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Copley Square

Copley Square /ˈkɒpli/,[1] is a public square in Boston's Back Bay neighborhood, bounded by Boylston Street, Clarendon Street, St. James Avenue, and Dartmouth Street. The square is named for painter John Singleton Copley. Prior to 1883 it was known as Art Square due to its many cultural institutions, some of which remain today.

Copley Square
TypePublic park
LocationBoston, Massachusetts, U.S.
Area2.4 acres (0.97 ha)
Created1883 (1883)
DesignerDean Abbott (1984)
Owned byThe City of Boston
Public transit accessSubway and bus; see "Transportation"

Architecture edit

Several architectural landmarks are adjacent to the square:

Notable buildings later demolished:

  • Peace Jubilee Coliseum[3] (1869, demolished the same year) A temporary wooden structure, seating fifty thousand, was built on St. James Park for the 1869 National Peace Jubilee. Replaced by World's Peace Jubilee Coliseum (1872), which was replaced by the Museum of Fine Arts.
  • Second Church (1874, sold 1912, demolished by 1914) A Gothic Revival church by N. J. Bradlee.
  • Chauncy Hall School (c. 1874, demolished 1908), a tall-gabled High Victorian brick school building on Boylston St. near Dartmouth Street.[4]
  • Museum of Fine Arts (1876, demolished 1910) by John Hubbard Sturgis and Charles Brigham in the Gothic Revival style, was the first purpose-built public art museum in the world.
  • S.S. Pierce Building, (1887, demolished 1958) by S. Edwin Tobey, "no masterpiece of architecture, [but] great urban design. A heap of dark Romanesque masonry, it anchored a corner of Copley Square as solidly as a mountain."[5]
  • Hotel Westminster[6] (1897, demolished 1961), Trinity Place, by Henry E. Cregier;[7][8] now replaced by the northeast corner of the new John Hancock Tower. Razed in 1961 by owner John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company for a parking lot.[9]
  • Grundmann Studios (1893, demolished 1917), home of the Boston Art Students Association (later known as the Copley Society), contained artist studios and Copley Hall, a popular venue for exhibitions, lectures and social gatherings.

Public art edit

Public events edit

 
Masonic parade on Huntington Ave. through Copley Square, Boston, 1895

One of the most popular attractions in Copley Square is the Farmers Market, held Tuesdays and Fridays from May through November.[12] (During the 2023-2024 reconstruction of the park, the market is held in front of the Public Library on Dartmouth.)

Annual events include First Night activities and ice sculpture competition, the Christmas tree lighting, the Boston Book Festival, and, for several years, the Boston Summer Arts Weekend. The park's central location also makes it a natural gathering place for protests and vigils.

The water level in the fountain pool can be lowered, turning it into a stage for concerts and theatrical performances.

History edit

 
Detail of 1888 map, showing Art Square and vicinity. The map shows West End Street Railway trolley lines entering the square from Huntington Avenue (southwest), Clarendon Street (north), and Boylston Street (east).

A significant number of important Boston educational and cultural institutions were originally located adjacent to (or very near) Copley Square, reflecting 19th-century Boston's aspirations for the location as a center of culture and progress.[13] These included the Museum of Fine Arts, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Harvard Medical School, the New England Museum of Natural History (today's Museum of Science), Trinity Church, the New Old South Church, the Boston Public Library, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the Massachusetts Normal Art School (today's Massachusetts College of Art and Design), the Horace Mann School for the Deaf, Boston University, Emerson College, and Northeastern University.

 
 
Copley Square, looking east (top) and west, c. 1905

By 1876, with the completion of the Museum of Fine Arts, Walter Muir Whitehill noted that "Copley Square which — unlike the rest of the Back Bay — had never been properly or reasonably laid out, was beginning to stumble into shape".[14] But the land comprising the current square, bisected diagonally by Huntington Avenue, was still available for commercial development. The city purchased the larger triangle, then known as Art Square, in 1883 and dubbed it Copley Square.[note 1] The smaller plot, known as Trinity Triangle, was the subject of several lawsuits against the property owner, who planned to put up a six-story apartment building directly in front of Trinity Church. Foundations were laid but further construction was delayed by various injunctions.[16] The city council appropriated funds for purchase of the triangle in 1885.[17] Calls to close off Huntington between Dartmouth and Boylston streets began almost immediately, but that was not accomplished until 1968.[18]

