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Dorchester, Boston

Dorchester is a Bostonian neighborhood comprising more than 6 square miles (16 km2) in the City of Boston, Massachusetts, United States. Originally, Dorchester was a separate town, founded by Puritans who emigrated in 1630 from Dorchester, Dorset, England, to the Massachusetts Bay Colony. This dissolved municipality, Boston's largest neighborhood by far,[3] is often divided by city planners in order to create two planning areas roughly equivalent in size and population to other Boston neighborhoods.

Dorchester, Boston
Nickname: 
Dot
Motto(s): 
Pietate, Literis, Industria (Latin)
"Piety, Learning, [and] Industry"
Dorchester, Boston
Location in Boston, Massachusetts
Coordinates: 42°19′N 71°3′W / 42.317°N 71.050°W / 42.317; -71.050
CountryUnited States
StateMassachusetts
CountySuffolk
Neighborhood ofBoston
SettledMay 1630
IncorporatedJune 1, 1630
Annexed by BostonJanuary 4, 1870[1]
Named forDorchester, Dorset
Population
 (2010)[2]
 • Total91,982 to 134,000
Time zoneUTC-5 (Eastern)
 • Summer (DST)UTC-4 (Eastern)
ZIP Codes
02121, 02122, 02124, 02125
Area code(s)617 and 857

The neighborhood is named after the town of Dorchester in the English county of Dorset, from which Puritans emigrated on the ship Mary and John, among others.[4]

Founded in 1630, just a few months before the founding of the city of Boston, Dorchester now covers a geographic area approximately equivalent to nearby Cambridge.[5] It was still a primarily rural town and had a population of 12,000 when it was annexed to Boston in 1870. Railroad and streetcar lines brought rapid growth, increasing the population to 150,000 by 1920. In the 2010 United States Census, the neighborhood's population was 92,115.

The Dorchester neighborhood has a very diverse population, which includes a large concentration of African Americans, European Americans (particularly those of Irish, German, Italian, and Polish origin), Caribbean Americans, Latinos, and East and Southeast Asian Americans. Dorchester also has a significant LGBT population, with active political groups and the largest concentration of same-sex couples in Boston after the neighborhoods of South End and Jamaica Plain.[6] Most of the people over the age of 25 have completed high school or obtained a GED.[7]

History edit

Indigenous peoples edit

Prior to European colonization, the region around Dorchester was inhabited by the indigenous Massachusett.[8] They lived in settlements established alongside the Neponset River estuary, which was a plentiful source of fish, including trout; they also gathered shellfish from the riverbed, and hunted beaver and deer. They established farms in nearby hills.[9] During the initial period of colonization of the region by Puritan settlers, the Massachusett suffered a rapid decline in population due to the introduction of foreign infectious diseases to which they had no immunity and violence related to settler colonialism.[9]

The Massachusett sachem, Chickatawbut, negotiated land treaties with the Puritan settlers before dying of smallpox in 1633. His brother, Cutshamekin, who succeeded him, deeded further land to the settlers.[10][11][12] The remaining Massachusett in the region, including Cutshamekin, accepted some Christianity as a form of survivance and eventually resettled in the Praying Town of Natick.[8][13]

European settlement in the 17th century edit

 
Old Blake House c. 1905

A syndicate of Dorsetshire fishermen organized an outport of fishing stages and flakes at Dorchester in 1623.[14] In 1626 David Thompson settled his family on Thompson Island in what is now Dorchester before Boston's Puritan migration wave began in 1630.[15] May 30, 1630, Captain Squib of the ship Mary and John entered Boston Harbor and on June 17, 1630, landed a boat with eight men on the Dorchester shore, at what was then a narrow peninsula known as Mattapan or Mattaponnock. Today it is known as Columbia Point (more popularly since 1984 as Harbor Point).[16] Those aboard the ship who founded the town included William Phelps, Roger Ludlowe, John Mason, John Maverick, Nicholas Upsall, Capt. Roger Fyler, William Gaylord, Henry Wolcott, and other men who would become prominent in the founding of a new nation. The original settlement founded in 1630 was at what is now the intersection of Columbia Road and Massachusetts Avenue. (Even though Dorchester was annexed over 100 years ago into the city of Boston, residents still annually celebrate the founding on Dorchester Day, which includes festivities and a parade down Dorchester Avenue).

Most of the early Dorchester settlers came from the English West Country, and some from Dorchester, Dorset, where the Rev. John White was chief proponent of a Puritan settlement in the Americas.[17] The town was centered on the First Parish Church of Dorchester. It is now operated as the Unitarian-Universalist church on Meeting House Hill and is the oldest religious organization in present-day Boston.[18]

On October 8, 1633, the first Town Meeting in the United States was held in Dorchester. Today, each October 8 is celebrated as Town Meeting Day in Massachusetts. Dorchester is the birthplace of the first public elementary school in America, the Mather School, established in 1639.[19] The school still stands as the oldest elementary school in the United States.[20] In 1634 Israel Stoughton built one of the earliest grist mills in America on the Neponset River, and Richard Callicott founded a trading post nearby. In 1641, Dorcas ye blackmore, an enslaved servant to Israel Stoughton, was the first recorded African American to join a church in New England. She served as an evangelist to Stoughton's Native American servants, and the First Parish Church of Dorchester attempted to help Dorcas gain her freedom.[21][22]

In 1649, Puritan missionaries, including John Eliot, began a campaign to convert the Indigenous people in Dorchester to Christianity with the help of Cockenoe and John Sassamon, two Indian servants in Dorchester. Eliot was given land by the town of Dorchester for his mission, where he established a church and school.

The James Blake House, oldest surviving home in the city of Boston, is located at Edward Everett Square. This is the historic intersection of Columbia Road, Boston Street, and Massachusetts Avenue, a few blocks from the Dorchester Historical Society. The Blake House was constructed in 1661, as was confirmed by dendrochronology in 2007.[23]

In 1695, a party was dispatched to found the town of Dorchester, South Carolina. It lasted a half-century before being abandoned.

18th century edit

 
Dorchester looking north toward Boston, c. 1781
 
Baker's Cocoa Advertisement in Overland Monthly, January 1919. The manufacture of chocolate had been introduced in the United States in 1765 by John Hannon and Dr. James Baker in Dorchester. Walter Baker & Company was located in Dorchester.

In 1765, chocolate was first introduced in the American colonies when Irish chocolate maker John Hannon (or alternatively spelled "Hannan" in some sources) imported beans from the West Indies and refined them in Dorchester, working with Dr. James Baker, an American physician and investor. They soon opened America's first chocolate mill and factory in the Lower Mills section of Dorchester on the Neponset River. The Walter Baker Chocolate Factory, part of Walter Baker & Company, operated until 1965.[24]: 627 [25][26][27]

Before the American Revolution, "The Sons of Liberty met in August 1769 at the Lemuel Robinson Tavern, which stood on the east side of the upper road (Washington St.) near the present Fuller Street. Lemuel Robinson was a representative of the town during the Revolution and was appointed a colonel in the Revolutionary army."[28] Dorchester (in a part of what is now South Boston) was also the site of the Battle of Dorchester Heights in 1776, which eventually resulted in the British evacuating Boston.

19th century edit

Victorian era edit

 
One of Dorchester's most influential residents, Lucy Stone was an early advocate for women's rights.

In Victorian times, Dorchester became a popular country retreat for Boston elite. It developed into a bedroom community, easily accessible to the city by streetcar. The mother and grandparents of John F. Kennedy lived in the Ashmont Hill neighborhood while his grandfather John F. "Honey Fitz" Fitzgerald was mayor of Boston.

American poet Oliver Wendell Holmes, wrote a poem called "The Dorchester Giant" in 1830, and referred to the special kind of stone, "Roxbury puddingstone", also quarried in Dorchester, which was used to build churches in the Boston area. Most notable of these is the Central Congregational Church (later called the Church of the Covenant) in Boston's Back Bay neighborhood.[29][30]: 116 

In 1845, the Old Colony Railroad ran through the area and connected Boston and Plymouth, Massachusetts. The station was originally called Crescent Avenue or Crescent Avenue Depot[31] as an Old Colony Railroad station. The name was changed to Columbia until December 1, 1982, and then again changed to JFK/UMASS. It is a Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority rail line station for both the Red Line subway and the Plymouth/Kingston, Middleborough/Lakeville and Greenbush commuter rail lines.

In the 1840s and 1850s, a new wave of development took place on a strip of waterfront overlooking Dorchester Bay (Park and Mill Streets at the Harrison Square Historic District, later known as Clam Point.) Renowned architects who had contributed to one of the most significant and intact collections of Clam Point's Italianate mansards include Luther Briggs, John A. Fox, and Mary E. Noyes. By the 1890s, Clam Point gained prominence as a summer resort: the Russell House hotel was its centerpiece and the Dorchester Yacht Club was established on Freeport Street.

In the 1880s, the calf pasture on Columbia Point was developed for a Boston sewer line and pumping station. This large pumping station still stands. In its time it was a model for treating sewage and helping to promote cleaner and healthier urban living conditions. It pumped waste to a remote treatment facility on Moon Island in Boston Harbor, and served as a model for other systems worldwide. This system was operated as the Boston Sewer system's headworks, handling all of the city's sewage, until 1968, when a new treatment facility was built on Deer Island. The pumping station is architecturally significant as a Richardsonian Romanesque designed by then Boston city architect, George Clough, then architect for the city of Boston. The only remaining 19th-century building on Columbia Point, it is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.[16]

In the history of the United Kingdom, the Victorian era was the period of Queen Victoria's reign, from 20 June 1837 until her death on 22 January 1901. The era followed the Georgian period and preceded the Edwardian period. Its later half overlaps with the first part of the Belle Époque era of Continental Europe.

Annexation to Boston edit

 
Two people play tennis in Franklin Park, 1906.
 
Map of Dorchester, Massachusetts, and surrounding area from the H. F. Walling Map of the County of Norfolk, Massachusetts, 1858
 
Map showing all ground in Boston occupied by buildings in 1880, just after Dorchester was annexed to Boston in 1870. Dorchester is in the lower left quadrant. From U.S. Census Bureau.

Dorchester was annexed by Boston in pieces beginning on March 6, 1804, and ending with complete annexation to the city of Boston after a plebiscite was held in Boston and Dorchester on June 22, 1869. As a result, Dorchester officially became part of Boston on January 3, 1870.[32] This is the historic reason that Dorchester Heights is today considered part of South Boston, not modern-day Dorchester, since it was part of the earliest cession of Dorchester to Boston in 1804. Additional parts of Dorchester were ceded to Quincy (in 1792, 1814, 1819, and 1855). Portions of the original town of Dorchester developed as the separate towns of Hyde Park (1868 and later annexed to Boston in 1912), Milton (1662), and Stoughton (1726, itself later subdivided).

In 1895, Frederick Law Olmsted, architect of the Boston Public Garden/Emerald Necklace and Central Park in New York City, was commissioned to create Dorchester Park. It was intended as an urban forest for the residents of a growing Dorchester.[33]

In 1904, the Dorchester Historical Society incorporated "Dorchester Day", which commemorated the settlement of Dorchester in 1630. Celebrated annually, Dorchester Day is a tableau of community events, highlighted by such activities as the Landing Day Observance, the Dorchester Day Parade along Dorchester Avenue the first Sunday in June, and the Community Banquet.[34]

Turn of the 20th century edit

During the late 19th and early 20th centuries, Dorchester was a site for community activism related to diverse issues. The first racially integrated neighborhood developed on Jones Hill. One of the residents of that neighborhood, William Monroe Trotter, with W.E.B. Du Bois, helped to found the Niagara Movement, the precursor of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.[35] Many leading suffragettes also lived in Dorchester, including Lucy Stone.[36]

In the early 20th century, Dorchester received numerous Catholic immigrants from a variety of nations, such as Ireland, French Canada, Poland, and Italy, as well as mostly Protestant African Americans from the South who were part of the Great Migration to northern industrial cities. Numerous three-decker apartment buildings were built in Dorchester to house the many industrial workers.[citation needed]

1950s–present edit

 
John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum on the Columbia Point peninsula (2007)
 
Uphams Corner section of Dorchester showing the typical urban street-scape found in the neighborhood (2010)

In the early 1950s, Dorchester became a center of civil rights activism by African Americans. Martin Luther King Jr. lived there for much of the time he attended Boston University for his PhD.

"With Boston's Baptist community riveted by his preaching and Coretta [Scott King] at his side, King's circle grew. The Dorchester apartment drew friends and followers like a magnet, according to [friend and roommate John] Bustamante, with 'untold numbers of visitors coming from the other schools.' The roommates housed and fed the visitors, who would join in civil rights discussions."[37]

During the 1960s–1980s, the ethnic landscape of Dorchester changed dramatically. The established descendants of early 20th-century Jewish, Italian, and Irish immigrants generally moved to newer housing, and new African, Asian, and Caribbean immigrants and their descendants settled here in a succession of ethnicities.

The first community health center in the United States was the Columbia Point Health Center in Dorchester. It was opened in December 1965 and served mostly the massive Columbia Point public housing complex adjoining it. It was founded by two medical doctors, Jack Geiger, who had been on the faculty of Harvard University and later at Tufts University, and Count Gibson from Tufts University.[38][39][40]

Geiger had previously studied the first community health centers and the principles of Community Oriented Primary Care with Sidney Kark[41] and colleagues while serving as a medical student in rural Natal, South Africa.[42] The Columbia Point Health Center is still in operation and was rededicated in 1990 as the Geiger-Gibson Community Health Center.[43][44][45]

In 1974, the University of Massachusetts Boston moved from Park Square in downtown Boston to Columbia Point in Dorchester. In 1982, Boston State College was incorporated into UMass Boston. Since the 1970s, UMass Boston has expanded substantially, including building a new campus center in 2004 and a new science center in 2015. It has also hosted numerous important social and civic events. In 2000, for example, the university hosted a presidential candidates’ debate between George W. Bush and Al Gore.[46]

In 1977, after an unsuccessful bid to have the John F. Kennedy Library located in Cambridge, Massachusetts, close to the late president's alma mater Harvard University, it was sited at the tip of Columbia Point and ground was broken. Designed by architect I. M. Pei, the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum was dedicated on October 20, 1979.

By the 1980s, the Blue Hill Avenue section of Dorchester had become a predominantly Black community.

During the 1990s, the city administration increased police presence and invested city money into the area for more street lighting.[citation needed]

On March 30, 2015, the Edward M. Kennedy Institute for the United States Senate was dedicated by President Barack Obama.[47] The Institute opened to the public on March 31, 2015.[48]

Geography edit

 
Map of the neighborhoods of Dorchester, Boston, Massachusetts

Dorchester is located south of downtown Boston and is surrounded by the neighborhoods of South Boston, Roxbury, Jamaica Plain, Hyde Park and South End, the city of Quincy and the town of Milton. The Neponset River separates Dorchester from Quincy and Milton.

Neighborhood sections and squares edit

Dorchester is Boston's largest and most populous neighborhood[49] and comprises many smaller sections and squares. Due to its size of about six square miles (16 km2), it is often divided for statistical purposes into North and South Dorchester. North Dorchester includes the portion north of Quincy, East and Freeport streets. The main business district in this part of Dorchester is Uphams Corner, at the intersection of Dudley Street and Columbia Road.

South Dorchester is bordered to the east by Dorchester Bay and to the south by the Neponset River.[50] The main business districts in this part of Dorchester are Fields Corner, at the intersection of Dorchester Avenue and Adams Street, and Codman Square, at the intersection of Washington Street and Talbot Avenue. Adjacent to Fields Corner is the Harrison Square Historic District, also known as Clam Point. It is notable for its collection of substantial Italianate Mansard residences.

Dorchester Avenue is the major neighborhood spine, running in a south–north line through all of Dorchester from Lower Mills to downtown Boston.[51] The southern part of Dorchester is primarily a residential area, with established neighborhoods still defined by parishes, and occupied by families for generations. The northern part of Dorchester is more urban, with a greater amount of apartment housing and industrial parks. South Bay and Newmarket industrial area are major sources of employment.

The Harbor Point area (formerly known as Columbia Point) is home of several large employers, including the Boston campus of the University of Massachusetts, the Massachusetts Archives and Commonwealth Museum, the Edward M. Kennedy Institute for the United States Senate, and the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum. Distinct commercial districts include Bowdoin/Geneva, Fields Corner, Codman Square, Peabody Square, Adams Village and Lower Mills. Primarily residential areas include Savin Hill, Jones Hill, Four Corners, Franklin Field, Franklin Hill, Ashmont, Meeting House Hill, Neponset, Popes Hill and Port Norfolk.

Demographics edit

Historical population
CensusPop.Note
18304,074
18404,87519.7%
18507,96963.5%
18609,76922.6%

Up until the 1960s, the Blue Hill Avenue part of Dorchester from Roxbury to Mattapan was primarily composed of Jewish Americans whose ancestors had immigrated from eastern Europe in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.[52] The Neponset neighborhood was primarily Irish-American, most of whom were Catholic.

