Monday, May 21, 2012

Ghost Children on Albany Street

Albany and Troy street, February 17, 1915 (City of Boston Archive Flickr photo group). Click on photo for larger image.


The City of Boston has joined the Boston Public Library in posting images to a Flickr photo group, and every so often they post another group of photos or documents. The latest group is titled "Dilapidated and Demolished Boston," and includes building in various states of disrepair.

The photo above is one of two that shows the building that seems to lean out over the sidewalk, which was on the corner of Albany and Troy streets, in the New York streets section of the South End. I discussed the New York streets (which would later become the Boston Herald plant) in a post almost exactly a year ago, which can be seen here.

Back from the link? Good. The building on the corner of Troy and Albany street shown above contained a junk business at the time, and would soon be torn down. Most of the photos in this series are devoid of people, as if they didn't want a human presence spoiling the depressing scenes of broken windows and rotting wood. The picture above, however, includes spectral children, staring out at us from just shy of one hundred years ago. It is the figures of the children, blurred by movement, that make this the most interesting photograph of the group.

Thursday, May 17, 2012

The Causeway Street Train Crossing

Causeway street, August 12, 1884 (click for larger image).


I've had this photo on my hard drive long enough that I've lost track of where I found it. The stone building in the background is the Fitchburg Railroad Depot, featured in an earlier post. This is the site of today's North Station. I love this photo. Note the carriage or omnibus in the lower left corner, and what may be a horse-car down the street towards the Fitchburg Depot. Some kind of construction seems to be going on along the Depot side of the street (edit: this scaffolding was part of a bucket conveyor to move dirt for a sewer construction project) . And in the center, gates are being closed as two locomotives prepare to cross Causeway street on their way to and from the Boston and Maine depot at Haymarket square.


Boston and Maine Railroad depot at the point of the Bullfinch Triangle, 1888. Note how the depot is approached by crossing Causeway street at the upper left.



Closer view of the 1888 map above. The two railroad tracks cross Causeway street near the Fitchburg Depot.

Not clear from this map is that standard railroad tracks also ran right down Atlantic avenue and Causeway street, servicing various wharves and warehouses between the depots that connected with what we would call South and North stations. Imagine the traffic - horse teams stopped; freight wagons, carriages, horsecars and trains all competing for precedence or biding their time. We tend to think of traffic congestion as a recent problem, but the pre-automobile era certainly had its share.

Monday, April 30, 2012

Streets in the Air



Not a particularly good reproduction of the drawing that went with the article. If you squint, you can see two elevated highway structures running down a wide, imaginary street. They seem to have seen this proposed elevated highway as simply a stacked up downtown street that would relieve traffic, rather than a through highway connecting the North and South Shores. The artist who drew the image above not only invented a very wide street with buildings on either side, he also managed to ignore the necessary on and off ramps. In any case, the planned roadway in the sky did get built, and it became the Central Artery. 

Daily Boston Globe December 21, 1930

Streets In The Air Only Solution To Boston's Traffic Problems

So Says the Planning Board That Asks for Two-Level Road Across City, Costing $28,000000, as First Item in a Big Scheme


Boston's plans for a system of overhead express motor highways withing the city for general relief of traffic congestion as still only on paper; New York city last week opened to public travel the first $6,500,000 "leg" of such an elevated thoroughfare, which is eventually to stretch along the Hudson River shore from the Battery clear through the Bronx.

The Boston scheme for about $50,000,000 worth of such overhead, unintersected highways, handsomely set forth in a Boston City Planning Board report of the thoroughfare plan for Boston, based on a three-year study of local problems by consultant Robert Whitten, who had to do with the New York project, is still being explained to and debated by local civic and professional organizations.

This is imperative, prior to Mayor Curley's effort to get Legislative sanction for it, wholly or in part.

Losing $24,000,000 a Year

Sorely as Boston apparently needs the relief that some such plan would give, nothing more is likely to be done about it for at least a year or two. Yet all who like to visualize the Boston of a half-century hence will secure and study a copy of this fascinating document, for some such means of public travel will inevitably be a part of the future Bostonian scene.

Arguments for abolition of street-traffic grade-crossings would be superfluous to motorists and truck-men driving through the present-day Boston. They know all the arguments, daily halting as them must, from two to eight minutes, at the city's multiple existing traffic-jammed crossroads.

Men whose word is authoritative calculate that delays in traffic movement in Boston impose a daily loss of $81,000 upon the collective Bostonian pocketbook. This conservatively-estimated $24,000,000 annually is computed as losses to ultimate consumers of foodstuffs and other merchandise caused by delays in trucking these across the congested city, and to time-losses to passengers in congestion-stalled automobiles.

