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West End, Boston

The West End is a neighborhood of Boston, Massachusetts, bounded generally by Cambridge Street to the south, the Charles River to the west and northwest, North Washington Street on the north and northeast, and New Sudbury Street on the east.[1]Beacon Hill is to the south, North Point is across the Charles River to the north, Kendall Square is across the Charles River to the west, and the North End is to the east. A late 1950s urban renewal project razed a large Italian and Jewish enclave and displaced over 20,000 people in order to redevelop much of the West End and part of the neighboring Downtown neighborhood. After that, the original West End became increasingly non-residential, including part of Government Center (formerly Scollay Square) as well as much of Massachusetts General Hospital and several high rise office buildings.[2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12][13][14] More recently, however, new residential buildings and spaces, as well as new parks, have been appearing across the West End.

West End
2007 view from the west, with former
Charles Street Jail buildings at right
CountryUnited States
StateMassachusetts
CountySuffolk
Neighborhood ofBoston
Time zoneUTC-5 (Eastern)
Area code617 / 857

Geography edit

 
West End, c. 1769

The West End occupies the northwest portion of the Shawmut Peninsula. Much of the land on which the neighborhood lies is the product of land reclamation.[15] Beginning in 1807, parts of Beacon Hill were used to fill in a small bay and mill pond that separated Beacon Hill and the West End from the North End. Today the neighborhood consists primarily of superblocks containing high rise residential towers. The West End borders the Charles River between the Longfellow Bridge and the Charles River Dam Bridge. The Charlesbank Playground runs along the bank of the river, but is separated from the rest of the neighborhood by Storrow Drive, a large crosstown expressway.

Early days edit

 
The first house Charles Bulfinch designed for Harrison Gray Otis in the West End.

In the late 18th and early 19th centuries, Boston's waterfront and North End were becoming overcrowded, and many of the city's well off residents took the opportunity to develop the area now known as the West End. At that time, the area was separated from the older neighborhoods by a small bay. The architect Charles Bulfinch was responsible for much of Boston's architectural character at the time, and played a large part in this new development of the West End.

Bulfinch spent much of his early career in the 1790s designing mansions, many of them in the West End and other Boston neighborhoods.[16] One of the most famous examples of these was the first Harrison Gray Otis House. This historic building was the first of three that Bulfinch designed for the affluent lawyer Harrison Gray Otis, and is one of the few buildings that survived Urban Renewal in the West End. Other West End landmarks designed by Bulfinch were the Massachusetts General Hospital's domed granite building, built 1816–1825 (today known as the Bulfinch Pavilion), and the West End Market on the corner of Grove and Cambridge Streets. Constructed in 1810, this historic market did not survive the area's redevelopment in the 1950s.[17] Bulfinch's architecture of newer large brick buildings with gardens attracted many of Boston's wealthier citizens. By 1810, the West End was inhabited by wealthy business men, merchants, and lawyers. Many would soon move to the nearby Beacon Hill, turning the West End into an African American community and stopping point for new immigrants.[16]

Another early West End building is the Charles Street Jail (1851), designed by Gridley James Fox Bryant, which was renovated into the Liberty Hotel.

West End House edit

The West End House was originally founded in 1906 as a community center for young immigrant boys. The community center's founding was funded by Boston-area philanthropist and investment banker James J. Storrow. The West End House served as a center for social and community life in Boston's West End neighborhood for over 60 years, opening its doors to young immigrant boys from a myriad of different ethnic and national backgrounds. The urban renewal plans of the 1950s and 1960s, which saw the near complete upheaval of the original West End neighborhood, negatively affected the community center's membership since much of the neighborhood's immigrant population was subsequently displaced. In 1971, thanks in large part to the fundraising efforts of alumni of the original West End House, the West End House was relocated to Allston-Brighton and reimagined into a modernized co-ed center for youth development with a focus on the arts, academics, athletics, and leadership.[18][19][20]