During the 1920s–1960s, many African Americans moved from the South to the North during the Great Migration and settled on Blue Hill Avenue and nearby sections. While some Jewish-Americans were moving "up and out" to the suburbs, certain Boston banks and real estate companies developed a blockbusting plan for the area. The Blue Hill Avenue area was "redlined" so that only the newly arriving African Americans would receive mortgages for housing in that section.[53] "White flight" was prevalent.

After changes to US immigration law in 1965, Dorchester received new waves of migrants from Puerto Rico, and immigrants from the Caribbean and Central America, such as Dominican Republic, Haiti, Jamaica, and Trinidad and Tobago. Immigrants also came from Cape Verde and Vietnam, as well as other Latin American, Asian, and African nations. Dorchester also continued to receive immigrants from Northern European countries such as Ireland, Germany and Poland. Dorchester became more diverse than at any point in its long history, with many nationalities represented here. These immigrants have helped revive the economy of the neighborhood by opening ethnic stores and restaurants.[54]

The sections of Dorchester have distinct ethnic, racial, and socioeconomic compositions. The eastern areas of Dorchester (especially between Adams Street and Dorchester Bay) are primarily ethnic European and Asian, with a large population of Irish Americans and Vietnamese Americans. Residents of the western, central and parts of the southern sections of the neighborhood are predominantly African American. In Neponset, the southeast corner of the neighborhood, as well as parts of Savin Hill in the north and Cedar Grove in the south, Irish Americans maintain the most visible identity.[55] In the northern section of Dorchester and southwestern section of South Boston is the Polish Triangle, where recent Polish immigrants are residents. Savin Hill, as well as Fields Corner, have large Vietnamese-American populations. Uphams Corner contains a Cape Verdean-American community, the largest concentration of people of Cape Verdean origin within Boston city limits. Western, central and parts of southern Dorchester have a large Caribbean population (especially people from Haiti, Jamaica, Barbados, and Trinidad and Tobago). They are most strongly represented in the Codman Square, Franklin Field and the Ashmont area, although there are also significant numbers in Four Corners and Fields Corner. Significant numbers of African Americans live in the Harbor Point, Uphams Corner, Fields Corner, Four Corners and Franklin Field areas.[56] In recent years Dorchester has also seen an influx of young residents, gay men and women, and working artists (in areas like Lower Mills, Ashmont Hill/Peabody Square, and Savin Hill).[57][58][59][60][61]

American Community Survey – Estimates – 2013 edit

The American Community Survey (ACS) for Dorchester, from 2007 to 2011, estimates the total population is 113,975 people. Slightly more than half are female, 52.6% or 59,914[7] and 47.4% or 54,061[7] are male.

In Dorchester, 68.4% or 77,980 of the residents are native born and 31.6% or 35,995[7] people are foreign born, of which 50.1% or 18,024[7] are not U.S. citizens. The largest racial group in the neighborhood is Black or African-American with 49,612 people or 43.05%[7] of the population. People who self-identify as white represent 26,102 or 26.99%[7] of the community. Hispanic/Latino account for 19.09% of the population with 19,295[7] resident. The Asian enclave represents 9.6% of 10,990[7] of the citizenry. The smallest racial group is bi/multi-racial and they make up 1.9% (2,174[7]) of the population.

According to the ACS survey, Dorchester has a large under 25 population with 38.1% or 43,472[7] people and 33,162 (29.1% of the total population)[7] of them under the age of 19 years old. Between the ages of 25 and 64 years old there are 59,788 or 52.6%[7] people and 10,715 people or 9.3%[7] are over the age of 65 years old. In Dorchester, approximately 61.9% or 70,503[7] people are over the age of 25, 23.5% or 16,582 people[7] do not have a high school diploma or GED, 30.5% or 21,479[7] have a diploma or GED, 18.5% or 13,045 people[7] have completed some college, and 27.5% or 19,397 people[7] have a college degree.

The ACS Survey estimates there are 40,443[7] households in the neighborhood of Dorchester, the per capita income of $22,120 and a median income of $44,136. A total of 13.1% or 5,286[7] households have reported income of less than $10,000. 27.3% or 11,020[7] households earn less than $19,999. A total of 19.1% or 7,720[7] households earn between $20,000 and 39,999.16.5% or 6,651[7] households in the earn between $40,000 and 59,999. A total of 19.7% or 7,977[7] households earn between $60,000 and 99,999. A total of 15.3% or 6,174[7] of household report annual incomes of $100,000 to 199,999.[7] Only 2.2% or 901[7] households in Dorchester earn $200,000 or more per year. The ACS reports as of 2011, Poverty affects 23.5% or 9,511 households and 24.3% or 9,820 of[7] households are receiving SNAP Benefits.

Race edit

Dorchester-Mount Bowdoin (02121) Racial Breakdown of Population (2017)[62][63]
Race Percentage of
02121
population
Percentage of
Massachusetts
population
Percentage of
United States
population
ZIP Code-to-State
Difference
ZIP Code-to-USA
Difference
Black 70.9% 8.8% 13.4% +62.1% +57.5%
Hispanic 28.7% 11.9% 18.1% +16.8% +10.6%
White 8.2% 81.3% 76.6% –73.1% –68.4%
White (Non-Hispanic) 2.6% 72.1% 60.7% –69.5% –58.1%
Asian 0.8% 6.9% 5.8% –6.1% –5.0%
Native Americans/Hawaiians 0.2% 0.6% 1.5% –0.4% –1.3%
Two or more races 5.2% 2.4% 2.7% +2.8% +2.5%
Dorchester-Fields Corner (02122) Racial Breakdown of Population (2017)[64][63]
Race Percentage of
02122
population
Percentage of
Massachusetts
population
Percentage of
United States
population
ZIP Code-to-State
Difference
ZIP Code-to-USA
Difference
White 37.7% 81.3% 76.6% –43.6% –38.9%
White (Non-Hispanic) 34.1% 72.1% 60.7% –38.0% –26.6%
Black 30.9% 8.8% 13.4% +22.1% +17.5%
Asian 18.4% 6.9% 5.8% +11.5% +12.6%
Hispanic 11.9% 11.9% 18.1% +0.0% –6.2%
Native Americans/Hawaiians 0.0% 0.6% 1.5% –0.6% –1.5%
Two or more races 3.5% 2.4% 2.7% +1.1% +0.8%
Dorchester-Codman Square-Ashmont (02124) Racial Breakdown of Population (2017)[65][63]
Race Percentage of
02124
population
Percentage of
Massachusetts
population
Percentage of
United States
population
ZIP Code-to-State
Difference
ZIP Code-to-USA
Difference
Black 64.4% 8.8% 13.4% +55.6% +61.0%
White 22.6% 81.3% 76.6% –58.7% –54.0%
White (Non-Hispanic) 16.3% 72.1% 60.7% –55.8% –44.4%
Hispanic 15.8% 11.9% 18.1% +3.9% –2.3%
Asian 6.2% 6.9% 5.8% –0.7% +0.4%
Native Americans/Hawaiians 1.1% 0.6% 1.5% +0.5% –0.4%
Two or more races 2.9% 2.4% 2.7% +0.5% +0.2%
Dorchester-Uphams Corner-Savin Hill-Columbia Point (02125) Racial Breakdown of Population (2017)[66][63]
Race Percentage of
02125
population
Percentage of
Massachusetts
population
Percentage of
United States
population
ZIP Code-to-State
Difference
ZIP Code-to-USA
Difference
White 34.2% 81.3% 76.6% –47.1% –42.4%
White (Non-Hispanic) 30.4% 72.1% 60.7% –41.7% –30.3%
Black 29.7% 8.8% 13.4% +20.9% +16.3%
Hispanic 20.3% 11.9% 18.1% +8.4% +2.2%
Asian 12.8% 6.9% 5.8% +5.9% +7.0%
Native Americans/Hawaiians 0.5% 0.6% 1.5% –0.1% +1.0%
Two or more races 5.1% 2.4% 2.7% +2.7% +2.4%

Ancestry edit

According to the 2012-2016 American Community Survey 5-Year Estimates, the largest ancestry groups in ZIP Codes 02121, 02122, 02124, and 02125 are:[67][68]

Ancestry Percentage of
02121
population
Percentage of
Massachusetts
population
Percentage of
United States
population
ZIP Code-to-State
Difference
ZIP Code-to-USA
Difference
West Indian 15.53% 1.96% 0.90% +13.57% +14.62%
Puerto Rican 10.76% 4.52% 1.66% +6.24% +9.10%
Sub-Saharan African 7.82% 2.00% 1.01% +5.82% +6.81%
Haitian 7.18% 1.15% 0.31% +6.02% +6.87%
Jamaican 4.22% 0.44% 0.34% +3.78% +3.88%
Cape Verdean 3.92% 0.97% 0.03% +2.95% +3.89%
American 2.84% 4.26% 6.89% –1.42% –4.05%
Somali 1.57% 0.06% 0.04% +1.50% +1.52%
Ancestry Percentage of
02122
population
Percentage of
Massachusetts
population
Percentage of
United States
population
ZIP Code-to-State
Difference
ZIP Code-to-USA
Difference
Irish 18.94% 21.16% 10.39% –2.22% +8.55%
Vietnamese 16.67% 0.69% 0.54% +15.98% +16.13%
Sub-Saharan African 10.85% 2.00% 1.01% +8.85% +9.84%
Cape Verdean 8.57% 0.97% 0.03% +7.60% +8.54%
Italian 6.43% 13.19% 5.39% –6.75% +1.04%
West Indian 5.61% 1.96% 0.90% +3.65% +4.70%
Puerto Rican 4.67% 4.52% 1.66% +0.15% +3.01%
American 3.55% 4.26% 6.89% –0.71% –3.34%
Haitian 2.36% 1.15% 0.31% +1.21% +2.05%
Polish 1.93% 4.67% 2.93% –2.73% –1.00%
English 1.66% 9.77% 7.67% –8.12% –6.01%
Jamaican 1.59% 0.44% 0.34% +1.15% +1.25%
German 1.39% 6.00% 14.40% –4.61% –13.01%
Asian Indian 1.19% 1.39% 1.09% –0.20% +0.10%
French 1.09% 6.82% 2.56% –5.74% –1.47%
Ancestry Percentage of
02124
population
Percentage of
Massachusetts
population
Percentage of
United States
population
ZIP Code-to-State
Difference
ZIP Code-to-USA
Difference
West Indian 19.04% 1.96% 0.31% +17.08% +18.14%
Haitian 8.14% 1.15% 0.31% +6.99% +7.83%
Irish 7.97% 21.16% 10.39% –13.18% –2.41%
Sub-Saharan African 7.54% 2.00% 1.01% +5.54% +6.52%
Puerto Rican 7.50% 4.52% 1.66% +2.98% +5.84%
Jamaican 5.39% 0.44% 0.34% +4.95% +5.04%
Vietnamese 4.83% 0.69% 0.54% +4.14% +4.29%
Cape Verdean 3.96% 0.97% 0.03% +2.99% +3.93%
American 2.74% 4.26% 6.89% –1.53% –4.16%
Trinidadian/Tobagonian 2.62% 0.10% 0.07% +2.52% +2.55%
English 2.23% 9.77% 7.67% –7.54% –5.44%
Italian 2.16% 13.19% 5.39% –11.03% –3.23%
German 1.29% 6.00% 14.40% –4.72% –13.12%
Barbadian 1.14% 0.08% 0.02% +1.05% +1.12%
Guyanese 1.11% 0.03% 0.07% +1.08% +1.04%
Ancestry Percentage of
02125
population
Percentage of
Massachusetts
population
Percentage of
United States
population
ZIP Code-to-State
Difference
ZIP Code-to-USA
Difference
Sub-Saharan African 15.27% 2.00% 1.01% +13.27% +14.26%
Cape Verdean 13.02% 0.97% 0.03% +12.05% +12.98%
Irish 9.34% 21.16% 10.39% –11.82% –1.05%
American 9.07% 4.26% 6.89% +4.81% +2.18%
Vietnamese 7.33% 0.69% 0.54% +6.64% +6.79%
Puerto Rican 6.90% 4.52% 1.66% +2.38% +5.24%
West Indian 5.26% 1.96% 0.90% +3.30% +4.36%
Italian 3.18% 13.19% 5.39% –10.00% –2.21%
Chinese 3.03% 2.28% 1.24% +0.75% +1.79%
Polish 2.92% 4.67% 2.93% –1.75% –0.02%
German 2.32% 6.00% 14.40% –3.69% –12.08%
English 2.12% 9.77% 7.67% –7.66% –5.55%
Haitian 1.94% 1.15% 0.31% +0.79% +1.64%
Albanian 1.50% 0.28% 0.06% +1.22% +1.44%
Arab 1.44% 1.10% 0.59% +0.35% +0.85%
Mexican 1.29% 0.67% 11.96% +0.62% –10.67%
Asian Indian 1.20% 1.39% 1.09% –0.19% +0.11%
French 1.05% 6.82% 2.56% –5.77% –1.51%

Transportation edit

 
The Red Line MBTA platform at the JFK/UMass station with a commuter rail at the station (2007)

The neighborhood is served by five stations on the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority Red Line (MBTA) rapid transit service, five stations on the Ashmont-Mattapan High Speed Line, five stations on the Fairmount Commuter Rail Line, and various bus routes. Over the last decade, the Dorchester branch of the Red Line had major renovations, including four rapid transit stations being rebuilt at Savin Hill, Fields Corner, Shawmut, and Ashmont.[69][70] At Ashmont station, the city of Boston and the state of Massachusetts partnered with private investors to create The Carruth, one of the state's first Transit-oriented developments (TOD).[70][71]

Interstate 93 (concurrent with Route 3 and U.S. 1) runs north–south through Dorchester between Quincy, Massachusetts, and downtown Boston, providing access to the eastern edge of Dorchester at Columbia Road, Morrissey Boulevard (northbound only), Neponset Circle (southbound only), and Granite Avenue (with additional southbound on-ramps at Freeport Street and from Morrissey Blvd at Neponset). Several other state routes traverse the neighborhood, e.g., Route 203, Gallivan Boulevard and Morton Street, and Route 28, Blue Hill Avenue (so named because it leads out of the city to the Blue Hills Reservation). The Neponset River separates Dorchester from Quincy and Milton. The "Dorchester Turnpike" (now "Dorchester Avenue") stretches from Fort Point Channel (now in South Boston) to Lower Mills, and once boasted a horse-drawn streetcar.

A number of the earliest streets in Dorchester have changed names several times through the centuries, meaning that some names have come and gone. Leavitt Place, for instance, named for one of Dorchester's earliest settlers, eventually became Brook Court and then Brook Avenue Place.[72] Gallivan Boulevard was once Codman Street and Brookvale Street was once Brook Street.[73] Morrissey Boulevard was once Old Colony Parkway.

Economy edit

 
The headquarters of the Boston Globe was located on Morrissey Boulevard in Dorchester (2009).

Throughout its history, Dorchester has had periods of economic revival and recession. In the 1960s and 1970s, Dorchester was particularly hard hit by economic recession, high unemployment, and white flight.[74]

In 1953, Carney Hospital moved from South Boston to its current location in Dorchester, serving the local communities of Dorchester, Mattapan, Milton and Quincy.

In 1953, a major public housing project was completed on the Columbia Point peninsula of Dorchester. There were 1,502 units in the development on 50 acres (200,000 m2) of land. It later became known for high rates of crime and poor living conditions, and it went through particularly bad times in the 1970s and 1980s. By 1988, there were only 350 families living there. In 1984, the City of Boston gave control of it to a private developer, Corcoran-Mullins-Jennison, who redeveloped the property into a residential mixed-income community called Harbor Point Apartments which was opened in 1988 and completed by 1990. It was the first federal housing project to be converted to private, mixed-income housing in the United States. Harbor Point has won much acclaim for this transformation, including awards from the Urban Land Institute, the FIABCI Award for International Excellence, and the Rudy Bruner Award for Urban Excellence.[75][76][77]

During the housing crisis of 2008 in the United States, Dorchester's Hendry Street became the epicenter in the media[78] In reaction, the city of Boston negotiated to buy several of the houses for as little as $30,000. It is moving to seize other foreclosed properties on which the owners have not paid taxes. The houses were renovated and added to the inventory of subsidized rental housing.[79]

In 2008, plans and proposals were unveiled and presented to public community hearings by the Corcoran-Jennison Company to redevelop the 30-acre (120,000 m2) Bayside Exposition Center site on the Columbia Point peninsula into a mixed use village of storefronts and residences, called "Bayside on the Point".[80][81][82][83] However, in 2009, the Bayside Expo Center property was lost in a foreclosure on Corcoran-Jennison to a Florida-based real estate firm, LNR/CMAT, who bought it. Soon after, the University of Massachusetts Boston bought the property from them to build future campus facilities.[84][85]

The corporate headquarters of The Boston Globe was also located in Dorchester, having moved there in 1958 from downtown Boston. In 2009, then-owner The New York Times Company put the paper up for bid, leading to concern from local community members, who had seen other major employers close their doors.[86] After negotiations with their union and cost reduction measures, the owner's plans to sell the Globe were abandoned in October 2009.[87] In 2013, the paper was bought by John W. Henry, owner of the Boston Red Sox, and in 2017 the Globe headquarters returned to downtown Boston.[88]

In the 20th century, many of the labor unions in Boston relocated their headquarters to Dorchester. This includes the Boston Teachers Union, International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local 103, New England Regional Council of Carpenters, International Association of Fire Fighters Local 718, among others.

