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Wikipedia

Beacon Hill, Boston

Beacon Hill is a historic neighborhood in Boston, Massachusetts, and the hill upon which the Massachusetts State House resides. The term "Beacon Hill" is used locally as a metonym to refer to the state government or the legislature itself, much like Washington, D.C.'s Capitol Hill does at the federal level.

Beacon Hill Historic District
Park Street, looking toward the Massachusetts State House
LocationBoston, Massachusetts
Built1795
ArchitectCharles Bulfinch
Architectural styleColonial Revival, Greek Revival, Federal
Websitewww.beacon-hill-boston.com
NRHP reference No.66000130
Significant dates
Added to NRHPOctober 15, 1966[1]
Designated NHLDDecember 19, 1962

Federal-style rowhouses, narrow gaslit streets and brick sidewalks adorn the neighborhood, which is generally regarded as one of the more desirable and expensive in Boston. According to the 2010 U.S. Census, the population of Boston's Beacon Hill neighborhood is 9,023.[2]

Window boxes on cobblestoned Acorn Street

Etymology Edit

 
View of John Hancock's house on Beacon Hill west of the summit from across the Common, 1768
 
Cutting down Beacon Hill in 1811; a view from the north toward the Massachusetts State House[3]

Like many similarly named areas, the neighborhood is named for the location of a former beacon atop the highest point in central Boston. The beacon was used to warn the residents of an invasion.[4][5][nb 1]

Geography Edit

Beacon Hill is bounded by Storrow Drive, and Cambridge, Bowdoin, Park and Beacon Streets.[4][9] It is about 1/6 of a square mile, and situated along the riverfront of the Charles River Esplanade to the west, just north of Boston Common and the Boston Public Garden. The block bound by Beacon, Tremont and Park Streets is included as well.[10] Beacon Hill has three sections: the south slope, the north slope and the "Flat of the Hill", which is a level neighborhood built on landfill. It is west of Charles Street and between Beacon Street and Cambridge Street.[6][10]

Located in the center of the Shawmut Peninsula, the area originally had three hills, Beacon Hill and two others nearby,[5][7] Pemberton Hill and Mount Vernon, which were leveled for Beacon Hill development.[7][11] The name trimount later morphed into "Tremont", as in Tremont Street.[8] Between 1807 and 1832 Beacon Hill was reduced from 138 feet in elevation to 80 feet. The shoreline and bodies of water such as the Mill Pond had a "massive filling", increasing Boston's land mass by 150%.[7] Charles Street was one of the new roads created from the project.[12]

Before the hill was reduced substantially, Beacon Hill was located just behind the current site of the Massachusetts State House.[5]

Demographics Edit

According to the 2010 U.S. Census, the population of Boston's Beacon Hill neighborhood is 9,023. This reflects a slight (0.3% or 29 individuals) decrease from the 2000 Census.[2] The racial/ethnic make-up of the neighborhood's population is as follows: 86.8% of the population is white, 2% black or African American, 4.1% Hispanic or Latino, 0.1% American Indian or Alaska Native, 5.3% Asian, 0.4% some other race/ethnicity, and 1.3% two or more races/ethnicities.[2]

According to 2007–2011 American Community Survey estimates, of the 5,411 households in Beacon Hill, 27.3% were family households and 72.7 were non-family households (with 55.7% of those female householders).[13] Of the 1,479 family households 81.6% were married couple families. 36.6% of married couple families were with related children under the age of 18 and 63.4% were with no related children under age 18. Other family types make up 18.4% of Beacon Hill's population, with 90.8% being female householders with no husband present and a majority of these households included children under 18 present.

Race Edit

Beacon Hill/Financial District (02108) racial breakdown of population (2017)[14][15]
Race Percentage of
02108
population
Percentage of
Massachusetts
population
Percentage of
United States
population
ZIP code-to-state
difference
ZIP code-to-USA
difference
White 86.8% 81.3% 76.6% +5.5% +10.2%
White (Non-Hispanic) 83.4% 72.1% 60.7% +11.3% +22.7%
Black 5.2% 8.8% 13.4% –3.6% –8.2%
Hispanic 4.3% 11.9% 18.1% –7.6% –13.8%
Asian 4.2% 6.9% 5.8% –2.7% –1.6%
Native Americans/Hawaiians 0.6% 0.6% 1.5% +0.0% –0.9%
Two or more races 2.4% 2.4% 2.7% +0.0% –0.3%
Beacon Hill/West End (02114) racial breakdown of population (2017)[16][15]
Race Percentage of
02116
population
Percentage of
Massachusetts
population
Percentage of
United States
population
ZIP code-to-state
difference
ZIP code-to-USA
difference
White 79.2% 81.3% 76.6% –2.1% +2.6%
White (Non-Hispanic) 73.6% 72.1% 60.7% +1.5% +12.9%
Asian 11.3% 6.9% 5.8% +4.4% +5.5%
Hispanic 9.3% 11.9% 18.1% –2.6% –8.8%
Black 4.3% 8.8% 13.4% –4.5% –9.1%
Native Americans/Hawaiians 0.0% 0.6% 1.5% –0.6% –1.5%
Two or more races 2.5% 2.4% 2.7% +0.1% –0.2%

Ancestry Edit

According to the 2012–2016 American Community Survey 5-Year Estimates, the largest ancestry groups in ZIP Codes 02108 and 02114 are:[17][18]

Ancestry Percentage of
02108
population
Percentage of
Massachusetts
population
Percentage of
United States
population
ZIP code-to-state
difference
ZIP code-to-USA
difference
Irish 17.51% 21.16% 10.39% –3.65% +7.12%
English 15.49% 9.77% 7.67% +5.71% +7.95%
Italian 13.34% 13.19% 5.39% +0.15% +7.95%
German 8.47% 6.00% 14.40% +2.47% –5.93%
Polish 5.78% 4.67% 2.93% +1.11% +2.85%
American 5.11% 4.26% 6.89% +0.85% –1.78%
French 3.68% 6.82% 2.56% –3.14% +1.12%
Norwegian 2.40% 0.51% 1.40% +1.88% +1.00%
Northern European 2.35% 0.11% 0.09% +2.24% +2.26%
Arab 2.32% 1.10% 0.59% +1.22% +1.73%
Chinese 1.93% 2.28% 1.24% –0.35% +0.69%
Korean 1.93% 0.37% 0.45% +1.56% +1.48%
Lithuanian 1.85% 0.70% 0.20% +1.15% +1.65%
Scottish 1.85% 2.28% 1.71% –0.43% +0.14%
Dutch 1.58% 0.62% 1.32% +0.96% +0.26%
Egyptian 1.53% 0.09% 0.08% +1.44% +1.46%
Swedish 1.51% 1.67% 1.23% –0.16% +0.28%
Ukrainian 1.46% 0.37% 0.31% +1.08% +1.15%
French Canadian 1.38% 3.91% 0.65% –2.52% +0.73%
British 1.16% 0.48% 0.43% +0.68% +0.73%
Welsh 1.01% 0.36% 0.57% +0.66% +0.45%
Ancestry Percentage of
02114
population
Percentage of
Massachusetts
population
Percentage of
United States
population
ZIP code-to-state
difference
ZIP code-to-USA
difference
Irish 17.58% 21.16% 10.39% –3.58% +7.19%
Italian 13.66% 13.19% 5.39% +0.47% +8.27%
German 8.81% 6.00% 14.40% +2.80% –5.60%
English 8.05% 9.77% 7.67% –1.73% +1.57%
Chinese 5.27% 2.28% 1.24% +2.99% +4.03%
Polish 4.50% 4.67% 2.93% –0.17% +1.57%
Puerto Rican 4.11% 4.52% 1.66% –0.41% +2.86%
French 4.10% 6.82% 2.56% –2.72% +1.54%
Scottish 3.67% 2.28% 1.71% +1.39% +1.96%
American 3.59% 4.26% 6.89% –0.67% –3.30%
Russian 2.71% 1.65% 0.88% +1.06% +1.83%
Asian Indian 2.48% 1.39% 1.09% +1.09% +1.39%
French Canadian 2.18% 3.91% 0.65% –1.72% +1.53%
Swedish 2.05% 1.67% 1.23% +0.39% +0.83%
Norwegian 1.82% 0.51% 1.40% +1.31% +0.42%
European 1.65% 1.08% 1.23% +0.56% +0.41%
Arab 1.52% 1.10% 0.59% +0.42% +0.92%
Turkish 1.07% 0.11% 0.07% +0.96% +1.00%
Greek 1.06% 1.22% 0.40% –0.16% +0.66%

History Edit

17th century Edit

 
Founders Memorial, John Francis Paramino, 1930. The memorial, located in the Boston Common, depicts the city's first English resident, William Blackstone, greeting colonial governor John Winthrop and his company.

