pei.
- 1997: Housing built by the Archdiocese of Boston is opened for
former West End residents at Lowell Square.
Further Reading
- Sammarco, Anthony Mitchell. The West End. Images of America Series.
Dover, NH: Arcadia, 1998.
Links
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