Crime edit

Dorchester, with a population of approximately 130,000, is home to nearly one-fifth of all Boston residents. In the early 1990s, Dorchester, along with Roxbury and Mattapan neighborhoods, had the highest percentage of victims with violence-related injuries. Since the early 2000s, crime rates across Boston declined. In the first three months of 2013, Boston crime rates reportedly dropped 15 percent, compared to the same time period in 2012.[89]

According to the Dorchester Reporter crime maps, the more dangerous areas in Dorchester are located to the west of Columbia Road, with criminal activity centered on Blue Hill Avenue area. Safer parts of the neighborhood include Savin Hill; the historic neighborhood of Clam Point; Columbia Point, which is populated by mostly UMass Boston students; Ashmont Hill; Saint Mark's; Pope's Hill; Cedar Grove; Lower Mills, around the Neponset, Gallivan, and Morrissey Boulevard areas; and the Jones Hill neighborhood (with the third largest percentage of same-sex households in Boston after the South End and Jamaica Plain).[90][91]

Statistics edit

According to the website AreaVibes,[92][93] the overall crime rate in Dorchester is 30% higher than the national average, and for every 100,000 people there are 10.55 daily crimes that occur in the neighborhood, such as violent crimes and property crimes. The rate of property crime is much higher than violent crime. Out of 100,000 people, 831 are involved in violent crime, and 3,021 out of 100,000 are involved in property crime.

The chance of being a victim of:

  • Property crime = 1 in 34
  • Violent crime = 1 in 121
  • Crime = 1 in 26

Education edit

 
The University of Massachusetts Boston is located on Columbia Point in Dorchester (2009).

Primary and secondary schools edit

Public schools edit

Students in Dorchester are served by Boston Public Schools (BPS). BPS assigns students based on preferences of the applicants and priorities of students in various zones.[94]

Dorchester High School predated the annexation of Dorchester to Boston. At its founding, it was an all-male school, first opened on December 10, 1852. In 1870 Dorchester was annexed to Boston and its schools became managed by the City of Boston. A replacement facility opened in Codman Square on Talbot Avenue 1901. The current Dorchester facility opened in 1925 on Peacevale Road to males, while the Talbot Avenue building was for females. In 1953 Dorchester High School consolidated as a coeducational school.[95]

BPS schools located in Dorchester[96] include

  • Boston Arts Academy, 9–12
  • Boston Community Leadership Academy/McCormack, 7–9
  • Boston International Newcomers Academy, 9–12
  • Boston Latin Academy, 7–12
  • Jeremiah E. Burke High School, 9–12
  • Clap Elementary, K1–5
  • Community Academy of Science & Health, 9–12
  • Paul A. Dever Elementary, K1–6
  • Edward Everett Elementary, K1–5
  • Lilla G. Frederick Pilot Middle School, 6–8
  • Sarah Greenwood, K0–8
  • Dr. William W. Henderson Inclusion School (formerly Patrick O'Hearn Elementary School), K0–12
  • Oliver Wendell Holmes Innovation School, K1–5
  • Thomas J. Kenny Elementary, K1–6
  • Martin Luther King Jr., K1–8
  • Lee Academy Pilot School, K0–3
  • Joseph Lee, K1–8
  • Mather Elementary, K1–5
  • Richard J. Murphy, K1–8
  • William E. Russell Elementary, K1–5
  • Pauline A. Shaw Elementary, K0–3
  • TechBoston Academy, 6–12
  • William Monroe Trotter, K1–8
  • UP Academy Dorchester, K1–8 (in-district charter)
  • UP Academy Holland, K1–5 (in-district charter)
  • John Winthrop Elementary, K1–5

Charter schools include

  • Boston Collegiate Charter School, 5–12
  • Brooke High School, 9–12
  • Codman Academy Charter Public School, K1–12
  • Conservatory Lab Charter School, K1–8
  • Helen Y. Davis Leadership Academy Charter Public School, 6–8
  • Neighborhood House Charter School, K1–12[97]
  • Roxbury Prep Lucy Stone Campus, 5–8
  • Roxbury Prep Dorchester Campus, 5–8

Catholic schools edit

Many Catholic schools closed in the 2000s as the demographics of the area changed.[98][99][100]

The remaining schools as of summer 2018 are:

  • Boston College High School, 7–12
  • Cristo Rey Boston High School, 9–12, leasing the old St. William Elementary building
  • St. Brendan School, K-6
  • Three locations of the Pope John Paul II Catholic Academy part of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Boston remain after the 2008 consolidation of seven parish elementary schools[101] into five locations.[98]
    • Columbia Campus (former St. Margaret's Elementary School building)
    • Lower Mills Campus (former St. Gregory Elementary School building)
    • Neponset Campus (former St. Ann Elementary School building)

Colleges and universities edit

  • The University of Massachusetts Boston is an accredited urban public research university and the second largest campus in the University of Massachusetts system. It is located on Columbia Point in Dorchester. The school offers associates, bachelors, masters and doctoral degrees. In regards to race and gender, the school has a diverse student population of about 13 thousand students at a time. Excluding financial aid, the average cost of tuition is $12,000 for in-state students, and $28,000 for out-of-state. The university is rated as a good value, with a 15:1 student faculty ratio and a variety of majors to study.[102] The economy of the school has been consistently productive since its establishment. Within the past twenty years, the school campuses have been improving and expanding. Some 95% of the students are in-state and attending classes full-time.
  • Labouré College is a Roman Catholic co-educational college offering associate degrees in nursing and the health sciences. It is located on the Carney Hospital campus near the Lower Mills section of Dorchester.

Public libraries edit

Boston Public Library operates six neighborhood branches in Dorchester.[103]

  • Adams Street Branch
  • Codman Square Branch – Originally opened at 6 Norfolk Street in 1905. The branch moved into its current facility, which was designed by Eco-Texture, Inc., in 1978.[104]
  • Fields Corner Branch
  • Grove Hall Branch
  • Lower Mills Branch
  • Uphams Corner Branch

Health care edit

Carney Hospital is located at 2100 Dorchester Avenue. Carney Hospital provides over 500 physicians with primary care and specialist physicians. They provide a range of services such as behavior health, cancer care, cardiac and vascular, gynecology services, neurology, orthopedics, rehabilitation and physical therapy, along with many more. Carney Hospital is promoting health and wellness. Carney Hospital has been serving the community since 1863. It is affiliated with Tufts University School Of Medicine, and is a teaching and training hospital for physicians in both internal medicine and family medicine.[105]

Codman Square Health Center is a community-based outpatient healthcare located on 637 Washington Street. They have been a functioning clinic since 1979 with the dream "To build the best urban community in America".[106] They employ about 280 multi-lingual staff members, most of whom reside in the neighborhoods surrounding Codman Square.

The Urban Asthma Coalition in Dorchester promotes collaboration among organizations and residents concerned about factors that affect asthma: the environment, quality of health care, access to health care, and education. Residents can join the active committee to promote better health and awareness.[107] They want to change policies through administrative advocacy and reduce the rate of asthma, as well as improve care. They have been successful in providing[108] 1,000 new healthy and affordable housing units in a year, green and healthy cleaners for the local schools, and a city program that works with health professionals and enforcement officers to further the improvement of housing for children of the area.

The Geiger-Gibson Health Center located in the Harbor Point section near UMass Boston is the oldest Community Health Center in the United States.

Housing edit

Most of Dorchester's population, about 63.3% or 72,239[7] people, lives in rental housing. The gross median monthly rent is $1,450,[109] which totals $17,400 per year and exceeds the income of almost 30% of the population. An estimated 40,180 people (35.3%)[7] live in owner-occupied homes and 1.4% or 1556 residents live in group homes/shelters.[7]

Excluding government-owned housing, Dorchester has 15,918[110] residential buildings including 4,344 or 27.3% single-family homes, 3,674 or 23.1%[110] two-family homes, 3,919 or 24.6%[110] three-family homes, and 3,981 or 25.0% condo units.[110] The median sales price for all residential property types is 244,450.[109] In 2013, there were 52 foreclosures petitions reported in Dorchester, representing 22.41% of the 232 foreclosures reported for the entire City Boston.[111] Subsequently, 37 out 147[111] distressed buildings documented in Boston are located in Dorchester.

Safety edit

Boston Police District C-11 Dorchester, located 40 Gibson St, Dorchester, MA 02122. To create an environment of trust, and empower the neighborhood is the goal. There are over 50 community meetings held monthly that allow the police department to partner with the seniors, community residents, business as well as the faith-based leaders of Dorchester. The police department also works closely to provide the community with crime prevention and safety tips. "Communication is the life-blood of our neighborhood"[112]

Dorchester has available shelters for those in need, a homeless shelter by the name of Pilgrim church (children's services of Roxbury) that is an adult shelter open to men only. This shelter is located on 540 Columbia Road Dorchester MA[113] The shelter is run by the Pilgrim church and it offers over night shelter, food, clothing, showers, first aid, and other supportive services. The shelter also provides evening transportation from Boston to the shelter. The shelter was originally established in 1990 by positive lifestyles and now is currently under the direction of United Homes Adult services.[114]

Urban policies edit

Income – Massachusetts sales tax rate is 6.25%, income tax is 5.20%. Income per capita is $18,226 which includes adults and children. Median household income $30,419.[115]

Public policy issues edit

Residents and activists have worked on issues of public safety, high crime rate, poor educational resources, and lack of housing for low-income families. Several organizations are working to provide the neighborhood with[citation needed]

  • Good Jobs/living wage
  • Education for the children
  • Housing
  • Healthcare resources & Access
  • Public Safety & Policy Relations

Among such organizations are First Parish Dorchester and The Bowdoin Geneva Resident Association.[116]

City budget plans edit

Mayor Marty Walsh proposed a budget for 2017 which included a five-year capital plan intended to make improvements to the infrastructure of Dorchester. The new projects involve building new libraries and also modernizing the Boston Public Libraries branches in Dorchester. Improvement of City parks is also included. The plans are to add more lights to Doherty-Gibson park in Fields Corner and another $3.7 million to make improvements in Harambee park next to the Franklin Field. The rest of the budget is intended to be used to complete already started projects in Savin Hill, King Street, Hemenway, Dower Avenue, and Ronan Park.[117]

Community edit

Based on the 2010 Census[118] Dorchester has 114,235 for a total population. Just about 15,530 are under the age of eighteen.[119]

The former president of Trader Joe's opened a non-profit retail food shop called the Daily Table.[120]

Ella J. Baker House edit

Ella J. Baker House is a community youth center in the Four Corners section of Dorchester.[121] The W. E. B. Du Bois Society, an academic and cultural enrichment program for African American secondary school students, is co-hosted by the W. E. B. Du Bois Research Institute along with Ella J. Baker House.[122]

Entertainment edit

Dorchester has various attractions, including the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum,[123] Edward M. Kennedy Institute for the United States Senate, Boston Winery, Dorchester Brewing Company, Boston Harbor Distillery, Strand Theatre, Commonwealth Museum, Greater Boston House Concert, Franklin Park Zoo, the Neponset Rivery Greenway and Lower Neponset River Trail.

Fields Corner[124] is a commercial center that is one of Dorchester's largest business districts. It has numerous restaurants and pubs, and independent clothing stores. Fields Corner is known both for its ethnic Irish residents, who support a variety of Irish pubs, and for Vietnamese restaurants operated by more recent immigrants. Adjacent to Fields Corner is an 11-acre park known as Hilltop Park, which offers a view of Dorchester Bay and plenty of green space.

Leisure activities and areas edit

Parks

  • Pope John Paul II Park Reservation: The Pope John Park Reservation is approximately 66 acres in size, and is open year-round for the residents of Dorchester. In its earlier times it was used as a landfill and also a drive-in theatre. It also serves as a buffer between the Town of Dorchester, Boston and Neponset River waterfront. This park now offers picnic facilities, soccer fields, play areas, paths for walking, and also spacious land to plant trees and shrubs.[citation needed]
  • Dorchester Park: Dorchester park was established in 1861 and is located in the southern part of Dorchester, specifically in the Cedar Grove and Lower Mills. It is across from the Neponset River. Dorchester Park is 30 acres. Events held at the park include the Annual Classic Car Show and Family Fun Day.[117] Dorchester Park is listed in the National Register of Historic Places.[citation needed]
  • Franklin Park: Established in 1885, this park has 485 acres. It includes walking and running paths, tennis courts, baseball fields, golf courses, and basketball courts. New England's Franklin Park Zoo has nine main exhibits that contain more than 220 species of animals. The Kite and Bike festival traditionally takes place in Franklin park. This event, hosted since 2010 by the Franklin Park Coalition, is usually held the Saturday after Mother's Day. It includes bike riding and kite flying.[125][citation needed]

Bike trails

  • Lower Neponset River Trail: This 2.4-mile path stretches from the historic Port Norfolk neighborhood in Dorchester, through Pope John Paul II Park, across Granite Avenue through Neponset Marshes, and through the Lower Mills area to Central Avenue in Milton. This trail is used for running, biking, and walking. The Neponset River Trail can be reached from the Butler, Milton Village, and Central Avenue Red Line (Mattapan trolley) stations.[126]
  • Neponset River Green way: The Neponset River Green way totals 5 miles in length. Scenery includes a salt marsh in Pope John Paul Park II and Tenan Beach at the mouth of Neponset River. Conveniently the trail is also adjacent to MBTA Red Line stations: Butler, Milton, and Central Avenue.[citation needed]
  • DotGreenway: a greenway for pedestrians and cyclists has been proposed to connect Talbot Avenue and Park Street along the MBTA Red Line tunnel cap (between Ashmont and Fields Corner stations).[127]

Sites of interest edit

Dorchester is home to many listings on the National Register of Historic Places.

Name on the Register[128][129] Date listed[129] Location
All Saints' Church June 16, 1980

(#80000678)

211 Ashmont St.

42°17′09″N 71°03′48″W

Benedict Fenwick School February 11, 2004

(#04000023)

150 Magnolia St.

42°18′49″N 71°04′21″W

James Blake House May 1, 1974

(#74002350)

735 Columbia Rd.

42°19′11″N 71°03′37″W

Boston Consumptives Hospital February 7, 2002

(#01001557)

249 River St.

42°16′34″N 71°05′01″W

Buildings at 825–829 Blue Hill Avenue September 10, 2014

(#14000561)

825–829 Blue Hill Ave.

42°17′49″N 71°05′16″W

Calf Pasture Pumping Station Complex August 2, 1990

(#90001095)

435 Mount Vernon St.

42°18′48″N 71°02′01″W

Clapp Houses May 2, 1974

(#74000911)

199 and 195 Boston St.

42°19′12″N 71°03′25″W

Codman Square District June 23, 1983

(#83000602)

Norfolk, Talbot, Epping, Lithgow, Centre, and Moultrie Sts.

42°17′25″N 71°04′16″W

Collins Building June 8, 2005

(#05000559)

213–217 Washington St.

42°18′02″N 71°04′37″W

Columbia Road–Bellevue Street Historic District September 8, 2017

(#100001582)

400-500 Block of Columbia Rd., and parts of Bellevue St.

42°18′46″N 71°04′06″W

Congregation Adath Jeshurun November 12, 1999

(#99001304)

397 Blue Hill Ave.

42°18′43″N 71°04′53″W

Sarah Davidson Apartment Block December 18, 2013

(#13000928)

3 Gaylord St.

42°17′56″N 71°04′23″W

Dorchester North Burying Ground April 18, 1974

(#74000915)

Stoughton St. and Columbia Rd.

42°19′00″N 71°03′52″W

Dorchester Park February 20, 2008

(#08000089)

Bounded by Dorchester Ave., Richmond, Adams, and Richview Sts.

42°16′34″N 71°04′01″W

Dorchester Pottery Works February 21, 1985

(#85000318)

101–105 Victory Rd.

42°17′49″N 71°03′05″W

Dorchester South Burying Ground June 27, 2014

(#14000365)

2095 Dorchester Ave.

42°16′43″N 71°04′01″W

Dorchester Temple Baptist Church January 16, 1998

(#97001239)

670 Washington St.

42°17′17″N 71°04′17″W

Dorchester-Milton Lower Mills Industrial District April 2, 1980

(#80000675)

Both sides of the Neponset River; also Adams, River, and Medway Sts., Millers Lane, and Eliot and Adams Sts.