Only a Beginning

The City Planning Board's overhead express highway system embodied in the report is based upon the authorized construction of the $16,000,000 East Boston vehicular tunnel. This tunnel will not be completed for four years, but unless the major part of the board's plans are in operation a few years after the tunnel is opened, downtown Boston traffic movement will come pretty near to complete paralysis by reason of heavier burned of tunnel traffic imposed upon an already strained situation, these authorities are convinced.

Anticipating that the next two or three decades may see in this corner of the country a doubling of the number of vehicles now upon the highways, and, convinced of the inadequacy of city-proper channels to handle with expedition even the loads that are now upon them, these authorities predict that the East Boston vehicular tunnel must necessarily have two two-way lanes, as has New York's Holland Tube, properly to accommodate the volume of traffic between Boston and the North that will eventually use the local under-harbor tunnel.

They are urging amendment of the enabling tunnel to act so as to provide this double tunnel act so as to provide this double tunnel, at perhaps a 70 percent increase in cost over the prescribed $16,000,000 for one double-lane tunnel.

Air the Only Room Left

The main feature of the relief plan sponsored by the Planning Board is a broad two-level highway, stretching from teh vicinity of the North Station through the heart of the city's business district, through Forest Hill sq and to the junction of Kneeland and Albany streets.

The upper-level structure, of reenforced concrete or of steel and granite, would be carried from the North Station to the junction named and then extended out over Albany st to a point beyond Dover st.

The cost of such a highway is reckoned at $28,000,000, since for many stretches it would require demolition of existing buildings and purchase of right of way. The argument for it is that it would for a century to come furnish adequate facilities for the rapid movement of north-south bound traffic that now stagnantly flows through the city proper.

The most potent argument against such a highway is the argument against all overhead structures within a city - the argument that eventually will bring the Boston Elevated superstructures in Charlestown and Roxbury underground.

Proponents of this 100-foot wide general overhead express motor highway scheme can answer, however, that inasmuch as Boston's present transportation-subway layout forbids some such tunnel underpass for traffic through the heart of the city, the natural alternative is to put such a highway on stilts rather than underground.

Picturing Future Conditions

A system of periodical ramps by which this upper-level surface could be mounted or demounted by through traffic would put this semi-loop in easy touch with local traffic centers, like the East Boston tunnel, the Northern artery, and all water-bridges linking Boston with northern and westerly points, its proponents claim.

To postpone adoption of some such general plan for relief of vehicle-crowded downtown highways would be about as disastrous to Boston's future as postponement a generation ago for the digging of the Park-st subway would have been, Planning Board spokesmen say.

They picture conditions as they might have been today had not the community the foresight to provide means of eventually taking all the trolly cars out of the downtown section by putting them underground.

In contrast to characteristic local inertia in tackling in a big way the solution of city-wide traffic congestion, they point to relief measures already adopted by New York and New Jersey, which has now in partial operation an elevated express highway for motor vehicles extending from the Jersey end of the Holland tunnel through Newark, Elizabeth and toward Philadelphia; they point to Detroit, Chicago and to California metropolises which have adopted the two-level express highway principle.

Items 1 and 2

They reckon that this proposed Boston two-level express highway for north-south traffic would reduce by 40 percent, at least, the existing congestion on surface highways in the downtown district - mainly, Washington and Tremont sts.

The Chamber of Commerce Retail Trade Board has approved all of the suggestions in principle.

The entire plan is, or course, tentative, and its execution would be staggered over 10 or 15 years. Thus there would be ample time to make amendments or modifications of the plan, as warranted.

The twin two-lane East Boston vehicular tunnel scheme and the Central Artery for express traffic between the North Station terrain and Dover st are simply Items 1 and 2 of this Boston City Planning Board scheme of wide scope. They are the immediately pressing ones, it is urged.

But, in order that maximum benefit may be derived, they must eventually be tied in with other mainn-stem through traffic routes; a two level Roxbury, crosstown double-decked highway and the North Shore radial, extending between Lynn and Boston between the lines of the present B & M R.R. and Narrow Gage Railroad rights of way, would be built by State appropriation, it is hoped.

Monday, April 23, 2012

The Secret of Grab Village - Revealed

The recent entry Locomotion in the Hub - And Saucy Boys Too! was a repost from a 2007 entry to my Remember Jamaica Plain blog. Commenter Anonymous asked a question that occurred to me when I first transcribed the article. In this sentence: "Cars likewise came down Tremont street, from Jamaica Plain, Brookline and "Grab Village," and passed through Waltham street, to connect with the Washington street track, returning by a spur track about Dover street on Tremont street,"what does "Grab Village" refer to, and where was it?