Ethnic history edit

African American history edit

 
West End Adult Evening School, c. 1890s; photo by A.H. Folsom (Boston Public Library)

In the early 19th century the West End, along with Beacon Hill's north slope, became an important center of Boston's African American community. The mostly affluent and white inhabitants of Beacon Hill's south slope were strongly supportive of abolitionism. This encouraged middle and working class free African Americans to move into the nearby North slope and West End. After the Civil War, the West End continued to be an important center of African American culture. It was one of the few locations in the United States at the time where African Americans had a political voice. At least one black resident from the West End sat on Boston's community council during every year between 1876 and 1895.[16]

Immigration edit

From the second half of the 19th century to the mid-20th century, Boston's West End became a home to many different immigrant groups. The wealthy and middle class business men were almost entirely gone, but many African Americans remained in the neighborhood, making it one of Boston's most diverse.[21] Among the many immigrant groups contributing to this melting pot were Armenians, Greeks, Irish, Lebanese, Italians, Jews, Lithuanians, Poles, Russians, Syrians, Ukrainians and many other Eastern Europeans and Southern Europeans. It was during this period that the neighborhood's population reached its peak at approximately 23,000 residents [22]

As a result of this immigration, the religious make-up of the neighborhood changed dramatically. Protestant churches moved away or shut down, to be replaced by Catholic churches and synagogues. For example, the old West Church, built in 1806 closed in 1892 due to lack of congregation. It reopened two years later as a library to better serve the new community.[17]

Irish edit

Irish immigrants were among the first to settle the West End. After briefly passing through the North End, many Irish families moved on to the West and South ends. The West End soon developed a thriving Irish community.

Later on, this community became associated with Martin Lomasney. Lomasney, also known as "the Mahatma", was the ward boss of Boston's Ward 8 located in the West End. He was well known for taking care of the community that had developed there, especially the Irish families.

 
Junior baseball team, West End, 1915

Early in Lomasney's career, he established the Hendricks Club in the heart of the neighborhood. The Hendricks began as a social club and gathering place, but later turned into the center of Lomasney's political machine. It was from here that he began to provide social services, charity, and shelter for poor immigrants. In return, he was able to drum up votes and support from much of the neighborhood.[16][23]

Jewish community edit

By the late 19th and early 20th centuries, the Irish immigration had slowed and Eastern European Jews began to immigrate into the West End in large numbers. Many came to escape persecution in Lithuania, Russia, and Poland. They formed a community in the West End and became a significant part of the population by 1910. They made their home in the neighborhood, constructing health centers, libraries, labor unions, loan societies, orphanages, and synagogues. Actor Leonard Nimoy[24] was raised in this community. The new Boston Synagogue, the 1919 Vilna Shul, and the African Meeting House which was the home of Anshi Lubuvicher from 1900 to 1972 are the only surviving West End synagogues. The Boston Synagogue is a newly merged congregation; the Vilna Shul at 16 Philips Street, which was outside the urban renewal demolition area, is now a synagogue museum, and the African American Meeting House is now a church museum. Over the Vilna Shul's ark is the double hand symbol for the Kohanim, the ancient Israelite priests, which was the source for the Star Trek Vulcan salute. The Vilna Shul also has pews salvaged from the former Twelfth Baptist Church on which once sat former African American slaves and volunteers in the 54th Massachusetts Infantry Regiment popularized by the movie Glory. The Vilna was the last of the approximately seven West End synagogues to stay open, closing in 1985.

Urban destruction edit

 
Green Street, 1959

By the 1950s, Boston's West End had turned into a working poor residential area with scattered businesses with small meandering roads much like the North End. According to most residents, the West End was a good place to live at this time.[21] The once overcrowded neighborhood was in the process of "deslumming"[25] and the population had dropped to around 7,500 residents.[26] By the end of the 1950s, over half of the neighborhood would be completely leveled to be replaced with residential high rises as part of a large scale urban renewal project.