42°16′16″N 71°04′08″W

Fields Corner Municipal Building November 12, 1981

(#81000620)

1 Arcadia St., 195 Adams St.

42°18′07″N 71°03′38″W

Greenwood Memorial United Methodist Church March 8, 2002

(#02000154)

378A–380 Washington St.

42°17′49″N 71°04′19″W

Harrison Square Historic District October 22, 2002

(#02001190)

Bounded by MBTA Braintree line embankment, Park, Everett, Freeport, Mill, Asland, Blanche Sts., Victory Rd.

42°18′07″N 71°03′13″W

Home for Destitute Jewish Children October 8, 2014

(#14000840)

150–156 American Legion Hwy.

42°17′41″N 71°05′34″W

The Peabody August 8, 2001

(#01000872)

195–197 Ashmont St.

42°17′07″N 71°03′53″W

Pierce House April 26, 1974

(#74000917)

24 Oakton Ave.

42°17′13″N 71°03′13″W

Pilgrim Congregational Church December 18, 2013

(#13000929)

540–544 Columbia Road

42°18′58″N 71°04′01″W

Saint Mark's Episcopal Church July 3, 2014

(#12000783)

73 Columbia Rd.

42°18′16″N 71°04′56″W

St. Mary's Episcopal Church October 30, 1998

(#98001292)

14–16 Cushing Ave.

42°18′59″N 71°03′54″W

Savin Hill Historic District May 9, 2003

(#03000385)

Roughly bounded by Savin Hill Ave., Morrissey Boulevard, Dorchester Bay, and Interstate 93

42°18′33″N 71°03′01″W

Sherman Apartments Historic District November 28, 2012

(#12000978)

544–546 Washington, 4–6, 12–14, 18 Lyndhurst Sts.

42°17′32″N 71°04′17″W

William Monroe Trotter House May 11, 1976

(#76002003)

97 Sawyer Ave.

42°18′47″N 71°03′46″W

Upham's Corner Market October 11, 1990

(#90001537)

600 Columbia Rd.

42°19′02″N 71°03′55″W

Walton and Roslin Halls December 18, 2013

(#13000930)

702–708 & 710–726 Washington St., 3–5 Walton St.

42°17′13″N 71°04′16″W

Additional sites of interest include:

Notable people edit

Notes and references edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ "Dorchester MA, Town History 1630–1870" 2013-10-20 at the Wayback Machine, Dorchester Atheneum
  2. ^ Bill Forry (2011). "Analysis: City counters bend boundaries, thousands cut out of Dot". Boston Neighborhood News, Inc. Retrieved April 13, 2011.
  3. ^ "Boston's Neighborhoods: Dorchester". Boston Redevelopment Authority (BRA). 2010. Retrieved August 17, 2010.
  4. ^ Clapp, Ebenezer. History of the Town of Dorchester, Massachusetts. Dorchester, Boston, MA: Dorchester Antiquarian and Historical Society, 1890.
  5. ^ History of Dorchester, Massachusetts 2012-02-04 at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ "Under a rainbow flag, linking the Dots – The Boston Globe". archive.boston.com. Retrieved 2017-08-11.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af Melnik, Mark; Gao, Lingshan. "American Community Survey 2007–2011 Estimate: Dorchester". Boston Redevelopment Authority. Retrieved 4 April 2016.
  8. ^ a b Alden T. Vaughan, New England Encounters: Indians and Euroamericans Ca. 1600-1850 (1999), pg 209 https://books.google.com/books?isbn=155553404X
  9. ^ a b Alden T. Vaughan, New England Encounters: Indians and Euroamericans Ca. 1600-1850 (1999) pg 209 https://books.google.com/books?isbn=155553404X
  10. ^ Susan Wilson, Boston Sites and Insights: An Essential Guide to Historic Landmarks ... p. 324 https://books.google.com/books?isbn=0807071358 2004
  11. ^ Morton, Thomas (1883). Charles Francis Adams Jr. (ed.). The new English Canaan of Thomas Morton. Boston: The Prince Society. pp. 11. OCLC 28272732. Retrieved 2009-10-14.
  12. ^ Jeremy Dupertuis Bangs, Indian Deeds: Land Transactions in Plymouth Colony. Boston: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 2002, maps
  13. ^ Mandell, Daniel R., King Philip's War: Colonial Expansion, Native Resistance, and the End of Indian Sovereignty (2010) https://books.google.com/books?id=_aDvP0d19rAC
  14. ^ Bowen, Frank C. (1938). America Sails the Seas. New York: Robert M. McBride & Company. p. 55.
  15. ^ Ralph E. Thompson, Matthew R. Thompson, First Yankee: David Thomson, 1592-1628--The Story of New Hampshire's First Settler
  16. ^ a b . Archived from the original on 2011-09-27. Retrieved 2008-12-01., Dorchester Atheneum
  17. ^ . Dorchester Atheneum. Archived from the original on 2012-02-11. Retrieved 2008-04-23.
  18. ^ . Massachusetts Historical Society. 29 September 2004. Archived from the original on 2013-11-26. Retrieved 2013-11-20.
  19. ^ "Notable Events in Massachusetts".
  20. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2008-05-27.
  21. ^ "Dorcas the blackmore (Ca. 1620-?) •". 10 February 2011.
  22. ^ Winthrop's Journal, "History of New England," 1630-1649
  23. ^ Dorchester Atheneum 2011-09-27 at the Wayback Machine. Dorchester Atheneum. Retrieved on 2017-09-13.
  24. ^ Clapp, Ebenezer Jr. (1859). History of the Town of Dorchester, Massachusetts. Boston: Committee of the Dorchester Antiquarian and Historical Society.
  25. ^ Stevens, Peter F. . History of Dorchester. Dorchester Reporter. Archived from the original on 2012-04-06.
  26. ^ . Dorchester Historical Society and the Milton Historical Society. Archived from the original on 2008-11-19. In conjunction with Kraft Foods
  27. ^ . Dorchester Atheneum. Archived from the original on 2008-12-06. Retrieved 2008-12-01.
  28. ^ "Sons of Liberty in Dorchester" 2011-05-26 at the Wayback Machine, Dorchester Athaneum
  29. ^ Holmes, Oliver Wendell Sr., "The Dorchester Giant", 1830 poem
  30. ^ Sammarco, Anthony Mitchell, Boston's South End, Arcadia Publishing, 1995
  31. ^ Whiting, E. (Boston Public Library Map Collection ed.). Archived from the original on 2008-12-02. The maps shows the Crescent Avenue Depot of the Old Colony Railroad Line.
  32. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-10-16. Retrieved 2014-01-01.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  33. ^ , Dorchester Park Association
  34. ^ "The Founding of the Dorchester Historical Society", Dorchester Historical Society
  35. ^ Taylor, Earl, "Settled before Boston, Dorchester home of many firsts" 2012-02-23 at the Wayback Machine, The Dorchester Reporter, May 29, 2008
  36. ^ Stevens, Peter F., "A VOICE FROM ON HIGH: Lucy Stone of Pope's Hill Was a Key Voice in the Early Days of the Women's Movement in America" February 5, 2012, at the Wayback Machine, The Dorchester Reporter, May 26, 2005
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References edit

  • Committee of the Dorchester Antiquarian and Historical Society, "History of the Town of Dorchester, Massachusetts", Boston : Ebenezer Clapp Jr., 1859.
  • Dutton, E.P. Published 1867. A good map of roads and rail lines around Dorchester. Note the Horse RailRoad on Dorchester Ave.
  • Glover, Anna. Glover Memorials and Genealogies: An Account of John Glover Of Dorchester and Some of his Descendants. Published 1867.
  • Orcutt, William Dana. Good Old Dorchester: A Narrative History of the Town, 1630–1893. Published 1893.
  • Sammarco, Anthony Mitchell.
    • Dorchester. Images of America. Dover, N.H.: Arcadia Publishing. 1995. ISBN 0-7524-0228-5. OL 935911M.
    • "Dorchester: Volume II", Images of America series, Arcadia Publishing, 2000
    • "Dorchester: Then & Now", Arcadia Publishing, 2005.
  • Seasholes, Nancy S. (2003). Gaining ground : a history of landmaking in Boston. Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press. ISBN 978-0-262-19494-5. nancy seasholes.
  • The Vital Records of Dorchester (Births, Marriages, and Deaths) to 1825 were published in 1890 as the 21st Report of the Records Commissioners of Boston.
  • Old USGS Maps of Boston and Dorchester area. 2008-03-21 at the Wayback Machine See the 1903 southeaster corner map.

Further reading edit

  • "Railroad Transportation in Dorchester" 2009-07-27 at the Wayback Machine – History by the Dorchester Atheneum
  • Dorchester, Massachusetts, 1790 Federal Head of Household Census Archived 2013-02-01 at archive.today, Dorchester, Massachusetts, US Census data
  • "Dorchester Epitaphs: from Epitaphs First Burying-Place in Dorchester" Archived 2013-02-01 at archive.today, (not in Dorchester town records), From the back of the book of Dorchester Vital Records to 1850
  • "Historical Sketch of Dorchester", Mercantile Publishing Company, Boston, 1888
  • Orcutt, William Dana, Good Old Dorchester: A Narrative history of the Town 1630–1893, Cambridge : John Wilson & Son, University Press, 1893
  • "Report for Reconnaissance Archaeological Survey of the Mary L. Pierce Well / Ronan Park / Boston (Dorchester), Massachusetts". 2021.

External links edit

  • From the Boston Public Library Map Collection:
    • 1831 Map of Dorchester 2008-12-02 at the Wayback Machine by Edmund J. Baker
    • by E. Whiting
    • 1868 Map of Dorchester and Quincy 2008-12-02 at the Wayback Machine by Dudley and Greenough
    • 1880 Plan of Dorchester 2008-12-02 at the Wayback Machine by the Boston Engineering Dept.
  • Dorchester Community Website
  • Dorchester Reporter Local newspaper
  • Map of Dorchester section of Boston – Open Space Plan, City of Boston
  • La Alianza Hispana records, located in the Northeastern University Libraries, Archives and Special Collections Department, Boston, MA
  • My Dot Tour, an open-source, "multimedia, youth-led walking tour of Fields Corner." It is "a project of the Fields Corner Collaborative."
  • Archival collections about Dorchester, University Archives and Special Collections, Joseph P. Healey Library, University of Massachusetts Boston
  • Dorchester Atheneum, a website devoted to the history of Dorchester
  • Dorchester's Soldiers and Sailors Monument at the Massachusetts Civil War Monuments Project