The first European settler was William Blaxton, also spelled Blackstone. In 1625 he built a house and orchard on Beacon Hill's south slope, roughly at the location of Beacon and Spruce street. The settlement was a "preformal arrangement". In 1630 Boston was settled by the Massachusetts Bay Company.[6][19] The southwestern slope was used by the city for military drills and livestock grazing. In 1634 a signal beacon was established on the top of the hill.[11][19] Sailors and British soldiers visited the north slope of Beacon Hill during the 17th and 18th centuries. As a result, it became an "undesirable" area for Boston residents.[6] "Fringe activities" occurred on "Mount Whoredom", the backslope of Beacon Hill.[20][nb 2]

18th century Edit

Beacon Street was established in 1708 from a cow path to the Boston Common.[11] John Singleton Copley owned land on the south slope for pasture for his cows and farmland.[6]

In 1787 Charles Bulfinch designed the Massachusetts State House.[11] Its construction was completed in 1795, replacing the Old State House in the center of Boston.[22][23][nb 3]

The Mount Vernon Proprietors group was formed to develop the trimount area,[6][7] The name trimount later morphed into "Tremont", as in Tremont Street.[8] when by 1780 the city's neighborhoods could no longer meet the needs of the growing number of residents.[11][nb 4] Eighteen and a half[22] or 19 acres of grassland west of the State House was purchased in 1795, most of it from John Singleton Copley. The Beacon Hill district's development began when Charles Bulfinch, an architect and planner, laid out the plan for the neighborhood. Four years later the hills were leveled, Mount Vernon Street was laid, and mansions were built along it. One of the first homes was the Harrison Gray Otis House on Cambridge Street.[11][22]

19th century Edit

Development Edit

Construction of homes began in earnest at the turn of the century, such as: freestanding mansions, symmetrical pairs of houses, and row houses.[22][nb 5] Between 1803 and 1805, the first row houses were built for Stephen Higginson.[11][nb 6]

In the 1830s, residential homes were built for wealthy people on Chestnut and Mt. Vernon Streets.[25] Some affluent people moved, beginning in the 1870s, to Back Bay with its "French-inspired boulevards and mansard-roofed houses that were larger, lighter, and airier than the denser Beacon Hill."[26]

In the early 19th century, there were "fringe activities" along the Back Bay waterfront, with ropewalks along Beacon and Charles Streets.[12]

South slope Edit

The south slope "became the seat of Boston wealth and power."[27] It was carefully planned for people who left densely populated areas, like the North End.[6] The residents of opulent homes, called the Boston Brahmins, were described by Oliver Wendell Holmes as a "harmless, inoffensive, untitled aristocracy". They had "houses by Charles Bulfinch, their monopoly on Beacon Street, their ancestral portraits and Chinese porcelains, humanitarianism, Unitarian faith in the march of the mind, Yankee shrewdness, and New England exclusiveness."[28]

Literary salons and publishing houses were founded in the 19th century. "Great thinkers" lived in the neighborhood, including Daniel Webster, Henry Thoreau and Wendell Phillips.[23]

Flat of the Hill Edit

Development began in the early 19th century. Single family homes often had stores on the first floor for retailers, carpenters and shoemakers.[6] Today, many of the 19th century waterfront landmarks, such as the Charles Street Meeting House, are found far from the water due to the filling that has taken place since then.

North slope Edit

The north slope was the home of African Americans, sailors and Eastern and Southern European immigrants.[6] The area around Belknap Street (now Joy Street) in particular became home to more than 1,000 blacks beginning in the mid-1700s. While this community is often described as arising from domestic workers in the homes of white residents on the south slope of the Hill, property records indicate that the black community on the north slope was already well-established by 1805, before the filling-in of the south slope was completed, and so before that slope of Beacon Hill came to be considered an affluent area.[29]

Many blacks in the neighborhood attended church with the whites but did not have a vote in church affairs and sat in segregated seating. The African Meeting House was built in 1806 and by 1840 there were five black churches. The African Meeting House on Joy Street was a community center for members of the black elite. Frederick Douglass spoke there about abolition, and William Lloyd Garrison formed the New England Anti-Slavery Society at the Meeting House.[6][11] It became a "hotbed and an important depot on the Underground Railroad."[21]

Blacks and whites were largely united on the subject of abolition. Beacon Hill was one of the staunchest centers of the anti-slavery movement in the Antebellum era.[30]

The Republican Party was founded by abolitionists. One of the earliest black Republican legislators[31] in the United States was Julius Caesar Chappelle (1852–1904), who served as a legislator in Boston from 1883 to 1886 and whose district included the Beacon Hill area. Chappelle was a popular, well-liked politician and was covered by many of the black newspapers in the United States.[32]

Blacks migrated to Roxbury and Boston's South End after the Civil War.[6][21]

Immigrants Edit

In the latter part of the 19th century, Beacon Hill absorbed an influx of Irish, Jewish and other immigrants.[6][21][33]

Many homes built of brick and wood in the early 19th century were dilapidated by the end of the Civil War and were razed for new housing.[6] Brick apartment buildings, or tenements, were built.[21][22][34] Yellow brick townhouses were constructed, generally with arched windows on the first floor and a low ceiling on the top, fourth floor. Residential homes were also converted to boarding houses.[6]

The north slope neighborhood transitioned as blacks moved out of the neighborhood and immigrants, such as Eastern European Jews, made their homes in the community. The Vilna Shul was established in 1898, and the African Meeting House was converted into a synagogue.[6][21]

20th century Edit

 
The neighborhood of Beacon Hill as seen from the Charles River, (with the Financial District in the background)

Better transportation service to the suburbs and other cities led a boom to the city's economy at the beginning of the 20th century. New buildings, "compatible with the surroundings", were built and older buildings renovated. To ensure that there were controls on new development and demolition, the Beacon Hill Association was formed in 1922. Into the 1940s there were attempts to replace brick sidewalks, but the projects were abandoned due to community resistance.[6]

Banks, restaurants and other service industries moved into the "Flat of the Hill", with a resulting transformation of the neighborhood.[6]

Red-light districts operated near Beacon Hill in Scollay Square and the West End until a 1950s urban renewal project renovated the area.[35] To prevent urban renewal projects of historically significant buildings in Beacon Hill, its residents ensured that the community obtained historic district status: south slope in 1955, Flat of the Hill in 1958, and north slope in 1963. The Beacon Hill Architectural Commission was established in 1955 to monitor renovation and development projects.[6] For instance, in 1963, 70-72 Mount Vernon Street was to be demolished for the construction of an apartment building. A compromise was made to maintain the building and its exterior and build new apartments inside.[6]

Historic district and national landmark Edit

In 1955, state legislation Chapter 616 created the Historic Beacon Hill District. It was the first such district in Massachusetts, created to protect historic sites and manage urban renewal.[6][9][11] Supporting these objectives is the local non-profit Beacon Hill Civic Association.[9] According to the Massachusetts Historical Commission, the historic districts "appear to have stabilized architectural fabric" of Beacon Hill.[36]

Beacon Hill was designated a National Historic Landmark on December 19, 1962.[37][38]

21st century Edit

Wealthy Boston families continue to live at the Flat of the Hill and south slope. Inhabitants of the north slope include Suffolk University students and professionals.[6]

Sites of interest Edit

Black Heritage Trail Edit

The Boston African American National Historic Site is located just north of Boston Common.[39] The historic buildings along today's Black Heritage Trail were the homes, businesses, schools and churches of the black community.[39][40][41][42] Charles Street Meeting House was built in 1807, the church had seating that segregated white and black people.[40][42] The Museum of African American History, New England's largest museum dedicated to African American history, is located at the African Meeting House, adjacent to the Abiel Smith School. The meeting house is the oldest surviving Black church built by African Americans.[40][42] The Robert Gould Shaw Memorial and the 54th Massachusetts Regiment Memorial are located at Beacon Street and Park Street, opposite the Massachusetts State House.[40][42]

Massachusetts State House Edit

The Massachusetts State House, located on Beacon Street, is the home of the Commonwealth's government. The gold-domed state capitol building was designed by Charles Bulfinch and was completed in 1798. Many of the country's state capitol buildings were modeled after the State House.[5][43]

Organizations Edit

Community Edit

The Beacon Hill Civic Association has a long history as a community resource for the Beacon Hill neighborhood. Founded in 1922 by neighbors with the goal of preventing home building and other construction, today it continues as a volunteer advocacy organization focused on improving quality of life in the neighborhood.[44] It was first founded to fight city plans to replace the neighborhood's brick sidewalks.[45] Since then its efforts have been instrumental in preserving Beacon Hill as a historic district, and have expanded to include such initiatives as: working to become the first neighborhood to receive resident parking permits, streamlining trash service, and creating a virtual retirement community serving the neighborhood's elderly.[45]