Political background edit

The large-scale renewal of the West End was first proposed in the 1930s by Nathan Strauss Jr., among others, shortly after the National Housing Act of 1934 was passed.[22] The neighborhood was considered a slum by wealthy Bostonians who did not live there. The working class residents of the West End felt strong ties to the community and so the plan would not become politically feasible until the 1950s.[27]

When the John B. Hynes administration came into power in 1949 city officials recognized that the federal government's Housing Act of 1949 presented the opportunity to remake parts of Boston. The Boston Housing Authority (BHA) held responsibility for developing Boston's urban renewal plans and was designated the city's local public authority for federal funds.[28]

Implementation edit

 
One of the few buildings (known as "The Last Tenement House") to survive the urban renewal of Boston's West End, 42 Lomasney Way, stands in one of the Super Blocks that was created by that project

As part of a plan to create a "New Boston", the Boston Housing Authority (BHA) and its 1957 successor, the Boston Redevelopment Authority, redeveloped neighborhoods throughout the 1950s and 1960s. The New York Streets section of the South End was redeveloped before the West End, and in the 1960s Scollay Square was leveled to create the Brutalist Government Center afterwards. The motivation behind these projects was to replace neighborhoods that had been classified as slums with neighborhoods that would bring in increased tax revenues. It is estimated that before the renewal project, the tax revenue from the West End was approximately $546,000 a year.[26]

The redevelopment of the West End was officially announced on April 11, 1953. Mayor Hynes and the BHA stated that the project would be beneficial to the neighborhood. The West End's narrow streets were a fire hazard and many of the buildings were not up to code, with approximately 80% of them substandard or marginal.[22]Tenants were assured that affordable housing would be found for them, and many were led to believe that they would be able to move back into the West End after the project was complete.

The plan involved completely leveling a 46-acre (190,000 m2) portion of the West End, displacing 2,700 families to make way for 5 residential high rise complexes that would contain only 477 apartments.[22] The new development was aimed towards upper middle class residents: most of those displaced would not be able to afford to return.

In October 1957, the BRA held a hearing on the new project. At least 200 West End residents attended and the consensus was overwhelmingly opposed to the plan. The Save the West End committee was formed with the support of Joseph Lee to organize protests against the new development. Most residents believed that the project would not be realized, and so did not act until it was too late.[22]

Residents received their eviction letters on April 25, 1958. The BRA used the Housing Act of 1949 to raze the West End to the ground. Working-class families were displaced, and superblocks replaced the original street layout. The result was a neighborhood consisting of residential high rises, shopping centers and parking lots.

Controversy edit

Population of the West End, 1910–1950
Year W. End Boston
1910 22,656 670,585
1920 18,442 748,060
1930 13,454 781,188
1940 12,879 770,816
1950 11,731 801,444
Source:[29]
 
West End project area looking northeasterly, circa 1959–1964

The urban renewal of the West End has been attacked by critics for its destruction of a neighborhood and its careless implementation. One of the main criticisms of the project is that the neighborhood was not considered a slum by the residents, and instead had a strong sense of community. A later mayor of Boston, Ray Flynn, described the West End as "a typical neighborhood" and "not blighted."[30] The perception of the neighborhood as a slum was mostly held by wealthy outsiders and was enhanced by city policy. For example, the city stopped collecting garbage and cleaning the streets, leaving the neighborhood a mess.[22] A photographer for a local newspaper was even assigned to go to the West End, overturn a trashcan, and take a picture of it to create the impression of a blighted neighborhood.[31]

Many building owners were not adequately compensated for their property. Due to city law, as soon as tenement buildings were condemned by the BRA, the city became the legal owner. This meant that building owners had no income as rent was paid directly to the city. Soon owners became desperate to sell their property at severely reduced prices.[25]

The justification for razing the West End has also been called into question. Some say that, as one of the neighborhoods that supported the former mayor, it was in the political sights of the Hynes administration. The entire net cost of the project was $15.8 million, not including the additional loss of tax dollars for the years that the West End was vacant. It is uncertain as to whether the increased tax revenue would ever be enough to justify the costs.[26]