 
Fountain in Copley Square, c. 1970

In 1966, a proposal by the Watertown, Massachusetts, landscape design firm Sasaki, Dawson, DeMay was selected from 188 entrants in a national competition sponsored by the city and private development concerns. The design centered on a sunken terraced plaza, intended to separate the pedestrian from the noise and bustle of the surrounding streets, but it also isolated the square from the community. As the architecture critic Robert Campbell noted, "From the day it opened, it didn't work".[19]

In 1983 the Copley Square Centennial Committee, consisting of representatives of business, civic and residential interests, was formed. They announced a new design competition, funded by a grant of $100,000 from the National Endowment for the Arts. The winner, announced in May 1984, was Dean Abbott of the New York firm Clarke & Rapuano.[20][21] The park was raised to street-level and a lawn and planting beds were added. The fountain, which had rarely functioned as intended, was re-configured. The updated park was dedicated on June 18, 1989, and received mixed reviews.[22]

By 2021 the park, now heavily used, was again in need of redesign; requirements included alleviating stress on existing trees, adding more trees, making the fountain safer, and prioritizing ease of maintenance. After a series of public meetings, the final proposal by Sasaki Associates was presented to the city in May 2022.[23] Renovations began on July 20, 2023, and are expected to take sixteen months.[24]

The non-profit membership organization Friends of Copley Square was formed in 1992 as a successor to the Copley Square Centennial Committee. It raises funds for care of the square's plantings, fountain, and monuments, and also manages the Copley Square Charitable trust.[25]

The Boston Marathon foot race has finished at Copley Square since 1986.[26] A memorial celebrating the race's 100th running in 1996 is located in the park, near the corner of Boylston and Dartmouth streets. [27]

Unrealized proposals edit

 
Surveyor's map of Copley Square, Boston, 1874
  • 1874 A surveyor's map shows a "Chemical School, Inst. Tech." (never built) and four house lots on the larger triangle.
  • 1894 A circular, sunken garden combining designs by Rotch & Tilden and Walker and Kimball, ringed with trees and marble balustrades, centered on a small fountain.[28]
  • 1912 A plan by architect Frank Bourne eliminated the Huntington Avenue crossing and sunk the square 2.5 feet below street level. One version featured an enormous monumental column in the center of the plaza.[29]
  • 1914 Landscape architect Arthur Shurtleff envisioned a circle of trees around the Brewer Fountain, which would be moved from Boston Common.[30]
  • 1927 A proposal for a State War Memorial, from plans by Guy Lowell, placed a large, cylindrical granite structure in a basin. The inner chamber rose fifty feet to a domed ceiling and the memorial was topped with bronze representation of Hope.[31]
  • 2012 A juried competition held by SHIFTBoston invited designs for creative illumination.[32] First prize was awarded to the firm Khoury Levit Fong for their conceptual chandelier of LEDs suspended over the square.[33]

Boston Marathon bombing edit

On April 15, 2013, around 2:50 pm (about three hours after the first runners crossed the line) two bombs exploded‍—‌one near the finish line near the Boston Public Library, the other some seconds later and one block west. Three people were killed and at least 183 injured, at least 14 of whom lost limbs.

Transportation edit

Copley is served by several forms of public transportation:

Major roads:

Notes edit

  1. ^ Some local wits suggested "Copley Skew" or "Copley Corners" as more appropriate for the non-square shape.[15] Others were against honoring a man who had left America in 1774 and never returned.