There was a horse-car line that came from Brookline by way of today's Huntington avenue, turning at Tremont street through Mission Hill, and turning again at Roxbury Crossing towards Boston. The Jamaica Plain line came in by way of Centre street through Hyde square to Jackson square, turning there towards Boston. But where was this "Grab Village" that also fed a horse-car line into Tremont street?

When I first saw the reference in 2007, I was curious, so I did some online digging. And I came up empty. I think I came up with one other reference to Grab Village, but it gave no information as to where it might be. And so I filed it away in my little grey cells and forgot about it. Now, with a re-post and a query from commenter A. Nonymous, I figured it was time to try again.

This time, I hit the jackpot. I found two references to Grab Village in the Boston Globe archive during the late 1880s. One was a passing reference in a letter to the editor that told me very little. The other laid out the boundaries of the mysterious Grab Village.

In a long feature article titled "Roxbury Explored," I found the following passage:

"To those not initiated, and this, probably implies(sic) to a majority of the residents of Boston, the uneuphonious term Grab Village has an unmeaning sound. This large class will feel surprised when informed that the title applies to a large part of the territory of our fair city, a nickname to be sure, but one that sticks as closely as a burr in thick hair in the recollections of a number of persons. It applies to territory located in the southern district, or, to be more definite, to that portion of Tremont street lying between the Lenox street horse car stables and the Roxbury stables at the Providence railroad crossing, and includes the contiguous streets and places. This is a picturesque and unique locality, especially the parts on Tremont street, which reminds one considerably of the Bowery in New York, and the more notably so from the frequent recurrence of Teutonic names upon the signs displayed.

It is, in fact, the mercantile portion of Germantown, which is concentrated in this vicinity in consequence of the number of breweries in Roxbury, Boylston station and Jamaica Plain, with which hundreds of the inhabitants are connected. Where or when the sobriquet named came to be applied is a profound mystery to the present generation. The oldest inhabitant of the region knows naught regarding the inception of such a queer name. What it implies may be only dimly inferred, and likely as not the deduction will be abandoned as not offering a clew to the mystery. "


Roxbury at Boston Neck, 1832 (BPL). The Roxbury-Boston border is at the far right side, which followed the meandering brook that drains towards the upper right corner, towards the back bay. Tremont street has been laid out, and is marked in red. Tremont street ends at what became Roxbury Crossing, where the old Road to Brookline turns west. Eliot Square and the Eliot church are at the bottom center, and Parker street goes off towards Gravelly Point at the top.


Grab Village, 1849 (BPL). In seventeen years, the same district has been built up dramatically. Again, Boston is shown to the right, and Tremont street runs right to left to Roxbury Crossing, where the new Boston & Providence railroad tracks cross the road to Brookline at grade. Multiple streets have been laid out off of Tremont street, and the little black squares show that houses and shops have been erected.

So now we know. Grab Village consisted of a portion of Tremont and adjoining streets, extending over both sides of the Boston-Roxbury border on Boston Neck. We also know that it was part of Germantown, another lost name for an area that housed and employed many of the area's German residents. It seems to have been a retail district, full of shops with German names. Sadly, the origin of the name was already lost in the 1880s.

I think that there is a good chance that my readers and I are now the only people in the world who know where Grab Village once was. There may be a few more who have stumbled on the Boston Globe article quoted above, but you may be confident that you have a local history trivia nugget that your friends are guaranteed not to know.


Source: Boston Sunday Globe, Sept. 23, 1888.

Monday, April 16, 2012

The Daniel Nason, and Roxbury's Locomotive Works

I just stumbled on this video someone made at the St Louis Transportation Museum.







This locomotive is the Daniel Nason , built in 1858 for the Boston & Providence railroad line. She's a wood-fired locomotive designed by George S. Griggs and built at the Roxbury shop. The eponymous Daniel Nason was the Superintendent of Transportation at the Boston depot of the Boston and Providence line. I knew from maps that the shop facility was there, mostly on the west side of the railroad tracks just north of Ruggles street, but I didn't know that they built their own locomotives there.


Boston and Providence shop, 1849 (Charles Whitney, BPL).


Note the location of the locomotive works on this 1849 map. To orient yourself, Tremont street runs across the bottom of the map, the Boston and Providence tracks come through Roxbury on the left and cross the Back bay (the water, that is) to the right. And the peninsula pointing towards the upper right is Roxbury's Gravelly Point. Parker street runs out to the point. Today, the tip of Gravelly Point would be near the intersection of Boylston street and Massachusetts avenue.


Boston & Providence shop, 1852 (Henry McIntyre, BPL).