The negative effect of urban renewal on the former residents of the West End has been well documented. Between one quarter and one half of the former residents were relocated to substandard housing with higher rents than they were previously paying. Approximately 40% also suffer from severe long term grief reactions.[22] Many former residents share their memories and grief through the West Ender Newsletter, published with the tag line, "Printed in the Spirit of the Mid-Town Journal and Dedicated to Being the Collective Conscience of Urban Renewal and Eminent Domain in the City of Boston."[32] The destruction of the West End community led to a strong distaste for urban renewal in Boston.[21] In 2015, Boston Redevelopment Authority director Brian P. Golden officially apologized for the demolition of the neighborhood.[33]

Present day edit

 
2009 view
 
The Boston Museum of Science, located in the West End

Today, the West End is a mixed-use commercial and residential area. A few non-residential areas were spared from the urban renewal of the 1950s, such as Massachusetts General Hospital, the Charles Street Jail, and the Bulfinch Triangle—a small section surrounded by Causeway, Merrimac, and North Washington Streets. Massachusetts General Hospital and the Charles Street Jail are located in the northwest section, while Government Center which was the former site of Scollay Square, comprises the southern section. Most of the northern section is covered by North Station and the TD Garden.

The character of the area prior to the urban renewal can still be seen in existing commercial and mixed use building of the Bulfinch Triangle. Here there are a few pubs and restaurants that feed off the traffic traveling to and from Faneuil Hall and the Garden. The residential areas that have been rebuilt are primarily upscale highrises, though the neighborhood is currently making strides to re-establish the close knit community that once was. The West End Museum currently has a permanent exhibition outlining the history of the neighborhood and its residents, while the West End Community Center hosts classes and events, in addition to putting on the annual West End Children's Festival.

42 Lomasney Way edit

One of the survivors of the West End's redevelopment phase is 42 Lomasney Way. Originally constructed in the 1870s, the building survived multiple redevelopment attempts, as well as two fires. Called "The Last Tenement" due to it being the only tenement structure still located in the West End, it also has been home to an associate of the Angiulo Brothers crime family.[34]

Demographics edit

According to the city of Boston, the total population was 4,080 as of the 2010 United States Census. 75.2% of residents were white, 16.2% were Asian, and 8.4% were some other race. Housing in the West End was about 89.3% occupied.[35]