References edit

  1. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the : "The Boston History Project: Copley Square with Anthony Sammarco". YouTube.
  2. ^ Mary Melvin Petronella, ed., Victorian Boston Today: Twelve Walking Tours (Northeastern University Press, 2004), 69, available online, access September 9, 2012
  3. ^ "Old Boston Coliseum, 1869". CelebrateBoston. Retrieved June 2, 2022.
  4. ^ "259 Boylston Street, Chauncey Hall School, ca. 1874–90". Tufts Digital Library. Retrieved May 28, 2022.
  5. ^ Robert Campbell and Peter Vanderwarker. Coming into Copley. Boston Globe. Mar 26, 2006. p. BGM 16.
  6. ^ Strahan, Derek (January 26, 2016). "Hotel Westminster, Boston". Lost New England. Retrieved May 27, 2022.
  7. ^ "Chicago Man's Reputation". Boston Evening Transcript. Feb 3, 1900. p. 7. Retrieved 4 May 2015.
  8. ^ Shand-Tucci 1999, p. 102
  9. ^ "Old Westminster Hotel to be Razed for Parking Lot". The Boston Globe. December 2, 1960.
  10. ^ "The Khalil Gibran Memorial". Boston Literary District. Retrieved June 3, 2022.
  11. ^ . publicartboston.com. Archived from the original on January 26, 2016. Retrieved June 13, 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  12. ^ "Copley Square Farmers Market". Mass Farmers Markets. Retrieved June 13, 2022.
  13. ^ Douglass Shand-Tucci, The Gods of Copley Square, lecture series, 2009, sponsored by Back Bay Historical/Boston-centric Global Studies and the New England Historical Genealogical Society
  14. ^ Whitehill 1968, p. 171
  15. ^ "Copley Skew". Boston Evening Transcript. May 15, 1885. p. 4.
  16. ^ "Trinity Objects to Bachelors' Hall as Neighbor". The Boston Globe. September 24, 1884. p. 3. Retrieved June 2, 2022.
  17. ^ "The Common Council". Boston Evening Transcript. January 2, 1885. p. 4. Retrieved June 3, 2022.
  18. ^ Campbell, Robert; Vanderwarker, Peter (1992). Cityscapes of Boston. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co. p. 74. Retrieved June 6, 2022.
  19. ^ Campbell, Robert (August 9, 1983). "Copley Sq. may come back to life". The Boston Globe. p. 43. Retrieved May 31, 2022.
  20. ^ "Dean Abbott". The Cultural Landscape Foundation. Retrieved June 3, 2022.
  21. ^ Pokorny 2002, pp. 12–13
  22. ^ Campbell, Robert (June 11, 1989). "The newest Copley Square is better, but...". The Boston Globe. p. 225.
  23. ^ "City of Boston Releases Design Updates for Copley Square". sasaki.com. May 19, 2022. Retrieved May 31, 2022.
  24. ^ "Improvements to Copley Square Park". boston.gov. Retrieved August 25, 2023.
  25. ^ Pokorny 2002, pp. 43–44
  26. ^ Powers, John (April 16, 2010). "Evolution of the Boston Marathon finish line". Boston Globe. Retrieved 19 October 2012.
  27. ^ (PDF). Boston Marathon Memorial. Boston Art Commission. p. 3. Archived from the original on March 4, 2016. Retrieved January 13, 2016.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  28. ^ "Copley Sq Embellishment as Planned". The Boston Globe. June 14, 1894. p. 4. Retrieved June 13, 2022.
  29. ^ "Copley Square as Rearranged". Boston Evening Transcript. October 26, 1912. p. 22. Retrieved June 13, 2022.
  30. ^ "Copley Square as It Probably Will Be --- The Semi-Official Plan". Boston Evening Transcript. March 13, 1914. p. 2. Retrieved June 13, 2022.
  31. ^ "Recommends Copley Sq as Site for State's World War Memorial". The Boston Globe. February 28, 1927. p. 12. Retrieved June 13, 2022.
  32. ^ "Glow Competition". SHIFTBoston. 2012. Retrieved June 13, 2022.
  33. ^ "GLOW/SHIFT Boston Copley Square Competition". cargocollective.com/khourylevitfong. 2012. Retrieved June 13, 2022.

Sources edit

  • Pokorny, Margaret, ed. (October 23, 2002). (PDF). Boston: Friends of Copley Square. Archived from the original (PDF) on May 28, 2013. Retrieved June 6, 2022.
  • Shand-Tucci, Douglass (1999). Built in Boston: City and Suburb 1800–2000. Foreword by Walter Muir Whitehill (Revised and Expanded ed.). Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press. ISBN 1-55849-201-1. LCCN 99016750. Retrieved June 11, 2022.
  • Whitehill, Walter Muir (1968). Boston: A Topographical History (Second, enlarged ed.). Cambridge, Massachusetts: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press. ISBN 0-674-07951-5. Retrieved June 11, 2022.