Non-religious Edit

The Club of Odd Volumes, a historic organization on Mount Vernon Street, serves as a Bibliophiles club, library, and archive. The Headquarters House, also known as William Hickling Prescott House, is a museum run by the Society of Colonial Dames.[46] The country's oldest legal organization, the Boston Bar Association, is on Beacon Street.[47] Beacon Hill Village was the first formal Elder Village in the United States.[48][49]

Religious Edit

Religious organizations include the Vilna Shul, an Orthodox Jewish synagogue, and the Unitarian Universalist Association headquarters.[50] Church of the Advent is a Victorian Gothic Church, faced in brick with 8 massive carillon bells and a 172-foot spire.[21] The Park Street Church, nicknamed "Brimstone Corner" in the 19th century, was used to store gunpowder during the War of 1812. Samuel Francis Smith first sang his song America the Beautiful at this church in 1831. Two years earlier William Lloyd Garrison spoke to the congregation about abolishing slavery.[23] One of the few outposts of the small Protestant group the Swedenborgian Church is on Bowdoin Street, and was embroiled in controversy in 2013 over alleged extortion by a former mafioso.[51] While home to a Paulist chapel, Beacon Hill is currently one of only two neighborhoods in Boston that does not contain a Catholic parish church.[52]

Neighborhoods Edit

Beacon Hill is predominantly residential, known for old colonial brick row houses with "beautiful doors, decorative iron work, brick sidewalks, narrow streets, and gas lamps". Restaurants and antique shops are located on Charles Street.[4][5]

Louisburg Square is "the most prestigious address" in Beacon Hill. Its residents have access to private parking and live in "magnificent Greek Revival townhouses." Nearby is Acorn Street, often mentioned as the "most frequently photographed street in the United States." It is a narrow lane paved with cobblestones that was home to coachmen employed by families in Mt. Vernon and Chestnut Street mansions.[21][53]

The Harrison Gray Otis House on Cambridge Street was built in 1796. Charles Bulfinch designed this house, and two additional houses, for the businessman and politician who was instrumental in Beacon Hill's development and Boston becoming the state capital.[43] The Otis House also houses the headquarters of Historic New England, previously known as Society for the Preservation of New England Antiquities. Other notable houses are the Francis Parkman House and an 1804 townhouse, now the Nichols House Museum.[54] The Nichols House "offers a rare glimpse inside [the] Brahmin life" of Rose Standish Nichols, a landscape artists.[21]

Suffolk University Edit

Suffolk University and its Law School are adjacent to the Massachusetts State House and the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court. The Suffolk University Law School was founded in 1906.[55]

Transportation Edit

 
MBTA subway map; Beacon Hill is in the center

Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA) subway stations in Beacon Hill are:[23]

MBTA bus, MBTA commuter rail, and ferry services are also available.

Notable residents Edit

Beacon Hill has been home to many notable persons, including:

In popular culture Edit

  • Published in 1937, the Pulitzer-Prize-winning novel The Late George Apley by John Phillips Marquand satirizes the upper-class white residents of Beacon Hill.[56]
  • William Kane, one of the protagonists in the Jeffrey Archer novel Kane and Abel, lives in Beacon Hill.
  • On Beacon Street, the Bull and Finch Bar was inspiration and source of exterior shots for the Cheers television show.[57]
  • Make Way for Ducklings (Viking, 1941) is a children's picture book written and illustrated by Robert McCloskey. Most of the story is set at the foot of Beacon Hill, especially the route taken by the fictional Mrs. Mallard and her children on foot across Beacon Street. It is commemorated every year in May by a parade through Beacon Hill to the Boston Public Garden, where the mallards nested.[58]
  • Nine Lives; or, the celebrated cat of Beacon Hill (Pantheon, 1951) is a 62-page children's book by the novelist Edward Fenton (1917–1995) and illustrator Paul Galdone. "A wealthy, elderly Boston matron adopts a scruffy tomcat and while she is away on a trip her jealous butler tries very hard to destroy all nine of the cat's lives."[59]
  • The 1968 Norman Jewison film The Thomas Crown Affair is set and was largely filmed in and around Beacon Hill.
  • Dr Charles Emerson Winchester was born and raised there, and in an episode of MASH [9/13 "No Laughing Matter"] swears "By Beacon Hill" to get revenge on the commanding officer who sent him to MASH 4077.
  • Robert Lowell's prose sketch 91 Revere Street was inspired by his childhood home on Beacon Hill.
  • Dr. Michaela Quinn of Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman was raised on Beacon Hill.
  • Dr. Maura Isles of TNT's Rizzoli & Isles lives on Beacon Hill.
  • Asclepia, a small private hospital, is mentioned in Patrick O'Brian's sixth Aubrey-Maturin novel, The Fortune of War, as being "in a dry, healthy location near Beacon Hill."
  • The NBC TV series Banacek (1972–1974) was set and partially filmed on Beacon Hill. Its main character "Thomas Banacek" played by George Peppard grew up in nearby "Scollay Square" and lived in the "Second Harrison Grey Otis House."

See also Edit

Notes and references Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ The trimount hills are commonly called Beacon Hill, Mount Vernon and Pemberton Hill. Beacon Hill was also called "Sentry Hill" and Pemberton Hill was called "Cotton Hill."[6][7] The name trimount later morphed into "Tremont", as in Tremont Street.[8]
  2. ^ Mount Whoredom was a name assigned by British soldiers. When Beacon Hill was developed, "the seedy nickname vanished along with the undesirable establishments."[21]
  3. ^ The land was chosen because it was higher in elevation than the center of town. The capital sits on John Hancock's land; The cornerstones were laid by Paul Revere and Sam Adams; and when the roof was leaking Revere laid copper over the dome. Now, the dome is covered in gold leaf.[23]
  4. ^ Boston's population doubled between 1775 and 1810. It went from 16,000 to 32,896 residents.[12]
  5. ^ Beacon Hill architects included Solomon Willard, Alexander Parris, Asher Benjamin and Charles Bulfinch. Greek Revival and Federal style homes were built in beginning of the 19th century. Later, additional styles included: Egyptian Revival, Queen Anne, Italianate and American Gothic Revival.[22]
  6. ^ The architecture was described as:

    Highstyle Federal brick townhouses, two and three stories tall with elliptical porticoes, pilasters and balustrades, the most ambitious of them free standing and Bulfinch-designed, were built along the crest of Beacon Hill and on Cambridge Street. Other imposing brick rowhouses were constructed around the Common. Substantial but less pretentious middle-class housing, three story, brick sidehall Federal rowhouses with side and fanlit entrances, filled in the lower slopes of Beacon Hill and the South End along Washington Street while modest sidehall brick houses, three stories tall, were built in the working class neighborhoods of the North End, the north slope of Beacon Hill and the West End.[24]