Notable people edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Boston Neighborhoods". BostonRedevelopmentAuthority.org. Retrieved 21 April 2016.
  2. ^ Gilbert, David A (2007). "Why Dwell on a Lurid Memory?: Deviance and Redevelopment in Boston's Scollay Square". Massachusetts Historical Review. 9: 103–133. JSTOR 25081214.
  3. ^ "How Eminent Domain Destroys Neighborhoods". youtube.com. Retrieved 15 September 2019.
  4. ^ "Urban Renewal". The West End Museum. 16 February 2015.
  5. ^ "Historic photos of the Scollay Square transformation". Boston Globe. Retrieved 15 September 2019.
  6. ^ "The West End Through Time From Farmland to Subway Suburb". Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Retrieved 15 September 2019.
  7. ^ Oakes, Bob. "As BRA Seeks To Extend Urban Renewal Powers, Exhibit Looks At Controversial Past". WBUR.com. Retrieved 15 September 2019.
  8. ^ "The West End". Global Boston. Boston College. Retrieved 15 September 2019.
  9. ^ Strahan, Derek. "Scollay Square Boston". Lost New England. Retrieved 15 September 2019.
  10. ^ Noren, Anders. "1. Introduction". FAH 198-05 GOVERNMENT CENTER. Tufts University.
  11. ^ "City Hall Plaza". tclf.org. The Cultural Landscape Foundation. Retrieved 15 September 2019.
  12. ^ Roberge, Pete (13 June 2016). "THROWBACK: FIGHTING FOR THE WEST END". Medium.com. Retrieved 15 September 2019.
  13. ^ "RENEWAL IN BOSTON: GOOD AND BAD". New York Times. 19 April 1964. Retrieved 15 September 2019.
  14. ^ Ross, Suzannah. "City Hall Plaza". The Landscape Architect’s Guide to BOSTON. Retrieved 15 September 2019.
  15. ^ Seasholes, Nancy (1999). "Gaining Ground: 'Landmaking in Boston's West End" (PDF). Old-Time New England. Spring/Summer: 24. Retrieved 9 March 2013.
  16. ^ a b c d O'Connor, Thomas H., The Hub: Boston Past and Present, Northeastern University Press Boston, 2001. ISBN 1-55553-474-0
  17. ^ a b Whitehill, Walter Muir, and Kennedy, Lawrence W., Boston: A Topographical History 3rd Ed, Harvard University Press, 2000. ISBN 0-674-00267-9
  18. ^ "Club History". West End House. Retrieved 2022-10-31.
  19. ^ Belfanti, Sebastian (7 October 2022). "» West End HouseThe West End Museum". Retrieved 2022-10-31.
  20. ^ Ueda, Reed (1949). West End House, 1906-1981.
  21. ^ a b c Gans, Herbert, J., The Urban Villagers: Group and Class in the Life of Italian-Americans, Free Press, 1962. ISBN 0-02-911240-0.
  22. ^ a b c d e f g O'Connor, Thomas H., Building a New Boston: Politics and Urban Renewal, Northern University Press, 1993. ISBN 1-55553-161-X
  23. ^ O'Connor, Thomas H., Boston A to Z, Harvard University Press, 2000. ISBN 978-0-674-00310-1
  24. ^ Benarsky, M. Leonard Nimoy, Boston Native, Dies at 83, Jamaica Plain Patch, February 27, 2015, 11:01am
  25. ^ a b Jacobs, Jane, The Death and Life of Great American Cities, page 287. Random House Inc. NY, 1961. ISBN 0-679-74195-X.
  26. ^ a b c Anderson, Martin, The Federal Bulldozer: A Critical Analysis of Urban Renewal 1949–1962, The MIT Press, 1964.
  27. ^ Weaver, Robert C., Dilemmas of Urban America, Harvard University Press, 1966. ISBN 0-674-20700-9.
  28. ^ O'Connor, Thomas H., Building a New Boston: Politics and Urban Renewal, Northern University Press, 1993. pp. 126–27.
  29. ^ Simonian, Kane. Urban Redevelopment Division, Boston Housing Authority. The West End Project Report: A Redevelopment Study. Boston, March 1953. Accessed 24 July 2014.
  30. ^ Jones, Michael, The Slaughter of Cities: Urban Renewal and Ethnic Cleansing p.524, St. Augustine's Press, South Bend, IN, 2004. ISBN 1-58731-775-3