dorchester, boston, dorchester, bostonian, neighborhood, comprising, more, than, square, miles, city, boston, massachusetts, united, states, originally, dorchester, separate, town, founded, puritans, emigrated, 1630, from, dorchester, dorset, england, massachu. Dorchester is a Bostonian neighborhood comprising more than 6 square miles 16 km2 in the City of Boston Massachusetts United States Originally Dorchester was a separate town founded by Puritans who emigrated in 1630 from Dorchester Dorset England to the Massachusetts Bay Colony This dissolved municipality Boston s largest neighborhood by far 3 is often divided by city planners in order to create two planning areas roughly equivalent in size and population to other Boston neighborhoods Dorchester BostonNeighborhood of BostonLeft right from top University of Massachusetts Boston campus Neponset River at Lower Mills JFK Presidential Library Lawrence Avenue Historic District Edward Everett Square First Parish Church of DorchesterSealNickname DotMotto s Pietate Literis Industria Latin Piety Learning and Industry Dorchester BostonLocation in Boston MassachusettsCoordinates 42 19 N 71 3 W 42 317 N 71 050 W 42 317 71 050CountryUnited StatesStateMassachusettsCountySuffolkNeighborhood ofBostonSettledMay 1630IncorporatedJune 1 1630Annexed by BostonJanuary 4 1870 1 Named forDorchester DorsetPopulation 2010 2 Total91 982 to 134 000Time zoneUTC 5 Eastern Summer DST UTC 4 Eastern ZIP Codes02121 02122 02124 02125Area code s 617 and 857The neighborhood is named after the town of Dorchester in the English county of Dorset from which Puritans emigrated on the ship Mary and John among others 4 Founded in 1630 just a few months before the founding of the city of Boston Dorchester now covers a geographic area approximately equivalent to nearby Cambridge 5 It was still a primarily rural town and had a population of 12 000 when it was annexed to Boston in 1870 Railroad and streetcar lines brought rapid growth increasing the population to 150 000 by 1920 In the 2010 United States Census the neighborhood s population was 92 115 The Dorchester neighborhood has a very diverse population which includes a large concentration of African Americans European Americans particularly those of Irish German Italian and Polish origin Caribbean Americans Latinos and East and Southeast Asian Americans Dorchester also has a significant LGBT population with active political groups and the largest concentration of same sex couples in Boston after the neighborhoods of South End and Jamaica Plain 6 Most of the people over the age of 25 have completed high school or obtained a GED 7 Contents 1 History 1 1 Indigenous peoples 1 2 European settlement in the 17th century 1 3 18th century 1 4 19th century 1 4 1 Victorian era 1 4 2 Annexation to Boston 1 5 Turn of the 20th century 1 6 1950s present 2 Geography 2 1 Neighborhood sections and squares 3 Demographics 3 1 American Community Survey Estimates 2013 3 2 Race 3 3 Ancestry 4 Transportation 5 Economy 6 Crime 6 1 Statistics 7 Education 7 1 Primary and secondary schools 7 1 1 Public schools 7 1 2 Catholic schools 7 2 Colleges and universities 7 3 Public libraries 8 Health care 9 Housing 10 Safety 11 Urban policies 11 1 Public policy issues 11 2 City budget plans 12 Community 12 1 Ella J Baker House 13 Entertainment 14 Leisure activities and areas 15 Sites of interest 16 Notable people 17 Notes and references 17 1 Notes 17 2 References 18 Further reading 19 External linksHistory editIndigenous peoples edit Prior to European colonization the region around Dorchester was inhabited by the indigenous Massachusett 8 They lived in settlements established alongside the Neponset River estuary which was a plentiful source of fish including trout they also gathered shellfish from the riverbed and hunted beaver and deer They established farms in nearby hills 9 During the initial period of colonization of the region by Puritan settlers the Massachusett suffered a rapid decline in population due to the introduction of foreign infectious diseases to which they had no immunity and violence related to settler colonialism 9 The Massachusett sachem Chickatawbut negotiated land treaties with the Puritan settlers before dying of smallpox in 1633 His brother Cutshamekin who succeeded him deeded further land to the settlers 10 11 12 The remaining Massachusett in the region including Cutshamekin accepted some Christianity as a form of survivance and eventually resettled in the Praying Town of Natick 8 13 European settlement in the 17th century edit nbsp Old Blake House c 1905A syndicate of Dorsetshire fishermen organized an outport of fishing stages and flakes at Dorchester in 1623 14 In 1626 David Thompson settled his family on Thompson Island in what is now Dorchester before Boston s Puritan migration wave began in 1630 15 May 30 1630 Captain Squib of the ship Mary and John entered Boston Harbor and on June 17 1630 landed a boat with eight men on the Dorchester shore at what was then a narrow peninsula known as Mattapan or Mattaponnock Today it is known as Columbia Point more popularly since 1984 as Harbor Point 16 Those aboard the ship who founded the town included William Phelps Roger Ludlowe John Mason John Maverick Nicholas Upsall Capt Roger Fyler William Gaylord Henry Wolcott and other men who would become prominent in the founding of a new nation The original settlement founded in 1630 was at what is now the intersection of Columbia Road and Massachusetts Avenue Even though Dorchester was annexed over 100 years ago into the city of Boston residents still annually celebrate the founding on Dorchester Day which includes festivities and a parade down Dorchester Avenue Most of the early Dorchester settlers came from the English West Country and some from Dorchester Dorset where the Rev John White was chief proponent of a Puritan settlement in the Americas 17 The town was centered on the First Parish Church of Dorchester It is now operated as the Unitarian Universalist church on Meeting House Hill and is the oldest religious organization in present day Boston 18 On October 8 1633 the first Town Meeting in the United States was held in Dorchester Today each October 8 is celebrated as Town Meeting Day in Massachusetts Dorchester is the birthplace of the first public elementary school in America the Mather School established in 1639 19 The school still stands as the oldest elementary school in the United States 20 In 1634 Israel Stoughton built one of the earliest grist mills in America on the Neponset River and Richard Callicott founded a trading post nearby In 1641 Dorcas ye blackmore an enslaved servant to Israel Stoughton was the first recorded African American to join a church in New England She served as an evangelist to Stoughton s Native American servants and the First Parish Church of Dorchester attempted to help Dorcas gain her freedom 21 22 In 1649 Puritan missionaries including John Eliot began a campaign to convert the Indigenous people in Dorchester to Christianity with the help of Cockenoe and John Sassamon two Indian servants in Dorchester Eliot was given land by the town of Dorchester for his mission where he established a church and school The James Blake House oldest surviving home in the city of Boston is located at Edward Everett Square This is the historic intersection of Columbia Road Boston Street and Massachusetts Avenue a few blocks from the Dorchester Historical Society The Blake House was constructed in 1661 as was confirmed by dendrochronology in 2007 23 In 1695 a party was dispatched to found the town of Dorchester South Carolina It lasted a half century before being abandoned 18th century edit nbsp Dorchester looking north toward Boston c 1781 nbsp Baker s Cocoa Advertisement in Overland Monthly January 1919 The manufacture of chocolate had been introduced in the United States in 1765 by John Hannon and Dr James Baker in Dorchester Walter Baker amp Company was located in Dorchester In 1765 chocolate was first introduced in the American colonies when Irish chocolate maker John Hannon or alternatively spelled Hannan in some sources imported beans from the West Indies and refined them in Dorchester working with Dr James Baker an American physician and investor They soon opened America s first chocolate mill and factory in the Lower Mills section of Dorchester on the Neponset River The Walter Baker Chocolate Factory part of Walter Baker amp Company operated until 1965 24 627 25 26 27 Before the American Revolution The Sons of Liberty met in August 1769 at the Lemuel Robinson Tavern which stood on the east side of the upper road Washington St near the present Fuller Street Lemuel Robinson was a representative of the town during the Revolution and was appointed a colonel in the Revolutionary army 28 Dorchester in a part of what is now South Boston was also the site of the Battle of Dorchester Heights in 1776 which eventually resulted in the British evacuating Boston 19th century edit Victorian era edit nbsp One of Dorchester s most influential residents Lucy Stone was an early advocate for women s rights In Victorian times Dorchester became a popular country retreat for Boston elite It developed into a bedroom community easily accessible to the city by streetcar The mother and grandparents of John F Kennedy lived in the Ashmont Hill neighborhood while his grandfather John F Honey Fitz Fitzgerald was mayor of Boston American poet Oliver Wendell Holmes wrote a poem called The Dorchester Giant in 1830 and referred to the special kind of stone Roxbury puddingstone also quarried in Dorchester which was used to build churches in the Boston area Most notable of these is the Central Congregational Church later called the Church of the Covenant in Boston s Back Bay neighborhood 29 30 116 In 1845 the Old Colony Railroad ran through the area and connected Boston and Plymouth Massachusetts The station was originally called Crescent Avenue or Crescent Avenue Depot 31 as an Old Colony Railroad station The name was changed to Columbia until December 1 1982 and then again changed to JFK UMASS It is a Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority rail line station for both the Red Line subway and the Plymouth Kingston Middleborough Lakeville and Greenbush commuter rail lines In the 1840s and 1850s a new wave of development took place on a strip of waterfront overlooking Dorchester Bay Park and Mill Streets at the Harrison Square Historic District later known as Clam Point Renowned architects who had contributed to one of the most significant and intact collections of Clam Point s Italianate mansards include Luther Briggs John A Fox and Mary E Noyes By the 1890s Clam Point gained prominence as a summer resort the Russell House hotel was its centerpiece and the Dorchester Yacht Club was established on Freeport Street In the 1880s the calf pasture on Columbia Point was developed for a Boston sewer line and pumping station This large pumping station still stands In its time it was a model for treating sewage and helping to promote cleaner and healthier urban living conditions It pumped waste to a remote treatment facility on Moon Island in Boston Harbor and served as a model for other systems worldwide This system was operated as the Boston Sewer system s headworks handling all of the city s sewage until 1968 when a new treatment facility was built on Deer Island The pumping station is architecturally significant as a Richardsonian Romanesque designed by then Boston city architect George Clough then architect for the city of Boston The only remaining 19th century building on Columbia Point it is listed on the National Register of Historic Places 16 In the history of the United Kingdom the Victorian era was the period of Queen Victoria s reign from 20 June 1837 until her death on 22 January 1901 The era followed the Georgian period and preceded the Edwardian period Its later half overlaps with the first part of the Belle Epoque era of Continental Europe Annexation to Boston edit nbsp Two people play tennis in Franklin Park 1906 nbsp Map of Dorchester Massachusetts and surrounding area from the H F Walling Map of the County of Norfolk Massachusetts 1858 nbsp Map showing all ground in Boston occupied by buildings in 1880 just after Dorchester was annexed to Boston in 1870 Dorchester is in the lower left quadrant From U S Census Bureau Dorchester was annexed by Boston in pieces beginning on March 6 1804 and ending with complete annexation to the city of Boston after a plebiscite was held in Boston and Dorchester on June 22 1869 As a result Dorchester officially became part of Boston on January 3 1870 32 This is the historic reason that Dorchester Heights is today considered part of South Boston not modern day Dorchester since it was part of the earliest cession of Dorchester to Boston in 1804 Additional parts of Dorchester were ceded to Quincy in 1792 1814 1819 and 1855 Portions of the original town of Dorchester developed as the separate towns of Hyde Park 1868 and later annexed to Boston in 1912 Milton 1662 and Stoughton 1726 itself later subdivided In 1895 Frederick Law Olmsted architect of the Boston Public Garden Emerald Necklace and Central Park in New York City was commissioned to create Dorchester Park It was intended as an urban forest for the residents of a growing Dorchester 33 In 1904 the Dorchester Historical Society incorporated Dorchester Day which commemorated the settlement of Dorchester in 1630 Celebrated annually Dorchester Day is a tableau of community events highlighted by such activities as the Landing Day Observance the Dorchester Day Parade along Dorchester Avenue the first Sunday in June and the Community Banquet 34 Turn of the 20th century edit During the late 19th and early 20th centuries Dorchester was a site for community activism related to diverse issues The first racially integrated neighborhood developed on Jones Hill One of the residents of that neighborhood William Monroe Trotter with W E B Du Bois helped to found the Niagara Movement the precursor of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People 35 Many leading suffragettes also lived in Dorchester including Lucy Stone 36 In the early 20th century Dorchester received numerous Catholic immigrants from a variety of nations such as Ireland French Canada Poland and Italy as well as mostly Protestant African Americans from the South who were part of the Great Migration to northern industrial cities Numerous three decker apartment buildings were built in Dorchester to house the many industrial workers citation needed 1950s present edit nbsp John F Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum on the Columbia Point peninsula 2007 nbsp Uphams Corner section of Dorchester showing the typical urban street scape found in the neighborhood 2010 In the early 1950s Dorchester became a center of civil rights activism by African Americans Martin Luther King Jr lived there for much of the time he attended Boston University for his PhD With Boston s Baptist community riveted by his preaching and Coretta Scott King at his side King s circle grew The Dorchester apartment drew friends and followers like a magnet according to friend and roommate John Bustamante with untold numbers of visitors coming from the other schools The roommates housed and fed the visitors who would join in civil rights discussions 37 During the 1960s 1980s the ethnic landscape of Dorchester changed dramatically The established descendants of early 20th century Jewish Italian and Irish immigrants generally moved to newer housing and new African Asian and Caribbean immigrants and their descendants settled here in a succession of ethnicities The first community health center in the United States was the Columbia Point Health Center in Dorchester It was opened in December 1965 and served mostly the massive Columbia Point public housing complex adjoining it It was founded by two medical doctors Jack Geiger who had been on the faculty of Harvard University and later at Tufts University and Count Gibson from Tufts University 38 39 40 Geiger had previously studied the first community health centers and the principles of Community Oriented Primary Care with Sidney Kark 41 and colleagues while serving as a medical student in rural Natal South Africa 42 The Columbia Point Health Center is still in operation and was rededicated in 1990 as the Geiger Gibson Community Health Center 43 44 45 In 1974 the University of Massachusetts Boston moved from Park Square in downtown Boston to Columbia Point in Dorchester In 1982 Boston State College was incorporated into UMass Boston Since the 1970s UMass Boston has expanded substantially including building a new campus center in 2004 and a new science center in 2015 It has also hosted numerous important social and civic events In 2000 for example the university hosted a presidential candidates debate between George W Bush and Al Gore 46 In 1977 after an unsuccessful bid to have the John F Kennedy Library located in Cambridge Massachusetts close to the late president s alma mater Harvard University it was sited at the tip of Columbia Point and ground was broken Designed by architect I M Pei the John F Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum was dedicated on October 20 1979 By the 1980s the Blue Hill Avenue section of Dorchester had become a predominantly Black community During the 1990s the city administration increased police presence and invested city money into the area for more street lighting citation needed On March 30 2015 the Edward M Kennedy Institute for the United States Senate was dedicated by President Barack Obama 47 The Institute opened to the public on March 31 2015 48 Geography edit nbsp Map of the neighborhoods of Dorchester Boston MassachusettsDorchester is located south of downtown Boston and is surrounded by the neighborhoods of South Boston Roxbury Jamaica Plain Hyde Park and South End the city of Quincy and the town of Milton The Neponset River separates Dorchester from Quincy and Milton Neighborhood sections and squares edit Dorchester is Boston s largest and most populous neighborhood 49 and comprises many smaller sections and squares Due to its size of about six square miles 16 km2 it is often divided for statistical purposes into North and South Dorchester North Dorchester includes the portion north of Quincy East and Freeport streets The main business district in this part of Dorchester is Uphams Corner at the intersection of Dudley Street and Columbia Road South Dorchester is bordered to the east by Dorchester Bay and to the south by the Neponset River 50 The main business districts in this part of Dorchester are Fields Corner at the intersection of Dorchester Avenue and Adams Street and Codman Square at the intersection of Washington Street and Talbot Avenue Adjacent to Fields Corner is the Harrison Square Historic District also known as Clam Point It is notable for its collection of substantial Italianate Mansard residences Dorchester Avenue is the major neighborhood spine running in a south north line through all of Dorchester from Lower Mills to downtown Boston 51 The southern part of Dorchester is primarily a residential area with established neighborhoods still defined by parishes and occupied by families for generations The northern part of Dorchester is more urban with a greater amount of apartment housing and industrial parks South Bay and Newmarket industrial area are major sources of employment The Harbor Point area formerly known as Columbia Point is home of several large employers including the Boston campus of the University of Massachusetts the Massachusetts Archives and Commonwealth Museum the Edward M Kennedy Institute