Further reading edit

  • Aldrich, Megan (1994). Gothic Revival. London: Phaidon Press. ISBN 978-0-7148-2886-2.
  • Bunting, Bainbridge (1967). Houses of Boston's Back Bay: An Architectural History, 1840-1917. Cambridge: Belknap Press, an imprint of Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-40901-9.
  • Forbes, Esther (1947). The Boston Book. Photographs by Arthur Griffin. Boston: Houghton Mifflin. OCLC 851279970.
  • Kay, Jane Holtz (1999). Lost Boston (Expanded and updated ed.). Boston: Houghton Mifflin. ISBN 978-0-395-96610-5.
  • Shand-Tucci, Douglass. "The Gods of Copley Square: Dawn of the Modern American Experience, 1865-1915", www.backbayhistorical.org/Blog, 2009. All chapters archived at Open Letters Monthly.
  • Shand-Tucci, Douglass. "Renaissance Rome and Emersonian Boston: Michelangelo and Sargent, between Triumph and Doubt", Anglican Theological Review, Fall 2002, 995–1008.
  • , Exhibitions, Boston Public Library, 2010, archived from the original on July 23, 2014

External links edit

  • Copley Square Farmers' Market
  • Friends of Copley Square
  • – via archive.org
  • Boston Streetcars: Copley Square A history of public transportation around and through Copley Square
  • View of Copley Square, 1974 Photograph by Nicholas Nixon of the first iteration of the plaza with the John Hancock tower in its "plywood palace" phase.
  • Copley Connect pilot project Held in June 2022, the city closed one block of Dartmouth street to create a plaza. "For the first time in its history, Copley Square was unified as a grand civic space, bookended by Boston Public Library's McKim Building and H.H. Richardson's Trinity Church."

42°21′00″N 71°04′34″W / 42.350°N 71.076°W / 42.350; -71.076 (Copley Square, Boston)