  31. ^ Jones, Michael, The Slaughter of Cities: Urban Renewal and Ethnic Cleansing p.175, St. Augustine's Press, South Bend, IN, 2004. ISBN 1-58731-775-3
  32. ^ Belmont, Vivienne. “West End Residents Struggle to Raise Neighborhood's Profile: Old Loyalties Survive.” Boston: City in Transition.
  33. ^ "BRA director offers formal apology for West End's demolition - The Boston Globe". BostonGlobe.com. Retrieved 2019-09-15.
  34. ^ Moskowitz, Eric (16 August 2015). "Boston's last tenement an island awash in modernity". Boston Globe. Retrieved 29 January 2016.
  35. ^ West End Neighborhood 2010 Census, cityofboston.gov
  36. ^ Gibran, Jean (2014). Love Made Visible: Scenes from a Mostly Happy Marriage. Interlink Publishing. p. 213. ISBN 9781623710521. Retrieved 6 December 2015.
  37. ^ . Jules Aarons. Archived from the original on 2017-06-12. Retrieved 2016-01-30.
  38. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Jacobs, Donald M., ed. (1993). "Appendix B: Black Persons of Prominence Who Resided in Boston's West End Section Prior to the Civil War". Courage and Conscience: Black & White Abolitionists in Boston. Indiana University Press. p. 226. ISBN 0-253-20793-2.
  39. ^ Ross, Michael A. (2003). The Jewish Friendship Trail Guidebook. BostonWalks. pp. 86–87. ISBN 9780970082510. Retrieved 6 December 2015.
  40. ^ Morgenroth, Lynda (2007). Boston Firsts. Beacon Press. p. 127. ISBN 9780807071328. Retrieved 6 December 2015.
  41. ^ Bass Warner, Sam (2001). Greater Boston: Adapting Regional Traditions to the Present. University of Pennsylvania Press. p. 120. ISBN 9780812217698. Retrieved 6 December 2015.
  42. ^ Bookbinder, Judith (2005). Boston Modern: Figurative Expressionism as Alternative Modernism. Durham, NH: University of New Hampshire Press. pp. 58–60. ISBN 9781584654889.
  43. ^ Alan Emmet (1997). "Radishes and orchids: the Boott's garden in Boston". So Fine a Prospect: Historic New England Gardens. Hanover, NH: University Press of New England. ISBN 9780874517743.
  44. ^ a b Marcus, Jonathan P. (2003). Our Boston. MBI. p. 50. ISBN 9781610604697.
  45. ^ Cromwell, Adelaide M. (1994). The Other Brahmins: Boston's Black Upper Class. University of Arkansas Press. p. 53. ISBN 9781610752930. Retrieved 6 December 2015.
  46. ^ Smith, Jessie Carney (1996). Notable Black American Women. VNR AG. p. 239. ISBN 9780810391772. Retrieved 8 December 2015.
  47. ^ "Thanks for keeping the West End together", The West Ender, Somerville, Massachusetts, March 2010, p.3.
  48. ^ a b O'Connor, Thomas H. (1998). Boston Catholics: A History of the Church and Its People. UPNE. p. 143. ISBN 9781555533595. Retrieved 6 December 2015.
  49. ^ a b "Important People". The West End Museum. Retrieved 8 December 2015.
  50. ^ Vargo, Dina (2015). Wild Women of Boston: Mettle and Moxie in the Hub. Arcadia Publishing. p. 73. ISBN 9781625853080. Retrieved 8 December 2015.
  51. ^ Descriptive catalogue of a map of the town of Boston in 1775. Boston: 1866
  52. ^ Sammarco, Anthony Mitchell (1998). Boston's West End. Charleston, SC: Arcadia Publishing. p. 85. ISBN 0-7524-1257-4. LCCN 98087140. OCLC 40670283.
  53. ^ . BDCWire. 27 February 2015. Archived from the original on 1 March 2015. Retrieved 6 December 2015.
  54. ^ "Otis House". Historic New England. Retrieved 6 December 2015.
  55. ^ a b Mitchell, Verner; Davis, Cynthia (2011). Literary Sisters: Dorothy West and Her Circle, A Biography of the Harlem Renaissance. Rutgers University Press. pp. 85, 89–90. ISBN 9780813552132.
  56. ^ 1880 Census 2011-06-07 at the Wayback Machine