References Edit

  1. ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. January 23, 2007.
  2. ^ a b c Melnik, Mark; Borella, Nicoya. "Beacon Hill 2010 Census Population". Boston Redevelopment Authority. Boston Redevelopment Authority: March 2011.
  3. ^ Whitehill, Walter Muir (1968). Boston: A Topographical History (Second ed.). Cambridge, Mass., Belknap Press of Harvard University Press. pp. 81–84.
  4. ^ a b c "Beacon Hill". City of Boston. Retrieved April 28, 2013.
  5. ^ a b c d e "Beacon Hill / West End". Boston Redevelopment Authority. Retrieved April 28, 2013.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u . People, places and planning in Boston. Archived from the original on March 7, 2013. Retrieved April 29, 2013.
  7. ^ a b c d e "MHC Reconnaissance Survey Town Report, Boston, 1981" (PDF). Secretary of State, State of Massachusetts. pp. 2–3, 5. Retrieved April 28, 2013.
  8. ^ a b c Anthony Mitchell Sammarco (October 1, 2002). Downtown Boston. Arcadia Publishing. p. 33. ISBN 978-0-7385-1124-5. Retrieved April 28, 2013.
  9. ^ a b c "10 Questions for Historic Homeowners" (PDF). Beacon Hill Civic Association. Retrieved April 28, 2013.
  10. ^ a b Let's Go Boston 4th Edition. Macmillan. December 1, 2003. p. 64. ISBN 978-0-312-31980-9. Retrieved April 28, 2013.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h i (PDF). City of Boston. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 20, 2011. Retrieved April 28, 2013.
  12. ^ a b c "MHC Reconnaissance Survey Town Report, Boston, 1981" (PDF). Secretary of State, State of Massachusetts. p. 10. Retrieved April 28, 2013.
  13. ^ Melnik, Mark; Gao, Lingshan; Kalevich, Alexis; Wong, Joanne. "American Community Survey 2007-2011 Estimate Beacon Hill Neighborhood". Boston Redevelopment Authority. Boston Redevelopment Authority: May 2013.
  14. ^ "ACS DEMOGRAPHIC AND HOUSING ESTIMATES 2012–2016 American Community Survey 5-Year Estimates". U.S. Census Bureau. Retrieved August 25, 2018.
  15. ^ a b "Massachusetts QuickFacts from the US Census Bureau". census.gov.
  16. ^ "ACS DEMOGRAPHIC AND HOUSING ESTIMATES 2012–2016 American Community Survey 5-Year Estimates". U.S. Census Bureau. Retrieved August 25, 2018.
  17. ^ "PEOPLE REPORTING ANCESTRY 2012–2016 American Community Survey 5-Year Estimates". U.S. Census Bureau. Retrieved August 25, 2018.
  18. ^ "ACS DEMOGRAPHIC AND HOUSING ESTIMATES 2012–2016 American Community Survey 5-Year Estimates". U.S. Census Bureau. Retrieved August 25, 2018.
  19. ^ a b "MHC Reconnaissance Survey Town Report, Boston, 1981" (PDF). Secretary of State, State of Massachusetts. p. 6. Retrieved April 28, 2013.
  20. ^ "MHC Reconnaissance Survey Town Report, Boston, 1981" (PDF). Secretary of State, State of Massachusetts. p. 7. Retrieved April 28, 2013.
  21. ^ a b c d e f g h i Christopher Klein (November 8, 2009). "Where the melting pot still simmers; Beacon Hill was settled in 1625...". The Boston Globe (Boston, MA). The New York Times Company. 2009. (accessed by HighBeam Research).
  22. ^ a b c d e f "Beacon Hill - History". City of Boston. Retrieved April 28, 2013.
  23. ^ a b c d e Mara Vorhess (2009). Boston 4. Lonely Planet. p. 68. ISBN 978-1-74179-178-5. Retrieved April 28, 2013.
  24. ^ "MHC Reconnaissance Survey Town Report, Boston, 1981" (PDF). Secretary of State, State of Massachusetts. p. 14. Retrieved April 28, 2013.
  25. ^ "MHC Reconnaissance Survey Town Report, Boston, 1981" (PDF). Secretary of State, State of Massachusetts. p. 16. Retrieved April 28, 2013.
  26. ^ Susan. Southworth; Michael. Southworth (March 18, 2008). AIA guide to Boston. Globe Pequot. pp. 1–2. ISBN 978-0-7627-4337-7. Retrieved April 28, 2013.
  27. ^ Dk Eyewitness Travel Guides Boston. Penguin. March 19, 2007. p. 41. ISBN 978-0-7566-2577-1. Retrieved April 28, 2013.
  28. ^ Patricia Harris; David Lyon (June 1, 2004). Insiders Guide Off the Beaten Path: Boston: A Guide to Unique Places. Globe Pequot. p. 3. ISBN 978-0-7627-3011-7. Retrieved April 28, 2013.
  29. ^ Grover, Kathryn and Da Silva, Janine, "Historic Resource Study: Boston African American National Historic Site", December 31, 2002.
  30. ^ James Oliver Horton; Lois E. Horton (1999). Black Bostonians: family life and community struggle in the antebellum North. Holmes & Meier. p. 2. ISBN 978-0-8419-1379-0. Retrieved April 28, 2013.
  31. ^ Obituary, "Chappelle Ends Notable Career", The Boston Herald, p. 14, February 28, 1904.
  32. ^ "Hon. Julius Caesar Chappelle", The Cleveland Gazette, front page, December 25, 1886.
  33. ^ "MHC Reconnaissance Survey Town Report, Boston, 1981" (PDF). Secretary of State, State of Massachusetts. p. 23. Retrieved April 28, 2013.
  34. ^ "MHC Reconnaissance Survey Town Report, Boston, 1981" (PDF). Secretary of State, State of Massachusetts. p. 4. Retrieved April 28, 2013.
  35. ^ MobileReference (2006). Travel Boston - City Guide and Maps. MobileReference. p. 2843. ISBN 978-1-60501-057-1. Retrieved April 28, 2013.
  36. ^ "MHC Reconnaissance Survey Town Report, Boston, 1981" (PDF). Secretary of State, State of Massachusetts. p. 3. Retrieved April 28, 2013.
  37. ^ K. Frank (June 20, 2002). Historic Preservation in the USA. Springer. p. 133. ISBN 978-3-540-41735-4. Retrieved April 28, 2013.
  38. ^ "National Historic Landmarks Program (NHL)". Tps.cr.nps.gov. December 19, 1962. Archived from the original on June 26, 2013. Retrieved April 29, 2013.
  39. ^ a b David L. Scott; Kay W. Scott (1997). Guide to the National Park Areas, Eastern States. Globe Pequot. pp. 110–112. Retrieved April 26, 2013.
  40. ^ a b c d "Boston African American NHS Park Brochure, Side 1" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved April 26, 2013.   This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the National Park Service.
  41. ^ Fodor's (December 16, 2008). The Official Guide to America's National Parks, 13th Edition. Fodor's Travel Publications. pp. 441–. ISBN 978-1-4000-1628-0. Retrieved April 26, 2013.
  42. ^ a b c d "Boston African American NHS Park Brochure, Side 2" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved April 26, 2013.   This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the National Park Service.
  43. ^ a b "Walking Tour of Beacon Hill and Downtown Boston". Architectural Record. October 5, 2011. Retrieved April 28, 2013.
  44. ^ . Beacon Hill Civic Association. Archived from the original on 8 April 2015. Retrieved 16 March 2015.
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  46. ^ . NSCDA. Archived from the original on July 21, 2012. Retrieved July 10, 2012.
  47. ^ Susan. Southworth; Michael. Southworth (March 18, 2008). AIA guide to Boston. Globe Pequot. p. 3. ISBN 978-0-7627-4337-7. Retrieved April 28, 2013.
  48. ^ Jane Gross, "A Grass-Roots Effort to Grow Old at Home", The New York Times, August 14, 2007; accessed 2013.05.17.
  49. ^ Haya El Nasser, 'Villages' let elderly grow old at home, USA Today, July 26, 2010; accessed 2013.05.17.
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  52. ^ "FAQs". September 15, 2016.
  53. ^ Michael Blanding; Alexandra Hall (May 3, 2011). Moon Spotlight Massachusetts. Avalon Travel. p. 16. ISBN 978-1-61238-086-5. Retrieved April 28, 2013.
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  56. ^ Life (April 21, 1947). "Movie of the Week: The Late George Apley". Life. Time Inc. p. 65. ISSN 0024-3019. Retrieved April 28, 2013.
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  58. ^ Leonard S. Marcus (February 5, 2008). A Caldecott Celebration: Seven Artists and Their Paths to the Caldecott Medal. Bloomsbury Publishing USA. p. 11. ISBN 978-0-8027-9703-2. Retrieved April 28, 2013.
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Sources Edit

  • "Area Preservation and the Beacon Hill Bill" (PDF). Old-Time New England. 46 (164). Spring 1956.
  • Moying Li-Marcus (October 17, 2002). Beacon Hill: The Life & Times of a Neighborhood. Northeastern University Press. ISBN 978-1-55553-543-8.
  • A. McVoy McIntyre (1975). Beacon Hill: A Walking Tour. Little, Brown. ISBN 978-0-316-55600-2.
  • Robert Shackleton (June 1, 2008). The Book of Boston. Kessinger Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4366-5685-6. Online version: Book of Boston

Further reading Edit

  • Biography: Martin Burgess Green (1989). The Mount Vernon Street Warrens: A Boston Story, 1860–1910. Charles Scribner's Sons. ISBN 978-0-684-19109-6.
  • Fiction: Frances Parkinson Keyes (1950). Joy Street. Messner. Retrieved April 29, 2013.