Boston had at least two dedicated locomotive manufacturers, the Hinkley Locomotive Works, between Harrison avenue and Albany street, and the Globe works in South Boston. Both were located along the South Bay, and before Albany street was laid out on fill, both had access to piers and the harbor. The Boston and Providence, on the other hand, was land-locked, and had to bring in raw materials overland. Of course, since they owned the track, the B&P could no doubt bring it its necessities at cost.

George S. Griggs was the master mechanic at the B&P shop, and designed the locomotives built there. Griggs was hired in 1934 just as the company was getting off the ground, and built his first locomotive in 1845. At this early stage, locomotive designers had to be inventors as well as mechanics, and Griggs owned multiple patents, including a critical one for using a brick arch inside the firebox, which allowed higher burning temperatures and the use of coal.


1852, wider view (Henry McIntyre, BPL).

George Griggs lived at Milford place, shown above. It ran from Tremont st (the main street from upper right to lower left) to Grinnell st, which ran along the railroad tracks. So as was common during the 19th century, Griggs could walk (and probably see the factory) from home. He died still living there in 1870, and the company was still producing locomotives at the time based on his designs.




B & P shops, 1873 (Wards Maps).


Repair shop, 1931 (Boston Atlas).


Notice that Columbus avenue has now been laid out through Milford place, where Griggs lived, and it is now Sarsfield st. To help orient yourself, Milford place/Sarsfield street is now the short connector between Columbus avenue and Tremont street, directly opposite Melnea Cass boulevard. And the old locomotive works is now part of the campus of Northeastern University.


For a look at a very early carriage that ran on the Boston & Providence line, check out a related post on my Jamaica Plain history blog.

Monday, April 9, 2012

Lawley's Shipyard

Launching at Lawley's yard, Neponset (BPL Flickr photo group).


This entry starts with the photo above, from the wonderful Boston Public Library Flickr photo group. It was this treasure trove that first revealed the existence of the Lawley shipbuilding business to me. And of course, as usual, one thing leads to another, and the story grows. I began with the intention of discussing the Lawley yard in Dorchester - a classic example of the kind of forgotten enterprise I enjoy sharing with you on this site . Once I got digging, it quickly became obvious that there was more to tell.




Lawley's Yacht yard, City Point, South Boston, 1899.


Remember that I said this story started with a yacht building yard in Dorchester. At the time, I didn't realize I was coming to the story late. George Lawley came from a shipbuilding family in London, and when he immigrated to the United States went to work for the famous Donald McKay in East Boston. Just after the end of the Civil War, Lawley and a partner opened a shipyard in Scituate, specializing in yachts. Success brought them back to Boston, where they set up shop in South Boston. On a site near City point, shown above, they built the winners of the 1885 and 1886 America's Cup, Puritan and Mayflower. One more move took them out of South Boston, and down to Neponset, at Port Norfolk. Over time, four generations of Lawleys would build boats in Boston.



Lawley & Sons shipyard on the Neponset River, Port Norfolk, Dorchester, 1918.




Satellite photo of the mouth of the Neponset river. Arrow points to former location of Lawley's shipyard. Also note above and to the left of the arrow at the mouth of the river, the gas tank that now sits along the Southeast expressway.


Beyond their work with yachts, Lawley & Sons also produced boats for the US Navy during both world wars. The built sub chasers, and, in WW II, landing craft. tank barges and tugs. Their last listed boat was a landing craft, January 3, 1945, the year the company went out of business.


Some great photos of Lawley yachts here.

George Lawley & Sons Wikipedia page.

A list of boats produced by Lawley & Sons here with their history.

Saturday, April 7, 2012

Brighton Cattle Call

Brighton, 1819 (BPL). Note the Agricultural Hall and Cattle Fair.


Brighton's history as a market center goes all the way back to 1776, when the Winships provided meat to General Washington's troops. By the end of the century, they were the largest meat packers in Massachusetts. Originally part of Cambridge, the town of Brighton was formed in 1807, allowing a focus on the cattle market. The state agricultural fair was soon located in Brighton, and the coming of the railroad in the 1830s allowed access from the rest of the state.




The Brighton Market on market day (BPL Flickr photo group).






The Cattle Fair Hotel became the center of business for the trade, and was run by Zachariah Porter, whom Porter square in Cambridge and the Porterhouse steak were named after.




As the town grew in population and agriculture gave way to industry in Massachusetts, the meat packing business was moved to empty land along the Charles river, where the Brighton abattoir was built. The abattoir would remain until the 1950s, when it was demolished for the Leo M. Birmingham Parkway and Soldier's Field Road.

Rather than go into more detail, I'll just point you to the links below, which already tell the story.



Brighton Allston Historical Society


Brighton Abattoir