for the United States Senate and the John F Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum Distinct commercial districts include Bowdoin Geneva Fields Corner Codman Square Peabody Square Adams Village and Lower Mills Primarily residential areas include Savin Hill Jones Hill Four Corners Franklin Field Franklin Hill Ashmont Meeting House Hill Neponset Popes Hill and Port Norfolk Demographics editHistorical population CensusPop Note 18304 074 18404 87519 7 18507 96963 5 18609 76922 6 Up until the 1960s the Blue Hill Avenue part of Dorchester from Roxbury to Mattapan was primarily composed of Jewish Americans whose ancestors had immigrated from eastern Europe in the late 19th and early 20th centuries 52 The Neponset neighborhood was primarily Irish American most of whom were Catholic During the 1920s 1960s many African Americans moved from the South to the North during the Great Migration and settled on Blue Hill Avenue and nearby sections While some Jewish Americans were moving up and out to the suburbs certain Boston banks and real estate companies developed a blockbusting plan for the area The Blue Hill Avenue area was redlined so that only the newly arriving African Americans would receive mortgages for housing in that section 53 White flight was prevalent After changes to US immigration law in 1965 Dorchester received new waves of migrants from Puerto Rico and immigrants from the Caribbean and Central America such as Dominican Republic Haiti Jamaica and Trinidad and Tobago Immigrants also came from Cape Verde and Vietnam as well as other Latin American Asian and African nations Dorchester also continued to receive immigrants from Northern European countries such as Ireland Germany and Poland Dorchester became more diverse than at any point in its long history with many nationalities represented here These immigrants have helped revive the economy of the neighborhood by opening ethnic stores and restaurants 54 The sections of Dorchester have distinct ethnic racial and socioeconomic compositions The eastern areas of Dorchester especially between Adams Street and Dorchester Bay are primarily ethnic European and Asian with a large population of Irish Americans and Vietnamese Americans Residents of the western central and parts of the southern sections of the neighborhood are predominantly African American In Neponset the southeast corner of the neighborhood as well as parts of Savin Hill in the north and Cedar Grove in the south Irish Americans maintain the most visible identity 55 In the northern section of Dorchester and southwestern section of South Boston is the Polish Triangle where recent Polish immigrants are residents Savin Hill as well as Fields Corner have large Vietnamese American populations Uphams Corner contains a Cape Verdean American community the largest concentration of people of Cape Verdean origin within Boston city limits Western central and parts of southern Dorchester have a large Caribbean population especially people from Haiti Jamaica Barbados and Trinidad and Tobago They are most strongly represented in the Codman Square Franklin Field and the Ashmont area although there are also significant numbers in Four Corners and Fields Corner Significant numbers of African Americans live in the Harbor Point Uphams Corner Fields Corner Four Corners and Franklin Field areas 56 In recent years Dorchester has also seen an influx of young residents gay men and women and working artists in areas like Lower Mills Ashmont Hill Peabody Square and Savin Hill 57 58 59 60 61 American Community Survey Estimates 2013 edit The American Community Survey ACS for Dorchester from 2007 to 2011 estimates the total population is 113 975 people Slightly more than half are female 52 6 or 59 914 7 and 47 4 or 54 061 7 are male In Dorchester 68 4 or 77 980 of the residents are native born and 31 6 or 35 995 7 people are foreign born of which 50 1 or 18 024 7 are not U S citizens The largest racial group in the neighborhood is Black or African American with 49 612 people or 43 05 7 of the population People who self identify as white represent 26 102 or 26 99 7 of the community Hispanic Latino account for 19 09 of the population with 19 295 7 resident The Asian enclave represents 9 6 of 10 990 7 of the citizenry The smallest racial group is bi multi racial and they make up 1 9 2 174 7 of the population According to the ACS survey Dorchester has a large under 25 population with 38 1 or 43 472 7 people and 33 162 29 1 of the total population 7 of them under the age of 19 years old Between the ages of 25 and 64 years old there are 59 788 or 52 6 7 people and 10 715 people or 9 3 7 are over the age of 65 years old In Dorchester approximately 61 9 or 70 503 7 people are over the age of 25 23 5 or 16 582 people 7 do not have a high school diploma or GED 30 5 or 21 479 7 have a diploma or GED 18 5 or 13 045 people 7 have completed some college and 27 5 or 19 397 people 7 have a college degree The ACS Survey estimates there are 40 443 7 households in the neighborhood of Dorchester the per capita income of 22 120 and a median income of 44 136 A total of 13 1 or 5 286 7 households have reported income of less than 10 000 27 3 or 11 020 7 households earn less than 19 999 A total of 19 1 or 7 720 7 households earn between 20 000 and 39 999 16 5 or 6 651 7 households in the earn between 40 000 and 59 999 A total of 19 7 or 7 977 7 households earn between 60 000 and 99 999 A total of 15 3 or 6 174 7 of household report annual incomes of 100 000 to 199 999 7 Only 2 2 or 901 7 households in Dorchester earn 200 000 or more per year The ACS reports as of 2011 Poverty affects 23 5 or 9 511 households and 24 3 or 9 820 of 7 households are receiving SNAP Benefits Race edit Dorchester Mount Bowdoin 02121 Racial Breakdown of Population 2017 62 63 Race Percentage of 02121population Percentage ofMassachusettspopulation Percentage ofUnited Statespopulation ZIP Code to StateDifference ZIP Code to USADifferenceBlack 70 9 8 8 13 4 62 1 57 5 Hispanic 28 7 11 9 18 1 16 8 10 6 White 8 2 81 3 76 6 73 1 68 4 White Non Hispanic 2 6 72 1 60 7 69 5 58 1 Asian 0 8 6 9 5 8 6 1 5 0 Native Americans Hawaiians 0 2 0 6 1 5 0 4 1 3 Two or more races 5 2 2 4 2 7 2 8 2 5 Dorchester Fields Corner 02122 Racial Breakdown of Population 2017 64 63 Race Percentage of 02122population Percentage ofMassachusettspopulation Percentage ofUnited Statespopulation ZIP Code to StateDifference ZIP Code to USADifferenceWhite 37 7 81 3 76 6 43 6 38 9 White Non Hispanic 34 1 72 1 60 7 38 0 26 6 Black 30 9 8 8 13 4 22 1 17 5 Asian 18 4 6 9 5 8 11 5 12 6 Hispanic 11 9 11 9 18 1 0 0 6 2 Native Americans Hawaiians 0 0 0 6 1 5 0 6 1 5 Two or more races 3 5 2 4 2 7 1 1 0 8 Dorchester Codman Square Ashmont 02124 Racial Breakdown of Population 2017 65 63 Race Percentage of 02124population Percentage ofMassachusettspopulation Percentage ofUnited Statespopulation ZIP Code to StateDifference ZIP Code to USADifferenceBlack 64 4 8 8 13 4 55 6 61 0 White 22 6 81 3 76 6 58 7 54 0 White Non Hispanic 16 3 72 1 60 7 55 8 44 4 Hispanic 15 8 11 9 18 1 3 9 2 3 Asian 6 2 6 9 5 8 0 7 0 4 Native Americans Hawaiians 1 1 0 6 1 5 0 5 0 4 Two or more races 2 9 2 4 2 7 0 5 0 2 Dorchester Uphams Corner Savin Hill Columbia Point 02125 Racial Breakdown of Population 2017 66 63 Race Percentage of 02125population Percentage ofMassachusettspopulation Percentage ofUnited Statespopulation ZIP Code to StateDifference ZIP Code to USADifferenceWhite 34 2 81 3 76 6 47 1 42 4 White Non Hispanic 30 4 72 1 60 7 41 7 30 3 Black 29 7 8 8 13 4 20 9 16 3 Hispanic 20 3 11 9 18 1 8 4 2 2 Asian 12 8 6 9 5 8 5 9 7 0 Native Americans Hawaiians 0 5 0 6 1 5 0 1 1 0 Two or more races 5 1 2 4 2 7 2 7 2 4 Ancestry edit According to the 2012 2016 American Community Survey 5 Year Estimates the largest ancestry groups in ZIP Codes 02121 02122 02124 and 02125 are 67 68 Ancestry Percentage of02121population Percentage ofMassachusettspopulation Percentage ofUnited Statespopulation ZIP Code to StateDifference ZIP Code to USADifferenceWest Indian 15 53 1 96 0 90 13 57 14 62 Puerto Rican 10 76 4 52 1 66 6 24 9 10 Sub Saharan African 7 82 2 00 1 01 5 82 6 81 Haitian 7 18 1 15 0 31 6 02 6 87 Jamaican 4 22 0 44 0 34 3 78 3 88 Cape Verdean 3 92 0 97 0 03 2 95 3 89 American 2 84 4 26 6 89 1 42 4 05 Somali 1 57 0 06 0 04 1 50 1 52 Ancestry Percentage of02122population Percentage ofMassachusettspopulation Percentage ofUnited Statespopulation ZIP Code to StateDifference ZIP Code to USADifferenceIrish 18 94 21 16 10 39 2 22 8 55 Vietnamese 16 67 0 69 0 54 15 98 16 13 Sub Saharan African 10 85 2 00 1 01 8 85 9 84 Cape Verdean 8 57 0 97 0 03 7 60 8 54 Italian 6 43 13 19 5 39 6 75 1 04 West Indian 5 61 1 96 0 90 3 65 4 70 Puerto Rican 4 67 4 52 1 66 0 15 3 01 American 3 55 4 26 6 89 0 71 3 34 Haitian 2 36 1 15 0 31 1 21 2 05 Polish 1 93 4 67 2 93 2 73 1 00 English 1 66 9 77 7 67 8 12 6 01 Jamaican 1 59 0 44 0 34 1 15 1 25 German 1 39 6 00 14 40 4 61 13 01 Asian Indian 1 19 1 39 1 09 0 20 0 10 French 1 09 6 82 2 56 5 74 1 47 Ancestry Percentage of02124population Percentage ofMassachusettspopulation Percentage ofUnited Statespopulation ZIP Code to StateDifference ZIP Code to USADifferenceWest Indian 19 04 1 96 0 31 17 08 18 14 Haitian 8 14 1 15 0 31 6 99 7 83 Irish 7 97 21 16 10 39 13 18 2 41 Sub Saharan African 7 54 2 00 1 01 5 54 6 52 Puerto Rican 7 50 4 52 1 66 2 98 5 84 Jamaican 5 39 0 44 0 34 4 95 5 04 Vietnamese 4 83 0 69 0 54 4 14 4 29 Cape Verdean 3 96 0 97 0 03 2 99 3 93 American 2 74 4 26 6 89 1 53 4 16 Trinidadian Tobagonian 2 62 0 10 0 07 2 52 2 55 English 2 23 9 77 7 67 7 54 5 44 Italian 2 16 13 19 5 39 11 03 3 23 German 1 29 6 00 14 40 4 72 13 12 Barbadian 1 14 0 08 0 02 1 05 1 12 Guyanese 1 11 0 03 0 07 1 08 1 04 Ancestry Percentage of02125population Percentage ofMassachusettspopulation Percentage ofUnited Statespopulation ZIP Code to StateDifference ZIP Code to USADifferenceSub Saharan African 15 27 2 00 1 01 13 27 14 26 Cape Verdean 13 02 0 97 0 03 12 05 12 98 Irish 9 34 21 16 10 39 11 82 1 05 American 9 07 4 26 6 89 4 81 2 18 Vietnamese 7 33 0 69 0 54 6 64 6 79 Puerto Rican 6 90 4 52 1 66 2 38 5 24 West Indian 5 26 1 96 0 90 3 30 4 36 Italian 3 18 13 19 5 39 10 00 2 21 Chinese 3 03 2 28 1 24 0 75 1 79 Polish 2 92 4 67 2 93 1 75 0 02 German 2 32 6 00 14 40 3 69 12 08 English 2 12 9 77 7 67 7 66 5 55 Haitian 1 94 1 15 0 31 0 79 1 64 Albanian 1 50 0 28 0 06 1 22 1 44 Arab 1 44 1 10 0 59 0 35 0 85 Mexican 1 29 0 67 11 96 0 62 10 67 Asian Indian 1 20 1 39 1 09 0 19 0 11 French 1 05 6 82 2 56 5 77 1 51 Transportation edit nbsp The Red Line MBTA platform at the JFK UMass station with a commuter rail at the station 2007 The neighborhood is served by five stations on the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority Red Line MBTA rapid transit service five stations on the Ashmont Mattapan High Speed Line five stations on the Fairmount Commuter Rail Line and various bus routes Over the last decade the Dorchester branch of the Red Line had major renovations including four rapid transit stations being rebuilt at Savin Hill Fields Corner Shawmut and Ashmont 69 70 At Ashmont station the city of Boston and the state of Massachusetts partnered with private investors to create The Carruth one of the state s first Transit oriented developments TOD 70 71 Interstate 93 concurrent with Route 3 and U S 1 runs north south through Dorchester between Quincy Massachusetts and downtown Boston providing access to the eastern edge of Dorchester at Columbia Road Morrissey Boulevard northbound only Neponset Circle southbound only and Granite Avenue with additional southbound on ramps at Freeport Street and from Morrissey Blvd at Neponset Several other state routes traverse the neighborhood e g Route 203 Gallivan Boulevard and Morton Street and Route 28 Blue Hill Avenue so named because it leads out of the city to the Blue Hills Reservation The Neponset River separates Dorchester from Quincy and Milton The Dorchester Turnpike now Dorchester Avenue stretches from Fort Point Channel now in South Boston to Lower Mills and once boasted a horse drawn streetcar A number of the earliest streets in Dorchester have changed names several times through the centuries meaning that some names have come and gone Leavitt Place for instance named for one of Dorchester s earliest settlers eventually became Brook Court and then Brook Avenue Place 72 Gallivan Boulevard was once Codman Street and Brookvale Street was once Brook Street 73 Morrissey Boulevard was once Old Colony Parkway Economy edit nbsp The headquarters of the Boston Globe was located on Morrissey Boulevard in Dorchester 2009 Throughout its history Dorchester has had periods of economic revival and recession In the 1960s and 1970s Dorchester was particularly hard hit by economic recession high unemployment and white flight 74 In 1953 Carney Hospital moved from South Boston to its current location in Dorchester serving the local communities of Dorchester Mattapan Milton and Quincy In 1953 a major public housing project was completed on the Columbia Point peninsula of Dorchester There were 1 502 units in the development on 50 acres 200 000 m2 of land It later became known for high rates of crime and poor living conditions and it went through particularly bad times in the 1970s and 1980s By 1988 there were only 350 families living there In 1984 the City of Boston gave control of it to a private developer Corcoran Mullins Jennison who redeveloped the property into a residential mixed income community called Harbor Point Apartments which was opened in 1988 and completed by 1990 It was the first federal housing project to be converted to private mixed income housing in the United States Harbor Point has won much acclaim for this transformation including awards from the Urban Land Institute the FIABCI Award for International Excellence and the Rudy Bruner Award for Urban Excellence 75 76 77 During the housing crisis of 2008 in the United States Dorchester s Hendry Street became the epicenter in the media 78 In reaction the city of Boston negotiated to buy several of the houses for as little as 30 000 It is moving to seize other foreclosed properties on which the owners have not paid taxes The houses were renovated and added to the inventory of subsidized rental housing 79 In 2008 plans and proposals were unveiled and presented to public community hearings by the Corcoran Jennison Company to redevelop the 30 acre 120 000 m2 Bayside Exposition Center site on the Columbia Point peninsula into a mixed use village of storefronts and residences called Bayside on the Point 80 81 82 83 However in 2009 the Bayside Expo Center property was lost in a foreclosure on Corcoran Jennison to a Florida based real estate firm LNR CMAT who bought it Soon after the University of Massachusetts Boston bought the property from them to build future campus facilities 84 85 The corporate headquarters of The Boston Globe was also located in Dorchester having moved there in 1958 from downtown Boston In 2009 then owner The New York Times Company put the paper up for bid leading to concern from local community members who had seen other major employers close their doors 86 After negotiations with their union and cost reduction measures the owner s plans to sell the Globe were abandoned in October 2009 87 In 2013 the paper was bought by John W Henry owner of the Boston Red Sox and in 2017 the Globe headquarters returned to downtown Boston 88 In the 20th century many of the labor unions in Boston relocated their headquarters to Dorchester This includes the Boston Teachers Union International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local 103 New England Regional Council of Carpenters International Association of Fire Fighters Local 718 among others Crime editDorchester with a population of approximately 130 000 is home to nearly one fifth of all Boston residents In the early 1990s Dorchester along with Roxbury and Mattapan neighborhoods had the highest percentage of victims with violence related injuries Since the early 2000s crime rates across Boston declined In the first three months of 2013 Boston crime rates reportedly dropped 15 percent compared to the same time period in 2012 89 According to the Dorchester Reporter crime maps the more dangerous areas in Dorchester are located to the west of Columbia Road with criminal activity centered on Blue Hill Avenue area Safer parts of the neighborhood include Savin Hill the historic neighborhood of Clam Point Columbia Point which is populated by mostly UMass Boston students Ashmont Hill Saint Mark s Pope s Hill Cedar Grove Lower Mills around the Neponset Gallivan and Morrissey Boulevard areas and the Jones Hill neighborhood with the third largest percentage of same sex households in Boston after the South End and Jamaica Plain 90 91 Statistics edit According to the website AreaVibes 92 93 the overall crime rate in Dorchester is 30 higher than the national average and for every 100 000 people there are 10 55 daily crimes that occur in the neighborhood such as violent crimes and property crimes The rate of property crime is much higher than violent crime Out of 100 000 people 831 are involved in violent crime and 3 021 out of 100 000 are involved in property crime The chance of being a victim of Property crime 1 in 34 Violent crime 1 in 121 Crime 1 in 26Education edit nbsp The University of Massachusetts Boston is located on Columbia Point in Dorchester 2009 Primary and secondary schools edit Public schools edit Students in Dorchester are served by Boston Public Schools BPS BPS assigns students based on preferences of the applicants and priorities of students in various zones 94 Dorchester High School predated the annexation of Dorchester to Boston At its founding it was an all male school first opened on December 10 1852 In 1870 Dorchester was annexed to Boston and its schools became managed by the City of Boston A replacement facility opened in Codman Square on Talbot Avenue 1901 The current Dorchester facility opened in 1925 on Peacevale Road to males while the Talbot Avenue building was for females In 1953 Dorchester High School consolidated as a coeducational school 95 BPS schools located in Dorchester 96 include Boston Arts Academy 9 12 Boston Community Leadership Academy McCormack 7 9 Boston International Newcomers Academy 9 12 Boston Latin Academy 7 12 Jeremiah E Burke High School 9 12 Clap Elementary K1 5 Community Academy of Science amp Health 9 12 Paul A Dever Elementary K1 6 Edward Everett Elementary K1 5 Lilla G Frederick Pilot Middle School 6 8 Sarah Greenwood K0 8 Dr William W Henderson Inclusion School formerly Patrick O Hearn Elementary School K0 12 Oliver Wendell Holmes Innovation School K1 5 Thomas J Kenny Elementary K1 6 Martin Luther King Jr K1 8 Lee Academy Pilot School K0 3 Joseph Lee K1 8 Mather Elementary K1 5 Richard J Murphy K1 8 William E Russell Elementary K1 5 Pauline A Shaw Elementary K0 3 TechBoston Academy 6 12 William Monroe Trotter K1 8 UP Academy Dorchester K1 8 in district charter UP Academy Holland K1 5 in district charter John Winthrop Elementary K1 5Charter schools include Boston Collegiate Charter School 5 12 Brooke High School 9 12 Codman Academy Charter Public School K1 12 Conservatory Lab Charter School K1 8 Helen Y Davis Leadership Academy Charter Public School 6 8 Neighborhood House Charter School K1 12 97 Roxbury Prep Lucy Stone Campus 5 8 Roxbury Prep Dorchester Campus 5 8Catholic schools edit Many Catholic schools closed in the 2000s as the demographics of the area changed 98 99 100 The remaining schools as of summer 2018 are Boston College High School 7 12 Cristo Rey Boston High School 9 12 leasing the old St William Elementary building