External links Edit

  • Beacon Hill History
  • Historic Beacon Hill District | City of Boston
  • Beacon Hill Online (last updated in 2009)

42°21′30″N 71°03′58″W / 42.3583°N 71.0661°W / 42.3583; -71.0661

beacon, hill, boston, other, uses, beacon, hill, disambiguation, beacon, hill, historic, neighborhood, boston, massachusetts, hill, upon, which, massachusetts, state, house, resides, term, beacon, hill, used, locally, metonym, refer, state, government, legisla. For other uses see Beacon Hill disambiguation Beacon Hill is a historic neighborhood in Boston Massachusetts and the hill upon which the Massachusetts State House resides The term Beacon Hill is used locally as a metonym to refer to the state government or the legislature itself much like Washington D C s Capitol Hill does at the federal level Beacon Hill Historic DistrictU S National Register of Historic PlacesU S National Historic Landmark DistrictPark Street looking toward the Massachusetts State HouseShow map of BostonShow map of MassachusettsShow map of the United StatesLocationBoston MassachusettsBuilt1795ArchitectCharles BulfinchArchitectural styleColonial Revival Greek Revival FederalWebsitewww wbr beacon hill boston wbr comNRHP reference No 66000130Significant datesAdded to NRHPOctober 15 1966 1 Designated NHLDDecember 19 1962Federal style rowhouses narrow gaslit streets and brick sidewalks adorn the neighborhood which is generally regarded as one of the more desirable and expensive in Boston According to the 2010 U S Census the population of Boston s Beacon Hill neighborhood is 9 023 2 Window boxes on cobblestoned Acorn StreetContents 1 Etymology 2 Geography 3 Demographics 3 1 Race 3 2 Ancestry 4 History 4 1 17th century 4 2 18th century 4 3 19th century 4 3 1 Development 4 3 2 South slope 4 3 3 Flat of the Hill 4 3 3 1 North slope 4 3 3 2 Immigrants 4 4 20th century 4 4 1 Historic district and national landmark 4 5 21st century 5 Sites of interest 5 1 Black Heritage Trail 5 2 Massachusetts State House 5 3 Organizations 5 3 1 Community 5 3 2 Non religious 5 3 3 Religious 5 4 Neighborhoods 5 5 Suffolk University 6 Transportation 7 Notable residents 8 In popular culture 9 See also 10 Notes and references 10 1 Notes 10 2 References 10 3 Sources 11 Further reading 12 External linksEtymology Edit nbsp View of John Hancock s house on Beacon Hill west of the summit from across the Common 1768 nbsp Cutting down Beacon Hill in 1811 a view from the north toward the Massachusetts State House 3 Like many similarly named areas the neighborhood is named for the location of a former beacon atop the highest point in central Boston The beacon was used to warn the residents of an invasion 4 5 nb 1 Geography EditBeacon Hill is bounded by Storrow Drive and Cambridge Bowdoin Park and Beacon Streets 4 9 It is about 1 6 of a square mile and situated along the riverfront of the Charles River Esplanade to the west just north of Boston Common and the Boston Public Garden The block bound by Beacon Tremont and Park Streets is included as well 10 Beacon Hill has three sections the south slope the north slope and the Flat of the Hill which is a level neighborhood built on landfill It is west of Charles Street and between Beacon Street and Cambridge Street 6 10 Located in the center of the Shawmut Peninsula the area originally had three hills Beacon Hill and two others nearby 5 7 Pemberton Hill and Mount Vernon which were leveled for Beacon Hill development 7 11 The name trimount later morphed into Tremont as in Tremont Street 8 Between 1807 and 1832 Beacon Hill was reduced from 138 feet in elevation to 80 feet The shoreline and bodies of water such as the Mill Pond had a massive filling increasing Boston s land mass by 150 7 Charles Street was one of the new roads created from the project 12 Before the hill was reduced substantially Beacon Hill was located just behind the current site of the Massachusetts State House 5 Demographics EditAccording to the 2010 U S Census the population of Boston s Beacon Hill neighborhood is 9 023 This reflects a slight 0 3 or 29 individuals decrease from the 2000 Census 2 The racial ethnic make up of the neighborhood s population is as follows 86 8 of the population is white 2 black or African American 4 1 Hispanic or Latino 0 1 American Indian or Alaska Native 5 3 Asian 0 4 some other race ethnicity and 1 3 two or more races ethnicities 2 According to 2007 2011 American Community Survey estimates of the 5 411 households in Beacon Hill 27 3 were family households and 72 7 were non family households with 55 7 of those female householders 13 Of the 1 479 family households 81 6 were married couple families 36 6 of married couple families were with related children under the age of 18 and 63 4 were with no related children under age 18 Other family types make up 18 4 of Beacon Hill s population with 90 8 being female householders with no husband present and a majority of these households included children under 18 present Race Edit Beacon Hill Financial District 02108 racial breakdown of population 2017 14 15 Race Percentage of 02108population Percentage ofMassachusettspopulation Percentage ofUnited Statespopulation ZIP code to statedifference ZIP code to USAdifferenceWhite 86 8 81 3 76 6 5 5 10 2 White Non Hispanic 83 4 72 1 60 7 11 3 22 7 Black 5 2 8 8 13 4 3 6 8 2 Hispanic 4 3 11 9 18 1 7 6 13 8 Asian 4 2 6 9 5 8 2 7 1 6 Native Americans Hawaiians 0 6 0 6 1 5 0 0 0 9 Two or more races 2 4 2 4 2 7 0 0 0 3 Beacon Hill West End 02114 racial breakdown of population 2017 16 15 Race Percentage of 02116population Percentage ofMassachusettspopulation Percentage ofUnited Statespopulation ZIP code to statedifference ZIP code to USAdifferenceWhite 79 2 81 3 76 6 2 1 2 6 White Non Hispanic 73 6 72 1 60 7 1 5 12 9 Asian 11 3 6 9 5 8 4 4 5 5 Hispanic 9 3 11 9 18 1 2 6 8 8 Black 4 3 8 8 13 4 4 5 9 1 Native Americans Hawaiians 0 0 0 6 1 5 0 6 1 5 Two or more races 2 5 2 4 2 7 0 1 0 2 Ancestry Edit According to the 2012 2016 American Community Survey 5 Year Estimates the largest ancestry groups in ZIP Codes 02108 and 02114 are 17 18 Ancestry Percentage of02108population Percentage ofMassachusettspopulation Percentage ofUnited Statespopulation ZIP code to statedifference ZIP code to USAdifferenceIrish 17 51 21 16 10 39 3 65 7 12 English 15 49 9 77 7 67 5 71 7 95 Italian 13 34 13 19 5 39 0 15 7 95 German 8 47 6 00 14 40 2 47 5 93 Polish 5 78 4 67 2 93 1 11 2 85 American 5 11 4 26 6 89 0 85 1 78 French 3 68 6 82 2 56 3 14 1 12 Norwegian 2 40 0 51 1 40 1 88 1 00 Northern European 2 35 0 11 0 09 2 24 2 26 Arab 2 32 1 10 0 59 1 22 1 73 Chinese 1 93 2 28 1 24 0 35 0 69 Korean 1 93 0 37 0 45 1 56 1 48 Lithuanian 1 85 0 70 0 20 1 15 1 65 Scottish 1 85 2 28 1 71 0 43 0 14 Dutch 1 58 0 62 1 32 0 96 0 26 Egyptian 1 53 0 09 0 08 1 44 1 46 Swedish 1 51 1 67 1 23 0 16 0 28 Ukrainian 1 46 0 37 0 31 1 08 1 15 French Canadian 1 38 3 91 0 65 2 52 0 73 British 1 16 0 48 0 43 0 68 0 73 Welsh 1 01 0 36 0 57 0 66 0 45 Ancestry Percentage of02114population Percentage ofMassachusettspopulation Percentage ofUnited Statespopulation ZIP code to statedifference ZIP code to USAdifferenceIrish 17 58 21 16 10 39 3 58 7 19 Italian 13 66 13 19 5 39 0 47 8 27 German 8 81 6 00 14 40 2 80 5 60 English 8 05 9 77 7 67 1 73 1 57 Chinese 5 27 2 28 1 24 2 99 4 03 Polish 4 50 4 67 2 93 0 17 1 57 Puerto Rican 4 11 4 52 1 66 0 41 2 86 French 4 10 6 82 2 56 2 72 1 54 Scottish 3 67 2 28 1 71 1 39 1 96 American 3 59 4 26 6 89 0 67 3 30 Russian 2 71 1 65 0 88 1 06 1 83 Asian Indian 2 48 1 39 1 09 1 09 1 39 French Canadian 2 18 3 91 0 65 1 72 1 53 Swedish 2 05 1 67 1 23 0 39 0 83 Norwegian 1 82 0 51 1 40 1 31 0 42 European 1 65 1 08 1 23 0 56 0 41 Arab 1 52 1 10 0 59 0 42 0 92 Turkish 1 07 0 11 0 07 0 96 1 00 Greek 1 06 1 22 0 40 0 16 0 66 History EditMain article History of Boston 17th century Edit nbsp Founders Memorial John Francis Paramino 1930 The memorial located in the Boston Common depicts the city s first English resident William Blackstone greeting colonial governor John Winthrop and his company The first European settler was William Blaxton also spelled Blackstone In 1625 he built a house and orchard on Beacon Hill s south slope roughly at the location of Beacon and Spruce street The settlement was a preformal arrangement In 1630 Boston was settled by the Massachusetts Bay Company 6 19 The southwestern slope was used by the city for military drills and livestock grazing In 1634 a signal beacon was established on the top of the hill 11 19 Sailors and British soldiers visited the north slope of Beacon Hill during the 17th and 18th centuries As a result it became an undesirable area for Boston residents 6 Fringe activities occurred on Mount Whoredom the backslope of Beacon Hill 20 nb 2 18th century Edit Beacon Street was established in 1708 from a cow path to the Boston Common 11 John Singleton Copley owned land on the south slope for pasture for his cows and farmland 6 In 1787 Charles Bulfinch designed the