copley, square, this, article, about, public, park, adjacent, hotel, fairmont, copley, plaza, hotel, privately, owned, indoor, shopping, mall, located, nearby, copley, place, public, square, boston, back, neighborhood, bounded, boylston, street, clarendon, str. This article is about the public park For the adjacent hotel see The Fairmont Copley Plaza Hotel For the privately owned indoor shopping mall located nearby see Copley Place Copley Square ˈ k ɒ p l i 1 is a public square in Boston s Back Bay neighborhood bounded by Boylston Street Clarendon Street St James Avenue and Dartmouth Street The square is named for painter John Singleton Copley Prior to 1883 it was known as Art Square due to its many cultural institutions some of which remain today Copley SquareClockwise from top Statue of John Singleton Copley in front of Trinity Church and the Hancock the fountain Boston Public Library Farmers market TypePublic parkLocationBoston Massachusetts U S Area2 4 acres 0 97 ha Created1883 1883 DesignerDean Abbott 1984 Owned byThe City of BostonPublic transit accessSubway and bus see Transportation Contents 1 Architecture 2 Public art 3 Public events 4 History 4 1 Unrealized proposals 4 2 Boston Marathon bombing 5 Transportation 6 Notes 7 References 8 Sources 9 Further reading 10 External linksArchitecture editSeveral architectural landmarks are adjacent to the square Old South Church 1873 by Charles Amos Cummings and Willard T Sears in the Venetian Gothic Revival style Trinity Church 1877 Romanesque Revival considered H H Richardson s tour de force Boston Public Library 1895 by Charles Follen McKim in a revival of Italian Renaissance style incorporates artworks by John Singer Sargent Edwin Austin Abbey Daniel Chester French and others The Fairmont Copley Plaza Hotel 1912 by Henry Janeway Hardenbergh in the Beaux Arts style on the site of the original Museum of Fine Arts Boston The John Hancock Tower 1976 late Modernist by Henry N Cobb at 790 feet 240 m New England s tallest building The BosTix Kiosk 1992 Postmodernist at the corner of Dartmouth and Boylston streets by Graham Gund with inspiration from Parisian park pavilions 2 Notable buildings later demolished Peace Jubilee Coliseum 3 1869 demolished the same year A temporary wooden structure seating fifty thousand was built on St James Park for the 1869 National Peace Jubilee Replaced by World s Peace Jubilee Coliseum 1872 which was replaced by the Museum of Fine Arts Second Church 1874 sold 1912 demolished by 1914 A Gothic Revival church by N J Bradlee Chauncy Hall School c 1874 demolished 1908 a tall gabled High Victorian brick school building on Boylston St near Dartmouth Street 4 Museum of Fine Arts 1876 demolished 1910 by John Hubbard Sturgis and Charles Brigham in the Gothic Revival style was the first purpose built public art museum in the world S S Pierce Building 1887 demolished 1958 by S Edwin Tobey no masterpiece of architecture but great urban design A heap of dark Romanesque masonry it anchored a corner of Copley Square as solidly as a mountain 5 Hotel Westminster 6 1897 demolished 1961 Trinity Place by Henry E Cregier 7 8 now replaced by the northeast corner of the new John Hancock Tower Razed in 1961 by owner John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company for a parking lot 9 Grundmann Studios 1893 demolished 1917 home of the Boston Art Students Association later known as the Copley Society contained artist studios and Copley Hall a popular venue for exhibitions lectures and social gatherings Public art editStatue of Phillips Brooks Augustus Saint Gaudens 1907 1910 The Kahlil Gibran Memorial 10 Kahlil Gibran nephew and godson of the poet 1977 The Tortoise and the Hare Nancy Schon 1994 The Boston Marathon Centennial Monument Mark Flannery 1994 Additions by Robert Shure and Robert Lamb 1996 11 Statue of John Singleton Copley Lewis Cohen 2002 Public events edit nbsp Masonic parade on Huntington Ave through Copley Square Boston 1895 One of the most popular attractions in Copley Square is the Farmers Market held Tuesdays and Fridays from May through November 12 During the 2023 2024 reconstruction of the park the market is held in front of the Public Library on Dartmouth Annual events include First Night activities and ice sculpture competition the Christmas tree lighting the Boston Book Festival and for several years the Boston Summer Arts Weekend The park s central location also makes it a natural gathering place for protests and vigils The water level in the fountain pool can be lowered turning it into a stage for concerts and theatrical performances History edit nbsp Detail of 1888 map showing Art Square and vicinity The map shows West End Street Railway trolley lines entering the square from Huntington Avenue southwest Clarendon Street north and Boylston Street east A significant number of important Boston educational and cultural institutions were originally located adjacent to or very near Copley Square reflecting 19th century Boston s aspirations for the location as a center of culture and progress 13 These included the Museum of Fine Arts the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Harvard Medical School the New England Museum of Natural History today s Museum of Science Trinity Church the New Old South Church the Boston Public Library the American Academy of Arts and Sciences the Massachusetts Normal Art School today s Massachusetts College of