St Brendan School K 6 Three locations of the Pope John Paul II Catholic Academy part of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Boston remain after the 2008 consolidation of seven parish elementary schools 101 into five locations 98 Columbia Campus former St Margaret s Elementary School building Lower Mills Campus former St Gregory Elementary School building Neponset Campus former St Ann Elementary School building Colleges and universities edit The University of Massachusetts Boston is an accredited urban public research university and the second largest campus in the University of Massachusetts system It is located on Columbia Point in Dorchester The school offers associates bachelors masters and doctoral degrees In regards to race and gender the school has a diverse student population of about 13 thousand students at a time Excluding financial aid the average cost of tuition is 12 000 for in state students and 28 000 for out of state The university is rated as a good value with a 15 1 student faculty ratio and a variety of majors to study 102 The economy of the school has been consistently productive since its establishment Within the past twenty years the school campuses have been improving and expanding Some 95 of the students are in state and attending classes full time Laboure College is a Roman Catholic co educational college offering associate degrees in nursing and the health sciences It is located on the Carney Hospital campus near the Lower Mills section of Dorchester Public libraries edit Boston Public Library operates six neighborhood branches in Dorchester 103 Adams Street Branch Codman Square Branch Originally opened at 6 Norfolk Street in 1905 The branch moved into its current facility which was designed by Eco Texture Inc in 1978 104 Fields Corner Branch Grove Hall Branch Lower Mills Branch Uphams Corner BranchHealth care editCarney Hospital is located at 2100 Dorchester Avenue Carney Hospital provides over 500 physicians with primary care and specialist physicians They provide a range of services such as behavior health cancer care cardiac and vascular gynecology services neurology orthopedics rehabilitation and physical therapy along with many more Carney Hospital is promoting health and wellness Carney Hospital has been serving the community since 1863 It is affiliated with Tufts University School Of Medicine and is a teaching and training hospital for physicians in both internal medicine and family medicine 105 Codman Square Health Center is a community based outpatient healthcare located on 637 Washington Street They have been a functioning clinic since 1979 with the dream To build the best urban community in America 106 They employ about 280 multi lingual staff members most of whom reside in the neighborhoods surrounding Codman Square The Urban Asthma Coalition in Dorchester promotes collaboration among organizations and residents concerned about factors that affect asthma the environment quality of health care access to health care and education Residents can join the active committee to promote better health and awareness 107 They want to change policies through administrative advocacy and reduce the rate of asthma as well as improve care They have been successful in providing 108 1 000 new healthy and affordable housing units in a year green and healthy cleaners for the local schools and a city program that works with health professionals and enforcement officers to further the improvement of housing for children of the area The Geiger Gibson Health Center located in the Harbor Point section near UMass Boston is the oldest Community Health Center in the United States Housing editMost of Dorchester s population about 63 3 or 72 239 7 people lives in rental housing The gross median monthly rent is 1 450 109 which totals 17 400 per year and exceeds the income of almost 30 of the population An estimated 40 180 people 35 3 7 live in owner occupied homes and 1 4 or 1556 residents live in group homes shelters 7 Excluding government owned housing Dorchester has 15 918 110 residential buildings including 4 344 or 27 3 single family homes 3 674 or 23 1 110 two family homes 3 919 or 24 6 110 three family homes and 3 981 or 25 0 condo units 110 The median sales price for all residential property types is 244 450 109 In 2013 there were 52 foreclosures petitions reported in Dorchester representing 22 41 of the 232 foreclosures reported for the entire City Boston 111 Subsequently 37 out 147 111 distressed buildings documented in Boston are located in Dorchester Safety editBoston Police District C 11 Dorchester located 40 Gibson St Dorchester MA 02122 To create an environment of trust and empower the neighborhood is the goal There are over 50 community meetings held monthly that allow the police department to partner with the seniors community residents business as well as the faith based leaders of Dorchester The police department also works closely to provide the community with crime prevention and safety tips Communication is the life blood of our neighborhood 112 Dorchester has available shelters for those in need a homeless shelter by the name of Pilgrim church children s services of Roxbury that is an adult shelter open to men only This shelter is located on 540 Columbia Road Dorchester MA 113 The shelter is run by the Pilgrim church and it offers over night shelter food clothing showers first aid and other supportive services The shelter also provides evening transportation from Boston to the shelter The shelter was originally established in 1990 by positive lifestyles and now is currently under the direction of United Homes Adult services 114 Urban policies editIncome Massachusetts sales tax rate is 6 25 income tax is 5 20 Income per capita is 18 226 which includes adults and children Median household income 30 419 115 Public policy issues edit Residents and activists have worked on issues of public safety high crime rate poor educational resources and lack of housing for low income families Several organizations are working to provide the neighborhood with citation needed Good Jobs living wage Education for the children Housing Healthcare resources amp Access Public Safety amp Policy RelationsAmong such organizations are First Parish Dorchester and The Bowdoin Geneva Resident Association 116 City budget plans edit Mayor Marty Walsh proposed a budget for 2017 which included a five year capital plan intended to make improvements to the infrastructure of Dorchester The new projects involve building new libraries and also modernizing the Boston Public Libraries branches in Dorchester Improvement of City parks is also included The plans are to add more lights to Doherty Gibson park in Fields Corner and another 3 7 million to make improvements in Harambee park next to the Franklin Field The rest of the budget is intended to be used to complete already started projects in Savin Hill King Street Hemenway Dower Avenue and Ronan Park 117 Community editBased on the 2010 Census 118 Dorchester has 114 235 for a total population Just about 15 530 are under the age of eighteen 119 The former president of Trader Joe s opened a non profit retail food shop called the Daily Table 120 Ella J Baker House edit Ella J Baker House is a community youth center in the Four Corners section of Dorchester 121 The W E B Du Bois Society an academic and cultural enrichment program for African American secondary school students is co hosted by the W E B Du Bois Research Institute along with Ella J Baker House 122 Entertainment editDorchester has various attractions including the John F Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum 123 Edward M Kennedy Institute for the United States Senate Boston Winery Dorchester Brewing Company Boston Harbor Distillery Strand Theatre Commonwealth Museum Greater Boston House Concert Franklin Park Zoo the Neponset Rivery Greenway and Lower Neponset River Trail Fields Corner 124 is a commercial center that is one of Dorchester s largest business districts It has numerous restaurants and pubs and independent clothing stores Fields Corner is known both for its ethnic Irish residents who support a variety of Irish pubs and for Vietnamese restaurants operated by more recent immigrants Adjacent to Fields Corner is an 11 acre park known as Hilltop Park which offers a view of Dorchester Bay and plenty of green space Leisure activities and areas editParks Pope John Paul II Park Reservation The Pope John Park Reservation is approximately 66 acres in size and is open year round for the residents of Dorchester In its earlier times it was used as a landfill and also a drive in theatre It also serves as a buffer between the Town of Dorchester Boston and Neponset River waterfront This park now offers picnic facilities soccer fields play areas paths for walking and also spacious land to plant trees and shrubs citation needed Dorchester Park Dorchester park was established in 1861 and is located in the southern part of Dorchester specifically in the Cedar Grove and Lower Mills It is across from the Neponset River Dorchester Park is 30 acres Events held at the park include the Annual Classic Car Show and Family Fun Day 117 Dorchester Park is listed in the National Register of Historic Places citation needed Franklin Park Established in 1885 this park has 485 acres It includes walking and running paths tennis courts baseball fields golf courses and basketball courts New England s Franklin Park Zoo has nine main exhibits that contain more than 220 species of animals The Kite and Bike festival traditionally takes place in Franklin park This event hosted since 2010 by the Franklin Park Coalition is usually held the Saturday after Mother s Day It includes bike riding and kite flying 125 citation needed Bike trails Lower Neponset River Trail This 2 4 mile path stretches from the historic Port Norfolk neighborhood in Dorchester through Pope John Paul II Park across Granite Avenue through Neponset Marshes and through the Lower Mills area to Central Avenue in Milton This trail is used for running biking and walking The Neponset River Trail can be reached from the Butler Milton Village and Central Avenue Red Line Mattapan trolley stations 126 Neponset River Green way The Neponset River Green way totals 5 miles in length Scenery includes a salt marsh in Pope John Paul Park II and Tenan Beach at the mouth of Neponset River Conveniently the trail is also adjacent to MBTA Red Line stations Butler Milton and Central Avenue citation needed DotGreenway a greenway for pedestrians and cyclists has been proposed to connect Talbot Avenue and Park Street along the MBTA Red Line tunnel cap between Ashmont and Fields Corner stations 127 Sites of interest editDorchester is home to many listings on the National Register of Historic Places Name on the Register 128 129 Date listed 129 LocationAll Saints Church June 16 1980 80000678 211 Ashmont St 42 17 09 N 71 03 48 WBenedict Fenwick School February 11 2004 04000023 150 Magnolia St 42 18 49 N 71 04 21 WJames Blake House May 1 1974 74002350 735 Columbia Rd 42 19 11 N 71 03 37 WBoston Consumptives Hospital February 7 2002 01001557 249 River St 42 16 34 N 71 05 01 WBuildings at 825 829 Blue Hill Avenue September 10 2014 14000561 825 829 Blue Hill Ave 42 17 49 N 71 05 16 WCalf Pasture Pumping Station Complex August 2 1990 90001095 435 Mount Vernon St 42 18 48 N 71 02 01 WClapp Houses May 2 1974 74000911 199 and 195 Boston St 42 19 12 N 71 03 25 WCodman Square District June 23 1983 83000602 Norfolk Talbot Epping Lithgow Centre and Moultrie Sts 42 17 25 N 71 04 16 WCollins Building June 8 2005 05000559 213 217 Washington St 42 18 02 N 71 04 37 WColumbia Road Bellevue Street Historic District September 8 2017 100001582 400 500 Block of Columbia Rd and parts of Bellevue St 42 18 46 N 71 04 06 WCongregation Adath Jeshurun November 12 1999 99001304 397 Blue Hill Ave 42 18 43 N 71 04 53 WSarah Davidson Apartment Block December 18 2013 13000928 3 Gaylord St 42 17 56 N 71 04 23 WDorchester North Burying Ground April 18 1974 74000915 Stoughton St and Columbia Rd 42 19 00 N 71 03 52 WDorchester Park February 20 2008 08000089 Bounded by Dorchester Ave Richmond Adams and Richview Sts 42 16 34 N 71 04 01 WDorchester Pottery Works February 21 1985 85000318 101 105 Victory Rd 42 17 49 N 71 03 05 WDorchester South Burying Ground June 27 2014 14000365 2095 Dorchester Ave 42 16 43 N 71 04 01 WDorchester Temple Baptist Church January 16 1998 97001239 670 Washington St 42 17 17 N 71 04 17 WDorchester Milton Lower Mills Industrial District April 2 1980 80000675 Both sides of the Neponset River also Adams River and Medway Sts Millers Lane and Eliot and Adams Sts 42 16 16 N 71 04 08 WFields Corner Municipal Building November 12 1981 81000620 1 Arcadia St 195 Adams St 42 18 07 N 71 03 38 WGreenwood Memorial United Methodist Church March 8 2002 02000154 378A 380 Washington St 42 17 49 N 71 04 19 WHarrison Square Historic District October 22 2002 02001190 Bounded by MBTA Braintree line embankment Park Everett Freeport Mill Asland Blanche Sts Victory Rd 42 18 07 N 71 03 13 WHome for Destitute Jewish Children October 8 2014 14000840 150 156 American Legion Hwy 42 17 41 N 71 05 34 WThe Peabody August 8 2001 01000872 195 197 Ashmont St 42 17 07 N 71 03 53 WPierce House April 26 1974 74000917 24 Oakton Ave 42 17 13 N 71 03 13 WPilgrim Congregational Church December 18 2013 13000929 540 544 Columbia Road 42 18 58 N 71 04 01 WSaint Mark s Episcopal Church July 3 2014 12000783 73 Columbia Rd 42 18 16 N 71 04 56 WSt Mary s Episcopal Church October 30 1998 98001292 14 16 Cushing Ave 42 18 59 N 71 03 54 WSavin Hill Historic District May 9 2003 03000385 Roughly bounded by Savin Hill Ave Morrissey Boulevard Dorchester Bay and Interstate 93 42 18 33 N 71 03 01 WSherman Apartments Historic District November 28 2012 12000978 544 546 Washington 4 6 12 14 18 Lyndhurst Sts 42 17 32 N 71 04 17 WWilliam Monroe Trotter House May 11 1976 76002003 97 Sawyer Ave 42 18 47 N 71 03 46 WUpham s Corner Market October 11 1990 90001537 600 Columbia Rd 42 19 02 N 71 03 55 WWalton and Roslin Halls December 18 2013 13000930 702 708 amp 710 726 Washington St 3 5 Walton St 42 17 13 N 71 04 16 WAdditional sites of interest include Bayside Expo Center also known as the Bayside Expo and Conference Center originally opened as a shopping mall in the 1960s and in 2010 sold to University of Massachusetts Boston for future redevelopment The Boston Globe building Captain Lemuel Clap House Commonwealth Museum 130 Dorchester Park Edward M Kennedy Institute for the United States Senate First Parish Church of Dorchester Franklin Park Zoo James Blake House John F Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum Neponset River State Reservation 131 University of Massachusetts Boston Harbor Campus William Clapp House William Monroe Trotter House Eire Pub visited by presidents and prime ministers and political candidatesNotable people editCharles Baker Adams born in Dorchester academic and naturalist 132 William Taylor Adams wrote fiction under pseudonym Oliver Optic served on Dorchester school board 132 Sheldon Adelson born and raised in Dorchester chairman and CEO of Las Vegas Sands Corporation and conservative political financier Samuel Turell Armstrong born in Dorchester 6th Mayor of Boston and Lieutenant Governor of Massachusetts 132 Major General Humphrey Atherton born c 1608 1661 an early settler of Dorchester who held the highest military rank in colonial New England Brigadier General Stephen Badlam cabinetmaker and artillery officer in the Revolutionary War Robert Bergenheim raised in Dorchester founder of Boston Business Journal 133 Ray Bolger vaudevillian and film actor best known as Scarecrow in classic movie The Wizard of Oz 1939 Jean Buckley born in Dorchester All American Girls Professional Baseball League player Whitey Bulger crime boss head of Winter Hill Gang subject of film Black Mass William M Bulger politician former President of the Massachusetts Senate and president of University of Massachusetts Herb Chambers owner and CEO of Herb Chambers Companies car dealerships Buddy Clark easy listening jazz singer Terrence Clarke college basketball player Arthur Colgan Roman Catholic bishop James B Conant born in Dorchester chemist and president of Harvard University 1933 1953 Joe Conforte owner of Mustang Ranch brothel in Nevada Clarence Cook born in Dorchester 19th Century art critic and writer 134 Michael L Coyne trial attorney and professor co founder and associate dean of Massachusetts School of Law Norm Crosby entertainer 135 Julia Knowlton Dyer philanthropist Thomas M Finneran former Speaker of the Massachusetts House of Representatives in 2007 pleaded guilty to felony obstruction of justice Tom Fitzgerald ice hockey and golf journalist 136 Roswell Gleason 19th century manufacturer of pewter and silver plate Mike Gorman TV play by play announcer for Boston Celtics Harry G Hamlet Commandant of U S Coast Guard 1932 36 attended high school in Dorchester Kay Hanley alternative rock musician vocalist for band Letters to Cleo Kevin Hayes born in Dorchester professional ice hockey player for the St Louis Blues Chrystal Herne Broadway actress Richard M Karp raised in Dorchester Turing Award laureate computer scientist Edward Edzo A Kelly 10th General President of the International Association of Firefighters active Boston Firefighter Joseph P Kennedy businessman political figure father of President John F Kennedy Robert F Kennedy and Edward M Ted Kennedy Rose Kennedy mother of John F Kennedy Robert F Kennedy and Edward M Ted Kennedy John King broadcast journalist host of Inside Politics on CNN Jonathan Knight singer musical group New Kids on the Block Jordan Knight singer New Kids on the Block Calixa Lavallee Canadian national anthem composer wrote offertorium for dedication of St Peter s of Dorchester 1883 137 138 Dennis Lehane raised in Dorchester author of Gone Baby Gone Mystic River Shutter Island screenwriter producer Lisa Jayne Lewis lived in Dorchester 2000 2006 British broadcaster and Eurovision Song Contest commentator Alexandra Lydon born in Dorchester actress and writer Bill Marshall professional baseball player of the 1930s John Mason Colonial military officer civil engineer Increase Mather Puritan minister public figure in early history of Massachusetts Bay Colony Aaron Maund professional soccer player Albert and David Maysles documentary filmmakers Bill McColgan sports announcer Marilyn Mosby raised in Dorchester former state s attorney of Baltimore 139 John Lothrop Motley historian and diplomat Adam Myerson professional cyclist Leonard Nimoy born in Dorchester actor director poet musician and photographer best known as Spock on Star Trek Bill O Brien born in Dorchester head coach of NFL s Houston Texans Lawrence O Donnell raised in Dorchester former aide to Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan producer of The West Wing and host of MSNBC s The Last Word with Lawrence O Donnell Rose Pitonof 1895 1984 marathon swimmer Martin Richard raised in Dorchester one of three people killed in Boston Marathon bombing Richard Scarry raised in Dorchester children s books author and illustrator known for his Busytown universe Elliot Silverstein raised in Dorchester directed Cat Ballou and four episodes of The Twilight Zone 140 Slaine hip hop MC rapper and actor Gone Baby Gone and The Town Lucy Stone abolitionist and suffragist Donna Summer pop and disco singer member of Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Donnie Wahlberg singer actor and film producer member of musical group New Kids on the Block star of TV series Blue Bloods Mark Wahlberg Academy Award nominated actor producer model and rapper