Massachusetts State House 11 Its construction was completed in 1795 replacing the Old State House in the center of Boston 22 23 nb 3 The Mount Vernon Proprietors group was formed to develop the trimount area 6 7 The name trimount later morphed into Tremont as in Tremont Street 8 when by 1780 the city s neighborhoods could no longer meet the needs of the growing number of residents 11 nb 4 Eighteen and a half 22 or 19 acres of grassland west of the State House was purchased in 1795 most of it from John Singleton Copley The Beacon Hill district s development began when Charles Bulfinch an architect and planner laid out the plan for the neighborhood Four years later the hills were leveled Mount Vernon Street was laid and mansions were built along it One of the first homes was the Harrison Gray Otis House on Cambridge Street 11 22 19th century Edit Development Edit Construction of homes began in earnest at the turn of the century such as freestanding mansions symmetrical pairs of houses and row houses 22 nb 5 Between 1803 and 1805 the first row houses were built for Stephen Higginson 11 nb 6 nbsp Harrison Gray Otis House mansion on Cambridge Street nbsp Pair of houses 54 55 Beacon Street House on left is known as William H Prescott House and as Headquarters House nbsp Chestnut Street row houses 2010In the 1830s residential homes were built for wealthy people on Chestnut and Mt Vernon Streets 25 Some affluent people moved beginning in the 1870s to Back Bay with its French inspired boulevards and mansard roofed houses that were larger lighter and airier than the denser Beacon Hill 26 In the early 19th century there were fringe activities along the Back Bay waterfront with ropewalks along Beacon and Charles Streets 12 South slope Edit The south slope became the seat of Boston wealth and power 27 It was carefully planned for people who left densely populated areas like the North End 6 The residents of opulent homes called the Boston Brahmins were described by Oliver Wendell Holmes as a harmless inoffensive untitled aristocracy They had houses by Charles Bulfinch their monopoly on Beacon Street their ancestral portraits and Chinese porcelains humanitarianism Unitarian faith in the march of the mind Yankee shrewdness and New England exclusiveness 28 Literary salons and publishing houses were founded in the 19th century Great thinkers lived in the neighborhood including Daniel Webster Henry Thoreau and Wendell Phillips 23 Flat of the Hill Edit Development began in the early 19th century Single family homes often had stores on the first floor for retailers carpenters and shoemakers 6 Today many of the 19th century waterfront landmarks such as the Charles Street Meeting House are found far from the water due to the filling that has taken place since then North slope Edit See also Boston African American National Historic Site The north slope was the home of African Americans sailors and Eastern and Southern European immigrants 6 The area around Belknap Street now Joy Street in particular became home to more than 1 000 blacks beginning in the mid 1700s While this community is often described as arising from domestic workers in the homes of white residents on the south slope of the Hill property records indicate that the black community on the north slope was already well established by 1805 before the filling in of the south slope was completed and so before that slope of Beacon Hill came to be considered an affluent area 29 Many blacks in the neighborhood attended church with the whites but did not have a vote in church affairs and sat in segregated seating The African Meeting House was built in 1806 and by 1840 there were five black churches The African Meeting House on Joy Street was a community center for members of the black elite Frederick Douglass spoke there about abolition and William Lloyd Garrison formed the New England Anti Slavery Society at the Meeting House 6 11 It became a hotbed and an important depot on the Underground Railroad 21 Blacks and whites were largely united on the subject of abolition Beacon Hill was one of the staunchest centers of the anti slavery movement in the Antebellum era 30 The Republican Party was founded by abolitionists One of the earliest black Republican legislators 31 in the United States was Julius Caesar Chappelle 1852 1904 who served as a legislator in Boston from 1883 to 1886 and whose district included the Beacon Hill area Chappelle was a popular well liked politician and was covered by many of the black newspapers in the United States 32 Blacks migrated to Roxbury and Boston s South End after the Civil War 6 21 Immigrants Edit In the latter part of the 19th century Beacon Hill absorbed an influx of Irish Jewish and other immigrants 6 21 33 Many homes built of brick and wood in the early 19th century were dilapidated by the end of the Civil War and were razed for new housing 6 Brick apartment buildings or tenements were built 21 22 34 Yellow brick townhouses were constructed generally with arched windows on the first floor and a low ceiling on the top fourth floor Residential homes were also converted to boarding houses 6 The north slope neighborhood transitioned as blacks moved out of the neighborhood and immigrants such as Eastern European Jews made their homes in the community The Vilna Shul was established in 1898 and the African Meeting House was converted into a synagogue 6 21 20th century Edit nbsp The neighborhood of Beacon Hill as seen from the Charles River with the Financial District in the background Better transportation service to the suburbs and other cities led a boom to the city s economy at the beginning of the 20th century New buildings compatible with the surroundings were built and older buildings renovated To ensure that there were controls on new development and demolition the Beacon Hill Association was formed in 1922 Into the 1940s there were attempts to replace brick sidewalks but the projects were abandoned due to community resistance 6 Banks restaurants and other service industries moved into the Flat of the Hill with a resulting transformation of the neighborhood 6 Red light districts operated near Beacon Hill in Scollay Square and the West End until a 1950s urban renewal project renovated the area 35 To prevent urban renewal projects of historically significant buildings in Beacon Hill its residents ensured that the community obtained historic district status south slope in 1955 Flat of the Hill in 1958 and north slope in 1963 The Beacon Hill Architectural Commission was established in 1955 to monitor renovation and development projects 6 For instance in 1963 70 72 Mount Vernon Street was to be demolished for the construction of an apartment building A compromise was made to maintain the building and its exterior and build new apartments inside 6 Historic district and national landmark Edit In 1955 state legislation Chapter 616 created the Historic Beacon Hill District It was the first such district in Massachusetts created to protect historic sites and manage urban renewal 6 9 11 Supporting these objectives is the local non profit Beacon Hill Civic Association 9 According to the Massachusetts Historical Commission the historic districts appear to have stabilized architectural fabric of Beacon Hill 36 Beacon Hill was designated a National Historic Landmark on December 19 1962 37 38 21st century Edit Wealthy Boston families continue to live at the Flat of the Hill and south slope Inhabitants of the north slope include Suffolk University students and professionals 6 Sites of interest EditBlack Heritage Trail Edit The Boston African American National Historic Site is located just north of Boston Common 39 The historic buildings along today s Black Heritage Trail were the homes businesses schools and churches of the black community 39 40 41 42 Charles Street Meeting House was built in 1807 the church had seating that segregated white and black people 40 42 The Museum of African American History New England s largest museum dedicated to African American history is located at the African Meeting House adjacent to the Abiel Smith School The meeting house is the oldest surviving Black church built by African Americans 40 42 The Robert Gould Shaw Memorial and the 54th Massachusetts Regiment Memorial are located at Beacon Street and Park Street opposite the Massachusetts State House 40 42 Massachusetts State House Edit The Massachusetts State House located on Beacon Street is the home of the Commonwealth s government The gold domed state capitol building was designed by Charles Bulfinch and was completed in 1798 Many of the country s state capitol buildings were modeled after the State House 5 43 nbsp Massachusetts State House nbsp Beacon Hill Monument in back of the State House marking the site of the original beacon poleOrganizations Edit Community Edit The Beacon Hill Civic Association has a long history as a community resource for the Beacon Hill neighborhood Founded