Further reading edit

  • Collins, Monica (August 7, 2005). "Born Again". The Boston Globe – via Boston.com.
  • Glazer, Nathan P. (February 1, 1963). "West End Story". The New York Review of Books. review of The Urban Villagers: Group and Class in the Life of Italian-Americans by Herbert J. Gans
  • Merrill, Kate (July 26, 2018). "It Happens Here: The Unique History Of Boston's West End". WBZ-TV.
  • Seasholes, Nancy (1999). "Gaining Ground: Landmaking in Boston's West End" (PDF). Old-Time New England. Vol. 77, no. 266.
Books
  • Del Vecchio, Frank (2016). City Streets: A Memoir. CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform. ISBN 978-1534957909.
  • Fisher, Sean M. (1992). Carolyn Hughes (ed.). The Last Tenement: Confronting Community and Urban Renewal in Boston's West End. The Bostonian Society. ISBN 0934865000.
  • Gans, Herbert J. (1962). The Urban Villagers: Group and Class in the Life of Italian-Americans. Free Press. ISBN 0-02-911240-0.
  • Langone, Frederick C. (1994). The North End: Where It All Began. Boston: Post-Gazette, American Independence Edition. pp. 49–55. ASIN B000KJD760.

External links edit

  • Boston Pictorial Archive. Boston Public Library on Flickr. Images of West End, Boston.
  • The West End Community Center
  • Global Boston: The West End