star of films including Boogie Nights The Perfect Storm Ted The Departed and The Fighter Marty Walsh Mayor of Boston Elizabeth Foster Wesselhoeft born in Dorchester children s literature writer Carolina White born in Dorchester 141 soprano and actress John Willis gangster Danny Wood singer musical group New Kids on the Block Marie Wright better known by stage name Free media personalityNotes and references editNotes edit Dorchester MA Town History 1630 1870 Archived 2013 10 20 at the Wayback Machine Dorchester Atheneum Bill Forry 2011 Analysis City counters bend boundaries thousands cut out of Dot Boston Neighborhood News Inc Retrieved April 13 2011 Boston s Neighborhoods Dorchester Boston Redevelopment Authority BRA 2010 Retrieved August 17 2010 Clapp Ebenezer History of the Town of Dorchester Massachusetts Dorchester Boston MA Dorchester Antiquarian and Historical Society 1890 History of Dorchester Massachusetts Archived 2012 02 04 at the Wayback Machine Under a rainbow flag linking the Dots The Boston Globe archive boston com Retrieved 2017 08 11 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af Melnik Mark Gao Lingshan American Community Survey 2007 2011 Estimate Dorchester Boston Redevelopment Authority Retrieved 4 April 2016 a b Alden T Vaughan New England Encounters Indians and Euroamericans Ca 1600 1850 1999 pg 209 https books google com books isbn 155553404X a b Alden T Vaughan New England Encounters Indians and Euroamericans Ca 1600 1850 1999 pg 209 https books google com books isbn 155553404X Susan Wilson Boston Sites and Insights An Essential Guide to Historic Landmarks p 324 https books google com books isbn 0807071358 2004 Morton Thomas 1883 Charles Francis Adams Jr ed The new English Canaan of Thomas Morton Boston The Prince Society pp 11 OCLC 28272732 Retrieved 2009 10 14 Jeremy Dupertuis Bangs Indian Deeds Land Transactions in Plymouth Colony Boston New England Historic Genealogical Society 2002 maps Mandell Daniel R King Philip s War Colonial Expansion Native Resistance and the End of Indian Sovereignty 2010 https books google com books id aDvP0d19rAC Bowen Frank C 1938 America Sails the Seas New York Robert M McBride amp Company p 55 Ralph E Thompson Matthew R Thompson First Yankee David Thomson 1592 1628 The Story of New Hampshire s First Settler a b Calf Pasture Pumping Station Archived from the original on 2011 09 27 Retrieved 2008 12 01 Dorchester Atheneum John White A Founder of Massachusetts Rev Arthur Ackerman Dorchester Atheneum Archived from the original on 2012 02 11 Retrieved 2008 04 23 First Parish Church in Dorchester Records Massachusetts Historical Society 29 September 2004 Archived from the original on 2013 11 26 Retrieved 2013 11 20 Notable Events in Massachusetts Mather Elementary School PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2008 05 27 Dorcas the blackmore Ca 1620 10 February 2011 Winthrop s Journal History of New England 1630 1649 Dorchester Atheneum Archived 2011 09 27 at the Wayback Machine Dorchester Atheneum Retrieved on 2017 09 13 Clapp Ebenezer Jr 1859 History of the Town of Dorchester Massachusetts Boston Committee of the Dorchester Antiquarian and Historical Society Stevens Peter F It Happened in Dorchester Dr Baker and the Chocolate Factory History of Dorchester Dorchester Reporter Archived from the original on 2012 04 06 Sweet History Dorchester and the Chocolate Factory Dorchester Historical Society and the Milton Historical Society Archived from the original on 2008 11 19 In conjunction with Kraft Foods Walter Baker amp Co General History Dorchester Atheneum Archived from the original on 2008 12 06 Retrieved 2008 12 01 Sons of Liberty in Dorchester Archived 2011 05 26 at the Wayback Machine Dorchester Athaneum Holmes Oliver Wendell Sr The Dorchester Giant 1830 poem Sammarco Anthony Mitchell Boston s South End Arcadia Publishing 1995 Whiting E Map of Dorchester Massachusetts in 1850 Boston Public Library Map Collection ed Archived from the original on 2008 12 02 The maps shows the Crescent Avenue Depot of the Old Colony Railroad Line Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2012 10 16 Retrieved 2014 01 01 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link About Dorchester Park Dorchester Park Association The Founding of the Dorchester Historical Society Dorchester Historical Society Taylor Earl Settled before Boston Dorchester home of many firsts Archived 2012 02 23 at the Wayback Machine The Dorchester Reporter May 29 2008 Stevens Peter F A VOICE FROM ON HIGH Lucy Stone of Pope s Hill Was a Key Voice in the Early Days of the Women s Movement in America Archived February 5 2012 at the Wayback Machine The Dorchester Reporter May 26 2005 Seligson Susan Martin Luther King Jr s Roommate Reminisces John Bustamante recalls Coretta Scott at Myles Standish and Dorchester digs Archived 2010 01 17 at the Wayback Machine BU Today January 15 2010 Delta Health Center Records 1966 1987 University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Southern Historical Collection Shriver Sargent June 1 1967 Remarks of Mr Shriver at Comprehensive Health Services Press Conference PDF p 5 Archived from the original PDF on February 6 2009 Grantee Tufts University School Of Medicine Medford Massachusetts Operating Institution Tufts University School of Medicine Department of Preventive Medicine Project Director Count Gibson M D H Jack Geiger M D Professors of Preventative Medicine Tufts University Location Columbia Point Boston Mass and Bolivar County Mississippi Items of Special Interest One of the original demonstration programs to contrast a model of a northern urban center with a southern rural one Amount 1 168 099 138 888 281 685 3 417 630 Date Approved 6 24 65 8 65 3 30 66 1 15 67 Count Gibson George Washington University School of Public Health and Health Services Archived from the original on 2012 02 14 Brown Theodore M Fee Elizabeth November 2002 VOICES FROM THE PAST Sidney Kark and John Cassel Social Medicine Pioneers and South African Emigres American Journal of Public Health 92 11 1744 5 doi 10 2105 AJPH 92 11 1744 PMC 3221478 PMID 12406799 Jack Geiger George Washington University School of Public Health and Health Services Archived from the original on 2012 05 17 Roessner Jane 2000 A Decent Place to Live from Columbia Point to Harbor Point A Community History Boston Northeastern University Press p 80 ISBN 1 55553 436 8 The Columbia Point Health Center The First Community Health Center in the Country 1965 Columbia Point Health Center PDF Boston History and Innovation Collaborative Archived from the original PDF on 2016 01 12 Kong Dolores October 28 1990 25 Years of Intensive Caring The Boston Globe p 29 History of UMass Boston Retrieved 2019 02 14 Evans Chris 2015 03 30 President Obama Helps Dedicate the New Edward M Kennedy Institute whitehouse gov Retrieved 2016 07 01 via National Archives Khalid Asma 2015 03 30 Edward M Kennedy Institute Opens With A Lofty Goal Restoring Respect For Congress Boston Retrieved 2016 07 01 Mleczko Monica An Unrecognized Gem Archived February 23 2012 at the Wayback Machine The Dorchester Reporter June 15 2006 Neighborhoods City of Boston Cityofboston gov Retrieved on 2017 09 13 Boston Redevelopment Authority Archived from the original on 2009 04 14 Retrieved 2010 01 10 Rubin Jeff 4 November 2014 Boston s lost Jewish neighborhood reborn on Facebook Times of Israel Retrieved 4 November 2014 Levine Hillel and Lawrence Harmon The Death of an American Jewish Community A Tragedy of Good Intentions Boston Free Press 1991 Foreign Born in Boston Boston Redevelopment Authority October 2007 Dorchester Reporter Dorchester MA USA Archived February 4 2012 at the Wayback Machine Dorchester Archived March 2 2012 at the Wayback Machine Dorchester development to be geared toward gays Bay Windows Thursday Aug 2 2007 Stidman Pete For Some Last Calls Heard on the Ave Archived 2012 02 23 at the Wayback Machine Dorchester Reporter January 31 2008 Diaz Johnny Under a rainbow flag linking the Dots Boston Globe October 30 2005 Kuhr Fred 2004 There goes the gayborhood The Advocate Jul 6 2004 Selling upscale living in Dorchester The Boston Globe May 11 2008 ACS DEMOGRAPHIC AND HOUSING ESTIMATES 2012 2016 American Community Survey 5 Year Estimates U S Census Bureau Retrieved August 25 2018 a b c d 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 ACS DEMOGRAPHIC AND HOUSING ESTIMATES 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 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 Ashmont Station Renovation Archived 2016 01 07 at the Wayback Machine MBTA a b Sullivan Jim O Ashmont Station Project Running into Trouble The Dorchester Reporter Feb 1 2005 Transit Oriented Development Archived February 4 2016 at the Wayback Machine A Record of the Streets Alleys Places Etc in the City of Boston Street Laying Out Dept Boston Mass City of Boston Printing Dept 1910 Codman Hill Archived 2011 09 27 at the Wayback Machine Dorchester Atheneum Boustan Leah Platt Was Postwar Suburbanization White Flight Evidence from the Black Migration Archived 2012 03 01 at the Wayback Machine Quarterly Journal of Economics February 2010 Kamin Blair Rethinking Public Housing Vol Summer 1997 Washington D C Blueprints magazine p 4 Archived from the original on 2007 10 11 Roessner Jane 2000 A Decent Place to Live From Columbia Point to Harbor Point Boston Northeastern University Press ISBN 1 55553 436 8 Archived from the original on 2006 09 19 Retrieved 2008 02 05 Boston War Zone Becomes Public Housing Dream November 23 1991 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Editorials Boston Herald Retrieved on 2017 09 13 Appelbaum Binyamin February 15 2008 Hendry St rescue plan underway The Boston Globe Stidman Pete August 14 2008 Sketches outline new deal for Columbia Point Dorchester Reporter Archived from the original on February 13 2012 Retrieved January 6 2012 Stidman Pete July 17 2008 Bayside developers go public with site plans Dorchester Reporter Archived from the original on February 13 2012 Retrieved January 6 2012 Bayside on the Point website Archived from the original on 2014 05 17 Stidman Pete November 13 2008 Next great neighborhood planned for Morrissey site Dorchester Reporter Archived from the original on February 13 2012 Retrieved January 6 2012 Forry Ed UMass Boston seeks to buy Bayside Expo Motley says no plans for dorms The Dorchester Reporter December 16 2009 Anderson Hil Boston s Bayside Expo Site Sold to University permanent dead link Trade Show Executive News January 2010 O Brien Keith June 10 2009 Times Co seeks Globe bids The Boston Globe Moore Galen October 14 2009 New York Times drops plan to sell Globe Mark Arsenault 2017 06 21 With an eye on the future Globe returns to downtown Boston The Boston Globe Archived from the original on 2017 12 22 Retrieved 2017 12 21 Crime rate reportedly reduced by 15 percent in Boston for 2013 Boston 25 News March 24 2013 Mapping America Census Bureau s 2005 9 American Community Survey The New York Times December 13 2010 Murders in Boston during 2011 boston com Living In North Dorchester Boston MA Boston Livability Score AreaVibes Retrieved on 2017 09 13 Living In South Dorchester Boston MA Boston Livability Score AreaVibes 2014 06 09 Retrieved on 2017 09 13 Student Assignment Policy Boston Public Schools Archived from the original on June 13 2010 Retrieved April 15 2009 Stevens Peter F June 5 2003 Of Debates And Diplomas The Legacy Of Dorchester High School Did Not Arrive Without Struggle Dorchester Reporter Archived from the original on November 20 2008 Retrieved April 15 2009 School Listings School Listings www bostonpublicschools org Retrieved 2022 03 02 Home Archived 2013 06 15 at the Wayback Machine Neighborhood House Charter School Retrieved on April 16 2013 21 Queen Street Dorchester MA 02122 a b Dorchester Parish Faces Hard Decisions About Future Stidman Pete June 19 2008 Class is out at St Peter s School Final graduation day marked by tears of joy sadness The Dorchester Reporter Archived from the original on July 16 2011 Retrieved December 8 2008 Benoit David June 19 2008 St Kevin s grads and alums share farewell Mass The Dorchester Reporter Archived from the original on July 16 2011 Retrieved December 8 2008 Mission amp History Archived from the original on 2018 08 10 Retrieved 2018 08 09 Umass Boston Statistics Neighborhood Branch Libraries Archived May 6 2010 at the Wayback Machine Boston Public Library Retrieved on May 23 2010 Codman Square Branch Library Archived January 5 2013 at the Wayback Machine Boston Public Library Retrieved on May 23 2010 Carney Hospital Steward Health Care Retrieved 2016 04 11 Codman Square Health Center Retrieved 2016 04 22 Urban Asthma Coalition The Dorchester Asthma Community Network Boston Urban Asthma Coalition 18 June 2007 Retrieved 2016 04 24 a b Friedman Evelyn Real Estate Trends 2011 PDF City of Boston City of Boston Department of Neighborhood Development Retrieved 4 April 2016 a b c d Dorchester Planning District Profile PDF City of Boston City of Boston Department of Neighborhood Development Archived from the original PDF on 8 May 2016 Retrieved 4 April 2016 a b Dillion Sheila Foreclosure Trends 2013 PDF City of Boston City of Boston Department of Neighborhood Development Archived from the original PDF on 7 May 2016 Retrieved 4 April 2016 District C 11 Dorchester bpd news Blog Posts www bphc org 2 February 2016 Retrieved 2016 03 04 My Dorchester Social Capital inc amp DotWell Dorchester Massachusetts Sperling Best Places Dorchester Reporter Compelling problems Achievable solutions positive change Judy Meredith Jenn Cartee Jennifer Johnson Michael Groves February 4 2015 Retrieved April 11 2016 a b Forry Bill 2016 04 14 Dorchester Reporter Retrieved 2016 04 24 Shooster Derek November 2011 2010 Census Summary File 1 Archived from the original on 20 March 2016 Retrieved 4 March 2016 BELL Mission amp History www experiencebell org Retrieved 2016 04 06 Daily Table dailytable org Retrieved 2016 04 06 Boston Foundation grants mean more summer jobs for teens TBF Retrieved 12 December 2020 W E B Du Bois Society The Hutchins Center for African amp African American Research 10 May 2018 Retrieved 12 December 2020 John F Kennedy John F Kennedy Retrieved 27 April 2016 Fields Corner Retrieved 27 April 2016 Kite amp Bike Festival Franklin Park Coalition Retrieved 2019 07 23 Transportation Options Massachusetts Rivers Alliance Retrieved October 3 2022 Greenway envisioned to beautify enliven Red Line tunnel cap Dorchester Reporter 2017 05 17 Retrieved 2017 10 17 National Park Service npgallery nps gov Retrieved 2017 10 17 a b National Register of Historical Places MASSACHUSETTS MA Suffolk County www nationalregisterofhistoricplaces com Retrieved 2017 10 17 Commonwealth Museum CommonwealthMuseum org Neponset River State Reservation Metro Boston a b c Who Was Who in America Historical Volume 1607 1896 Chicago Marquis Who s Who 1963 Stickgold Emma 2010 06 10 Robert Bergenheim founded Boston Business Journal Boston Globe Retrieved 2010 06 26 Clarence Cook Dead The New York Times June 3 1900 Forry Bill September 7 2006 Crosby comes home for lifetime achievement award Dorchester Reporter Archived from the original on January 7 2009 Singelais Neil October 13 1983 Obituaries Tom Fitzgerald at 71 longtime Globe golf hockey writing specialist The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts p 67 nbsp Lapierre Eugene Calixa Lavallee musicien national du Canada Montreal Fides 1965 p 235 Scanned in at the American Memory Collection of the Library of Congress Freddie Gray case prosecutor Marilyn Mosby has deep ties to Boston Metro The Boston Globe BostonGlobe com Retrieved 14 June 2015 Elliot Silverstein Director of Cat Ballou and A Man Called Horse Dies at 96 The Hollywood Reporter November 27 2023 Retrieved November 27 2023 Henry Charles Lahee 1912 The Grand Opera Singers of To day An Account of the Leading Operatic Stars who Have Sung During Recent Years Together with a Sketch of the Chief Operatic Enterprises L C Page pp 425 427 References edit Committee of the Dorchester Antiquarian and Historical Society History of the Town of Dorchester Massachusetts Boston Ebenezer Clapp Jr 1859 Dutton E P Chart of Boston Harbor and Massachusetts Bay with Map of Adjacent Country Published 1867 A good map of roads and rail lines around Dorchester Note the Horse RailRoad on Dorchester Ave Glover Anna Glover Memorials and Genealogies An Account of John Glover Of Dorchester and Some of his Descendants Published 1867 Orcutt William Dana Good Old Dorchester A Narrative History of the Town 1630 1893 Published 1893 Sammarco Anthony Mitchell Dorchester Images of America Dover N H Arcadia Publishing 1995 ISBN 0 7524 0228 5 OL 935911M Dorchester Volume II Images of America series Arcadia Publishing 2000 Dorchester Then amp Now Arcadia Publishing 2005 Seasholes Nancy S 2003 Gaining ground a history of landmaking in Boston Cambridge Massachusetts MIT Press ISBN 978 0 262 19494 5 nancy seasholes The Vital Records of Dorchester Births Marriages and Deaths to 1825 were published in 1890 as the 21st Report of the Records Commissioners of Boston Old USGS Maps of Boston and Dorchester area Archived 2008 03 21 at the Wayback Machine See the 1903 southeaster corner map Further reading edit Railroad Transportation in Dorchester Archived 2009 07 27 at the Wayback Machine History by the Dorchester Atheneum Dorchester Massachusetts 1790 Federal Head of Household Census Archived 2013 02 01 at archive today Dorchester Massachusetts US Census data Dorchester Epitaphs from Epitaphs First Burying Place in Dorchester Archived 2013 02 01 at archive today not in Dorchester town records From the back of the book of Dorchester Vital Records to 1850 Historical Sketch of Dorchester Mercantile Publishing Company Boston 1888 Orcutt William Dana Good Old Dorchester A Narrative history of the Town 1630 1893 Cambridge John Wilson amp Son University Press 1893 Report for Reconnaissance Archaeological Survey of the Mary L Pierce Well Ronan Park Boston Dorchester Massachusetts 2021 External links editDorchester Boston at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Definitions from Wiktionary nbsp Media from Commons nbsp News from Wikinews nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Texts from Wikisource nbsp Textbooks from Wikibooks nbsp Resources from Wikiversity nbsp Travel information from Wikivoyage From the Boston Public Library Map Collection 1831 Map of Dorchester Archived 2008 12 02 at the Wayback Machine by Edmund J Baker 1850 Map of Dorchester by E Whiting 1868 Map of Dorchester and Quincy Archived 2008 12 02 at the Wayback Machine by Dudley and Greenough 1880 Plan of Dorchester Archived 2008 12 02 at the Wayback Machine by the Boston Engineering Dept Dorchester Community Website Dorchester Reporter Local newspaper Map of Dorchester section of Boston Open Space Plan City of Boston Boston Redevelopment Authority map of Dorchester La Alianza Hispana records located in the Northeastern University Libraries Archives and Special Collections Department Boston MA My Dot Tour an open source multimedia youth led walking tour of Fields Corner It is a project of the Fields Corner Collaborative Archival collections about Dorchester University Archives and Special Collections Joseph P Healey Library University of Massachusetts Boston Dorchester Atheneum a website devoted to the history of Dorchester Dorchester s Soldiers and Sailors Monument at the Massachusetts Civil War Monuments Project Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dorchester Boston amp oldid 1205634953, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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