in 1922 by neighbors with the goal of preventing home building and other construction today it continues as a volunteer advocacy organization focused on improving quality of life in the neighborhood 44 It was first founded to fight city plans to replace the neighborhood s brick sidewalks 45 Since then its efforts have been instrumental in preserving Beacon Hill as a historic district and have expanded to include such initiatives as working to become the first neighborhood to receive resident parking permits streamlining trash service and creating a virtual retirement community serving the neighborhood s elderly 45 Non religious Edit The Club of Odd Volumes a historic organization on Mount Vernon Street serves as a Bibliophiles club library and archive The Headquarters House also known as William Hickling Prescott House is a museum run by the Society of Colonial Dames 46 The country s oldest legal organization the Boston Bar Association is on Beacon Street 47 Beacon Hill Village was the first formal Elder Village in the United States 48 49 nbsp The Club of Odd Volumes 77 Mt Vernon Street nbsp The Chester Harding House a National Historic Landmark occupied by portrait painter Chester Harding from 1826 to 1830 now houses the Boston Bar Association Religious Edit Religious organizations include the Vilna Shul an Orthodox Jewish synagogue and the Unitarian Universalist Association headquarters 50 Church of the Advent is a Victorian Gothic Church faced in brick with 8 massive carillon bells and a 172 foot spire 21 The Park Street Church nicknamed Brimstone Corner in the 19th century was used to store gunpowder during the War of 1812 Samuel Francis Smith first sang his song America the Beautiful at this church in 1831 Two years earlier William Lloyd Garrison spoke to the congregation about abolishing slavery 23 One of the few outposts of the small Protestant group the Swedenborgian Church is on Bowdoin Street and was embroiled in controversy in 2013 over alleged extortion by a former mafioso 51 While home to a Paulist chapel Beacon Hill is currently one of only two neighborhoods in Boston that does not contain a Catholic parish church 52 Neighborhoods Edit Beacon Hill is predominantly residential known for old colonial brick row houses with beautiful doors decorative iron work brick sidewalks narrow streets and gas lamps Restaurants and antique shops are located on Charles Street 4 5 Louisburg Square is the most prestigious address in Beacon Hill Its residents have access to private parking and live in magnificent Greek Revival townhouses Nearby is Acorn Street often mentioned as the most frequently photographed street in the United States It is a narrow lane paved with cobblestones that was home to coachmen employed by families in Mt Vernon and Chestnut Street mansions 21 53 nbsp Houses on Louisburg Square nbsp Acorn Street 2009 nbsp Second Harrison Gray Otis House 85 Mount Vernon Street nbsp Acorn Street 2013The Harrison Gray Otis House on Cambridge Street was built in 1796 Charles Bulfinch designed this house and two additional houses for the businessman and politician who was instrumental in Beacon Hill s development and Boston becoming the state capital 43 The Otis House also houses the headquarters of Historic New England previously known as Society for the Preservation of New England Antiquities Other notable houses are the Francis Parkman House and an 1804 townhouse now the Nichols House Museum 54 The Nichols House offers a rare glimpse inside the Brahmin life of Rose Standish Nichols a landscape artists 21 See also List of notable addresses in Beacon Hill Boston Suffolk University Edit See also List of colleges and universities in metropolitan Boston Suffolk University and its Law School are adjacent to the Massachusetts State House and the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court The Suffolk University Law School was founded in 1906 55 nbsp Sargent Hall Suffolk University nbsp Law Library reading room Suffolk University Law SchoolTransportation Edit nbsp MBTA subway map Beacon Hill is in the centerFurther information Transportation in Boston Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority MBTA subway stations in Beacon Hill are 23 Park Street Red and Green Lines Bowdoin Blue Line Charles MGH Red LineMBTA bus MBTA commuter rail and ferry services are also available Notable residents EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Beacon Hill has been home to many notable persons including Mildred Albert Louisa May Alcott John Albion Andrew William Blaxton original owner of Beacon Hill Edwin Booth Peter Bent Brigham Charles Bulfinch John Cheever Ednah Dow Littlehale Cheney John Singleton Copley Michael Crichton Robert Frost James Gibson Captain Janet Doub Erickson John Hancock Chester Harding Teresa Heinz Oliver Wendell Holmes Sr Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr Julia Ward Howe Abigail Johnson Edward M Kennedy John Kerry Henry Cabot Lodge James Russell Lowell Robert Lowell Mary Osgood Harrison Gray Otis Sylvia Plath William Prescott Eleanor Raymond C Allen Thorndike Rice Henry Rice David Lee Roth George Santayana Anne Sexton Robert Gould Shaw Carly Simon Charles Sumner Uma Thurman David Walker Gretchen Osgood Warren Fiske Warren Daniel Webster Jack WelchIn popular culture EditPublished in 1937 the Pulitzer Prize winning novel The Late George Apley by John Phillips Marquand satirizes the upper class white residents of Beacon Hill 56 William Kane one of the protagonists in the Jeffrey Archer novel Kane and Abel lives in Beacon Hill On Beacon Street the Bull and Finch Bar was inspiration and source of exterior shots for the Cheers television show 57 Make Way for Ducklings Viking 1941 is a children s picture book written and illustrated by Robert McCloskey Most of the story is set at the foot of Beacon Hill especially the route taken by the fictional Mrs Mallard and her children on foot across Beacon Street It is commemorated every year in May by a parade through Beacon Hill to the Boston Public Garden where the mallards nested 58 Nine Lives or the celebrated cat of Beacon Hill Pantheon 1951 is a 62 page children s book by the novelist Edward Fenton 1917 1995 and illustrator Paul Galdone A wealthy elderly Boston matron adopts a scruffy tomcat and while she is away on a trip her jealous butler tries very hard to destroy all nine of the cat s lives 59 The 1968 Norman Jewison film The Thomas Crown Affair is set and was largely filmed in and around Beacon Hill Dr Charles Emerson Winchester was born and raised there and in an episode of MASH 9 13 No Laughing Matter swears By Beacon Hill to get revenge on the commanding officer who sent him to MASH 4077 Robert Lowell s prose sketch 91 Revere Street was inspired by his childhood home on Beacon Hill Dr Michaela Quinn of Dr Quinn Medicine Woman was raised on Beacon Hill Dr Maura Isles of TNT s Rizzoli amp Isles lives on Beacon Hill Asclepia a small private hospital is mentioned in Patrick O Brian s sixth Aubrey Maturin novel The Fortune of War as being in a dry healthy location near Beacon Hill The NBC TV series Banacek 1972 1974 was set and partially filmed on Beacon Hill Its main character Thomas Banacek played by George Peppard grew up in nearby Scollay Square and lived in the Second Harrison Grey Otis House See also EditNational Register of Historic Places listings in northern Boston Massachusetts List of National Historic Landmarks in Boston List of notable addresses in Beacon Hill BostonNotes and references EditNotes Edit The trimount hills are commonly called Beacon Hill Mount Vernon and Pemberton Hill Beacon Hill was also called Sentry Hill and Pemberton Hill was called Cotton Hill 6 7 The name trimount later morphed into Tremont as in Tremont Street 8 Mount Whoredom was a name assigned by British soldiers When Beacon Hill was developed the seedy nickname vanished along with the undesirable establishments 21 The land was chosen because it was higher in elevation than the center of town The capital sits on John Hancock s land The cornerstones were laid by Paul Revere and Sam Adams and when the roof was leaking Revere laid copper over the dome Now the dome is covered in gold leaf 23 Boston s population doubled between 1775 and 1810 It went from 16 000 to 32 896 residents 12 Beacon Hill architects included Solomon Willard Alexander Parris Asher Benjamin and Charles Bulfinch Greek Revival and Federal style homes were built in beginning of the 19th century Later additional styles included Egyptian Revival Queen Anne Italianate and American Gothic Revival 22 The architecture was described as Highstyle Federal brick townhouses two and three stories tall with elliptical porticoes pilasters and balustrades the most ambitious of them free standing and Bulfinch designed were built along the crest of Beacon Hill and on Cambridge Street Other imposing brick rowhouses were constructed around the Common Substantial but less pretentious