Art and Design the Horace Mann School for the Deaf Boston University Emerson College and Northeastern University nbsp nbsp Copley Square looking east top and west c 1905 By 1876 with the completion of the Museum of Fine Arts Walter Muir Whitehill noted that Copley Square which unlike the rest of the Back Bay had never been properly or reasonably laid out was beginning to stumble into shape 14 But the land comprising the current square bisected diagonally by Huntington Avenue was still available for commercial development The city purchased the larger triangle then known as Art Square in 1883 and dubbed it Copley Square note 1 The smaller plot known as Trinity Triangle was the subject of several lawsuits against the property owner who planned to put up a six story apartment building directly in front of Trinity Church Foundations were laid but further construction was delayed by various injunctions 16 The city council appropriated funds for purchase of the triangle in 1885 17 Calls to close off Huntington between Dartmouth and Boylston streets began almost immediately but that was not accomplished until 1968 18 nbsp Fountain in Copley Square c 1970 In 1966 a proposal by the Watertown Massachusetts landscape design firm Sasaki Dawson DeMay was selected from 188 entrants in a national competition sponsored by the city and private development concerns The design centered on a sunken terraced plaza intended to separate the pedestrian from the noise and bustle of the surrounding streets but it also isolated the square from the community As the architecture critic Robert Campbell noted From the day it opened it didn t work 19 In 1983 the Copley Square Centennial Committee consisting of representatives of business civic and residential interests was formed They announced a new design competition funded by a grant of 100 000 from the National Endowment for the Arts The winner announced in May 1984 was Dean Abbott of the New York firm Clarke amp Rapuano 20 21 The park was raised to street level and a lawn and planting beds were added The fountain which had rarely functioned as intended was re configured The updated park was dedicated on June 18 1989 and received mixed reviews 22 By 2021 the park now heavily used was again in need of redesign requirements included alleviating stress on existing trees adding more trees making the fountain safer and prioritizing ease of maintenance After a series of public meetings the final proposal by Sasaki Associates was presented to the city in May 2022 23 Renovations began on July 20 2023 and are expected to take sixteen months 24 The non profit membership organization Friends of Copley Square was formed in 1992 as a successor to the Copley Square Centennial Committee It raises funds for care of the square s plantings fountain and monuments and also manages the Copley Square Charitable trust 25 The Boston Marathon foot race has finished at Copley Square since 1986 26 A memorial celebrating the race s 100th running in 1996 is located in the park near the corner of Boylston and Dartmouth streets 27 Unrealized proposals edit nbsp Surveyor s map of Copley Square Boston 1874 1874 A surveyor s map shows a Chemical School Inst Tech never built and four house lots on the larger triangle 1894 A circular sunken garden combining designs by Rotch amp Tilden and Walker and Kimball ringed with trees and marble balustrades centered on a small fountain 28 1912 A plan by architect Frank Bourne eliminated the Huntington Avenue crossing and sunk the square 2 5 feet below street level One version featured an enormous monumental column in the center of the plaza 29 1914 Landscape architect Arthur Shurtleff envisioned a circle of trees around the Brewer Fountain which would be moved from Boston Common 30 1927 A proposal for a State War Memorial from plans by Guy Lowell placed a large cylindrical granite structure in a basin The inner chamber rose fifty feet to a domed ceiling and the memorial was topped with bronze representation of Hope 31 2012 A juried competition held by SHIFTBoston invited designs for creative illumination 32 First prize was awarded to the firm Khoury Levit Fong for their conceptual chandelier of LEDs suspended over the square 33 Boston Marathon bombing edit Main article Boston Marathon bombing On April 15 2013 around 2 50 pm about three hours after the first runners crossed the line two bombs exploded one near the finish line near the Boston Public Library the other some seconds later and one block west Three people were killed and at least 183 injured at least 14 of whom lost limbs Transportation editCopley is served by several forms of public transportation Copley Station on the MBTA Green Line Several MBTA bus routes the square is a major transfer point and terminal for several local and express routes Logan Express to Logan International Airport Nearby Back Bay station for MBTA Orange Line MBTA Commuter Rail and Amtrak Major roads Massachusetts Turnpike Boylston StreetNotes edit Some local wits suggested Copley Skew or Copley Corners as more appropriate for the non square shape 15 Others were against honoring a man who had left America in 1774 and never returned References edit Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine The Boston History Project Copley Square with Anthony Sammarco YouTube Mary Melvin Petronella ed Victorian Boston Today Twelve Walking Tours Northeastern University Press 2004 