middle class housing three story brick sidehall Federal rowhouses with side and fanlit entrances filled in the lower slopes of Beacon Hill and the South End along Washington Street while modest sidehall brick houses three stories tall were built in the working class neighborhoods of the North End the north slope of Beacon Hill and the West End 24 References Edit National Register Information System National Register of Historic Places National Park Service January 23 2007 a b c Melnik Mark Borella Nicoya Beacon Hill 2010 Census Population Boston Redevelopment Authority Boston Redevelopment Authority March 2011 Whitehill Walter Muir 1968 Boston A Topographical History Second ed Cambridge Mass Belknap Press of Harvard University Press pp 81 84 a b c Beacon Hill City of Boston Retrieved April 28 2013 a b c d e Beacon Hill West End Boston Redevelopment Authority Retrieved April 28 2013 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Beacon Hill People places and planning in Boston Archived from the original on March 7 2013 Retrieved April 29 2013 a b c d e MHC Reconnaissance Survey Town Report Boston 1981 PDF Secretary of State State of Massachusetts pp 2 3 5 Retrieved April 28 2013 a b c Anthony Mitchell Sammarco October 1 2002 Downtown Boston Arcadia Publishing p 33 ISBN 978 0 7385 1124 5 Retrieved April 28 2013 a b c 10 Questions for Historic Homeowners PDF Beacon Hill Civic Association Retrieved April 28 2013 a b Let s Go Boston 4th Edition Macmillan December 1 2003 p 64 ISBN 978 0 312 31980 9 Retrieved April 28 2013 a b c d e f g h i Beacon Hill and Bay Village Brochure PDF City of Boston Archived from the original PDF on July 20 2011 Retrieved April 28 2013 a b c MHC Reconnaissance Survey Town Report Boston 1981 PDF Secretary of State State of Massachusetts p 10 Retrieved April 28 2013 Melnik Mark Gao Lingshan Kalevich Alexis Wong Joanne American Community Survey 2007 2011 Estimate Beacon Hill Neighborhood Boston Redevelopment Authority Boston Redevelopment Authority May 2013 ACS DEMOGRAPHIC AND HOUSING ESTIMATES 2012 2016 American Community Survey 5 Year Estimates U S Census Bureau Retrieved August 25 2018 a b Massachusetts QuickFacts from the US Census Bureau census gov ACS DEMOGRAPHIC AND HOUSING ESTIMATES 2012 2016 American Community Survey 5 Year Estimates U S Census Bureau Retrieved August 25 2018 PEOPLE REPORTING ANCESTRY 2012 2016 American Community Survey 5 Year Estimates U S Census Bureau Retrieved August 25 2018 ACS DEMOGRAPHIC AND HOUSING ESTIMATES 2012 2016 American Community Survey 5 Year Estimates U S Census Bureau Retrieved August 25 2018 a b MHC Reconnaissance Survey Town Report Boston 1981 PDF Secretary of State State of Massachusetts p 6 Retrieved April 28 2013 MHC Reconnaissance Survey Town Report Boston 1981 PDF Secretary of State State of Massachusetts p 7 Retrieved April 28 2013 a b c d e f g h i Christopher Klein November 8 2009 Where the melting pot still simmers Beacon Hill was settled in 1625 The Boston Globe Boston MA The New York Times Company 2009 accessed by HighBeam Research a b c d e f Beacon Hill History City of Boston Retrieved April 28 2013 a b c d e Mara Vorhess 2009 Boston 4 Lonely Planet p 68 ISBN 978 1 74179 178 5 Retrieved April 28 2013 MHC Reconnaissance Survey Town Report Boston 1981 PDF Secretary of State State of Massachusetts p 14 Retrieved April 28 2013 MHC Reconnaissance Survey Town Report Boston 1981 PDF Secretary of State State of Massachusetts p 16 Retrieved April 28 2013 Susan Southworth Michael Southworth March 18 2008 AIA guide to Boston Globe Pequot pp 1 2 ISBN 978 0 7627 4337 7 Retrieved April 28 2013 Dk Eyewitness Travel Guides Boston Penguin March 19 2007 p 41 ISBN 978 0 7566 2577 1 Retrieved April 28 2013 Patricia Harris David Lyon June 1 2004 Insiders Guide Off the Beaten Path Boston A Guide to Unique Places Globe Pequot p 3 ISBN 978 0 7627 3011 7 Retrieved April 28 2013 Grover Kathryn and Da Silva Janine Historic Resource Study Boston African American National Historic Site December 31 2002 James Oliver Horton Lois E Horton 1999 Black Bostonians family life and community struggle in the antebellum North Holmes amp Meier p 2 ISBN 978 0 8419 1379 0 Retrieved April 28 2013 Obituary Chappelle Ends Notable Career The Boston Herald p 14 February 28 1904 Hon Julius Caesar Chappelle The Cleveland Gazette front page December 25 1886 MHC Reconnaissance Survey Town Report Boston 1981 PDF Secretary of State State of Massachusetts p 23 Retrieved April 28 2013 MHC Reconnaissance Survey Town Report Boston 1981 PDF Secretary of State State of Massachusetts p 4 Retrieved April 28 2013 MobileReference 2006 Travel Boston City Guide and Maps MobileReference p 2843 ISBN 978 1 60501 057 1 Retrieved April 28 2013 MHC Reconnaissance Survey Town Report Boston 1981 PDF Secretary of State State of Massachusetts p 3 Retrieved April 28 2013 K Frank June 20 2002 Historic Preservation in the USA Springer p 133 ISBN 978 3 540 41735 4 Retrieved April 28 2013 National Historic Landmarks Program NHL Tps cr nps gov December 19 1962 Archived from the original on June 26 2013 Retrieved April 29 2013 a b David L Scott Kay W Scott 1997 Guide to the National Park Areas Eastern States Globe Pequot pp 110 112 Retrieved April 26 2013 a b c d Boston African American NHS Park Brochure Side 1 PDF National Park Service Retrieved April 26 2013 nbsp This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the National Park Service Fodor s December 16 2008 The Official Guide to America s National Parks 13th Edition Fodor s Travel Publications pp 441 ISBN 978 1 4000 1628 0 Retrieved April 26 2013 a b c d Boston African American NHS Park Brochure Side 2 PDF National Park Service Retrieved April 26 2013 nbsp This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the National Park Service a b Walking Tour of Beacon Hill and Downtown Boston Architectural Record October 5 2011 Retrieved April 28 2013 Mission Beacon Hill Civic Association Archived from the original on 8 April 2015 Retrieved 16 March 2015 a b Alarik Scott February 9 2003 PICKY SURE ORGANIZED YOU BETCHA FOR ACTIVISTS 80 YEARS OF HOLDING DOWN THE HILL Boston Globe Prescott House NSCDA Archived from the original on July 21 2012 Retrieved July 10 2012 Susan Southworth Michael Southworth March 18 2008 AIA guide to Boston Globe Pequot p 3 ISBN 978 0 7627 4337 7 Retrieved April 28 2013 Jane Gross A Grass Roots Effort to Grow Old at Home The New York Times August 14 2007 accessed 2013 05 17 Haya El Nasser Villages let elderly grow old at home USA Today July 26 2010 accessed 2013 05 17 MobileReference 2006 Travel Boston City Guide and Maps MobileReference p 2845 ISBN 978 1 60501 057 1 Retrieved April 28 2013 Akilah Johnson May 22 2013 Beacon Hill church director accused of stealing funds The Boston Globe Retrieved July 8 2013 FAQs September 15 2016 Michael Blanding Alexandra Hall May 3 2011 Moon Spotlight Massachusetts Avalon Travel p 16 ISBN 978 1 61238 086 5 Retrieved April 28 2013 Susan Southworth Michael Southworth March 18 2008 AIA guide to Boston Globe Pequot pp 7 37 38 ISBN 978 0 7627 4337 7 Retrieved April 28 2013 Suffolk University 2006 Suffolk Law School Archived from the original on December 25 2007 Retrieved April 2 2006 Life April 21 1947 Movie of the Week The Late George Apley Life Time Inc p 65 ISSN 0024 3019 Retrieved April 28 2013 Susan Southworth Michael Southworth March 18 2008 AIA guide to Boston Globe Pequot p 12 ISBN 978 0 7627 4337 7 Retrieved April 28 2013 Leonard S Marcus February 5 2008 A Caldecott Celebration Seven Artists and Their Paths to the Caldecott Medal Bloomsbury Publishing USA p 11 ISBN 978 0 8027 9703 2 Retrieved April 28 2013 Nine lives or The celebrated cat of Beacon Hill One library catalog record for the first edition WorldCat Retrieved 30 August 2013 Sources Edit Area Preservation and the Beacon Hill Bill PDF Old Time New England 46 164 Spring 1956 Moying Li Marcus October 17 2002 Beacon Hill The Life amp Times of a Neighborhood Northeastern University Press ISBN 978 1 55553 543 8 A McVoy McIntyre 1975 Beacon Hill A Walking Tour Little Brown ISBN 978 0 316 55600 2 Robert Shackleton June 1 2008 The Book of Boston Kessinger Publishing ISBN 978 1 4366 5685 6 Online version Book of BostonFurther reading EditBiography Martin Burgess Green 1989 The Mount Vernon Street Warrens A Boston Story 1860 1910 Charles Scribner s Sons ISBN 978 0 684 19109 6 Fiction Frances Parkinson Keyes 1950 Joy Street Messner Retrieved April 29 2013 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Beacon Hill Boston nbsp Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Beacon Hill Beacon Hill History Historic Beacon Hill District City of Boston Beacon Hill Online last updated in 2009 42 21 30 N 71 03 58 W 42 3583 N 71 0661 W 42 3583 71 0661 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Beacon Hill Boston amp oldid 1181212952, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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