69 available online access September 9 2012 Old Boston Coliseum 1869 CelebrateBoston Retrieved June 2 2022 259 Boylston Street Chauncey Hall School ca 1874 90 Tufts Digital Library Retrieved May 28 2022 Robert Campbell and Peter Vanderwarker Coming into Copley Boston Globe Mar 26 2006 p BGM 16 Strahan Derek January 26 2016 Hotel Westminster Boston Lost New England Retrieved May 27 2022 Chicago Man s Reputation Boston Evening Transcript Feb 3 1900 p 7 Retrieved 4 May 2015 Shand Tucci 1999 p 102 Old Westminster Hotel to be Razed for Parking Lot The Boston Globe December 2 1960 The Khalil Gibran Memorial Boston Literary District Retrieved June 3 2022 Boston Marathon Memorial publicartboston com Archived from the original on January 26 2016 Retrieved June 13 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Copley Square Farmers Market Mass Farmers Markets Retrieved June 13 2022 Douglass Shand Tucci The Gods of Copley Square lecture series 2009 sponsored by Back Bay Historical Boston centric Global Studies and the New England Historical Genealogical Society Whitehill 1968 p 171 Copley Skew Boston Evening Transcript May 15 1885 p 4 Trinity Objects to Bachelors Hall as Neighbor The Boston Globe September 24 1884 p 3 Retrieved June 2 2022 The Common Council Boston Evening Transcript January 2 1885 p 4 Retrieved June 3 2022 Campbell Robert Vanderwarker Peter 1992 Cityscapes of Boston Boston Houghton Mifflin Co p 74 Retrieved June 6 2022 Campbell Robert August 9 1983 Copley Sq may come back to life The Boston Globe p 43 Retrieved May 31 2022 Dean Abbott The Cultural Landscape Foundation Retrieved June 3 2022 Pokorny 2002 pp 12 13 Campbell Robert June 11 1989 The newest Copley Square is better but The Boston Globe p 225 City of Boston Releases Design Updates for Copley Square sasaki com May 19 2022 Retrieved May 31 2022 Improvements to Copley Square Park boston gov Retrieved August 25 2023 Pokorny 2002 pp 43 44 Powers John April 16 2010 Evolution of the Boston Marathon finish line Boston Globe Retrieved 19 October 2012 100 Public Artworks PDF Boston Marathon Memorial Boston Art Commission p 3 Archived from the original on March 4 2016 Retrieved January 13 2016 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Copley Sq Embellishment as Planned The Boston Globe June 14 1894 p 4 Retrieved June 13 2022 Copley Square as Rearranged Boston Evening Transcript October 26 1912 p 22 Retrieved June 13 2022 Copley Square as It Probably Will Be The Semi Official Plan Boston Evening Transcript March 13 1914 p 2 Retrieved June 13 2022 Recommends Copley Sq as Site for State s World War Memorial The Boston Globe February 28 1927 p 12 Retrieved June 13 2022 Glow Competition SHIFTBoston 2012 Retrieved June 13 2022 GLOW SHIFT Boston Copley Square Competition cargocollective com khourylevitfong 2012 Retrieved June 13 2022 Sources editPokorny Margaret ed October 23 2002 Copley Square The Story of Boston s Art Square PDF Boston Friends of Copley Square Archived from the original PDF on May 28 2013 Retrieved June 6 2022 Shand Tucci Douglass 1999 Built in Boston City and Suburb 1800 2000 Foreword by Walter Muir Whitehill Revised and Expanded ed Amherst University of Massachusetts Press ISBN 1 55849 201 1 LCCN 99016750 Retrieved June 11 2022 Whitehill Walter Muir 1968 Boston A Topographical History Second enlarged ed Cambridge Massachusetts The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press ISBN 0 674 07951 5 Retrieved June 11 2022 Further reading editAldrich Megan 1994 Gothic Revival London Phaidon Press ISBN 978 0 7148 2886 2 Bunting Bainbridge 1967 Houses of Boston s Back Bay An Architectural History 1840 1917 Cambridge Belknap Press an imprint of Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 40901 9 Forbes Esther 1947 The Boston Book Photographs by Arthur Griffin Boston Houghton Mifflin OCLC 851279970 Kay Jane Holtz 1999 Lost Boston Expanded and updated ed Boston Houghton Mifflin ISBN 978 0 395 96610 5 Shand Tucci Douglass The Gods of Copley Square Dawn of the Modern American Experience 1865 1915 www backbayhistorical org Blog 2009 All chapters archived at Open Letters Monthly Shand Tucci Douglass Renaissance Rome and Emersonian Boston Michelangelo and Sargent between Triumph and Doubt Anglican Theological Review Fall 2002 995 1008 Greetings from Copley Square A Chronology in Postcards Exhibitions Boston Public Library 2010 archived from the original on July 23 2014External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Copley Square category Copley Square Farmers Market Friends of Copley Square Boston Public Library Copley Square Collection via archive org Boston Streetcars Copley Square A history of public transportation around and through Copley Square View of Copley Square 1974 Photograph by Nicholas Nixon of the first iteration of the plaza with the John Hancock tower in its plywood palace phase Copley Connect pilot project Held in June 2022 the city closed one block of Dartmouth street to create a plaza For the first time in its history Copley Square was unified as a grand civic space bookended by Boston Public Library s McKim Building and H H Richardson s Trinity Church 42 21 00 N 71 04 34 W 42 350 N 71 076 W 42 350 71 076 Copley Square Boston Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Copley Square amp oldid 1222745166, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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