west, boston, west, neighborhood, boston, massachusetts, bounded, generally, cambridge, street, south, charles, river, west, northwest, north, washington, street, north, northeast, sudbury, street, east, beacon, hill, south, north, point, across, charles, rive. The West End is a neighborhood of Boston Massachusetts bounded generally by Cambridge Street to the south the Charles River to the west and northwest North Washington Street on the north and northeast and New Sudbury Street on the east 1 Beacon Hill is to the south North Point is across the Charles River to the north Kendall Square is across the Charles River to the west and the North End is to the east A late 1950s urban renewal project razed a large Italian and Jewish enclave and displaced over 20 000 people in order to redevelop much of the West End and part of the neighboring Downtown neighborhood After that the original West End became increasingly non residential including part of Government Center formerly Scollay Square as well as much of Massachusetts General Hospital and several high rise office buildings 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 More recently however new residential buildings and spaces as well as new parks have been appearing across the West End West EndNeighborhood of Boston2007 view from the west with formerCharles Street Jail buildings at rightCountryUnited StatesStateMassachusettsCountySuffolkNeighborhood ofBostonTime zoneUTC 5 Eastern Area code617 857 Contents 1 Geography 2 Early days 2 1 West End House 3 Ethnic history 3 1 African American history 3 2 Immigration 3 2 1 Irish 3 2 2 Jewish community 4 Urban destruction 4 1 Political background 4 2 Implementation 4 3 Controversy 5 Present day 5 1 42 Lomasney Way 6 Demographics 7 Notable people 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksGeography edit nbsp West End c 1769The West End occupies the northwest portion of the Shawmut Peninsula Much of the land on which the neighborhood lies is the product of land reclamation 15 Beginning in 1807 parts of Beacon Hill were used to fill in a small bay and mill pond that separated Beacon Hill and the West End from the North End Today the neighborhood consists primarily of superblocks containing high rise residential towers The West End borders the Charles River between the Longfellow Bridge and the Charles River Dam Bridge The Charlesbank Playground runs along the bank of the river but is separated from the rest of the neighborhood by Storrow Drive a large crosstown expressway Early days edit nbsp The first house Charles Bulfinch designed for Harrison Gray Otis in the West End In the late 18th and early 19th centuries Boston s waterfront and North End were becoming overcrowded and many of the city s well off residents took the opportunity to develop the area now known as the West End At that time the area was separated from the older neighborhoods by a small bay The architect Charles Bulfinch was responsible for much of Boston s architectural character at the time and played a large part in this new development of the West End Bulfinch spent much of his early career in the 1790s designing mansions many of them in the West End and other Boston neighborhoods 16 One of the most famous examples of these was the first Harrison Gray Otis House This historic building was the first of three that Bulfinch designed for the affluent lawyer Harrison Gray Otis and is one of the few buildings that survived Urban Renewal in the West End Other West End landmarks designed by Bulfinch were the Massachusetts General Hospital s domed granite building built 1816 1825 today known as the Bulfinch Pavilion and the West End Market on the corner of Grove and Cambridge Streets Constructed in 1810 this historic market did not survive the area s redevelopment in the 1950s 17 Bulfinch s architecture of newer large brick buildings with gardens attracted many of Boston s wealthier citizens By 1810 the West End was inhabited by wealthy business men merchants and lawyers Many would soon move to the nearby Beacon Hill turning the West End into an African American community and stopping point for new immigrants 16 Another early West End building is the Charles Street Jail 1851 designed by Gridley James Fox Bryant which was renovated into the Liberty Hotel West End House edit The West End House was originally founded in 1906 as a community center for young immigrant boys The community center s founding was funded by Boston area philanthropist and investment banker James J Storrow The West End House served as a center for social and community life in Boston s West End neighborhood for over 60 years opening its doors to young immigrant boys from a myriad of different ethnic and national backgrounds The urban renewal plans of the 1950s and 1960s which saw the near complete upheaval of the original West End neighborhood negatively affected the community center s membership since much of the neighborhood s immigrant population was subsequently displaced In 1971 thanks in large part to the fundraising efforts of alumni of the original West End House the West End House was relocated to Allston Brighton and reimagined into a modernized co ed center for youth development with a focus on the arts academics athletics and leadership 18 19 20 Ethnic history editAfrican American history edit nbsp West End Adult Evening School c 1890s photo by A H Folsom Boston Public Library See also History of the United States 1789 1849 and African American history In the early 19th century the West End along with Beacon Hill s north slope became an important center of Boston s African American community The mostly affluent and white inhabitants of Beacon Hill s south slope were strongly supportive of abolitionism This encouraged middle and working class free African Americans to move into the nearby North slope and West End After the Civil War the West End continued to be an important center of African American culture It was one of the few locations in the United States at the time where African Americans had a political voice At least one black resident from the West End sat on Boston s community council during every year between 1876 and 1895 16 Immigration edit From the second half of the 19th century to the mid 20th century Boston s West End became a home to many different immigrant groups The wealthy and middle class business men were almost entirely gone but many African Americans remained in the neighborhood making it one of Boston s most diverse 21 Among the many immigrant groups contributing to this melting pot were Armenians Greeks Irish Lebanese Italians Jews Lithuanians Poles Russians Syrians Ukrainians and many other Eastern Europeans and Southern Europeans It was during this period that the neighborhood s population reached its peak at approximately 23 000 residents 22 As a result of this immigration the religious make up of the neighborhood changed dramatically Protestant churches moved away or shut down to be replaced by Catholic churches and synagogues For example the old West Church built in 1806 closed in 1892 due to lack of congregation It reopened two years later as a library to better serve the new community 17 Irish edit Irish immigrants were among the first to settle the West End After briefly passing through the North End many Irish families moved on to the West and South ends The West End soon developed a thriving Irish community Later on this community became associated with Martin Lomasney Lomasney also known as the Mahatma was the ward boss of Boston s Ward 8 located in the West End He was well known for taking care of the community that had developed there especially the Irish families nbsp Junior baseball team West End 1915Early in Lomasney s career he established the Hendricks Club in the heart of the neighborhood The Hendricks began as a social club and gathering place but later turned into the center of Lomasney s political machine It was from here that he began to provide social services charity and shelter for poor immigrants In return he was able to drum up votes and support from much of the neighborhood 16 23 Jewish community edit By the late 19th and early 20th centuries the Irish immigration had slowed and Eastern European Jews began to immigrate into the West End in large numbers Many came to escape persecution in Lithuania Russia and Poland They formed a community in the West End and became a significant part of the population by 1910 They made their home in the neighborhood constructing health centers libraries labor unions loan societies orphanages and synagogues Actor Leonard Nimoy 24 was raised in this community The new Boston Synagogue the 1919 Vilna Shul and the African Meeting House which was the home of Anshi Lubuvicher from 1900 to 1972 are the only surviving West End synagogues The Boston Synagogue is a newly merged congregation the Vilna Shul at 16 Philips Street which was outside the urban renewal demolition area is now a synagogue museum and the African American Meeting House is now a church museum Over the Vilna Shul s ark is the double hand symbol for the Kohanim the ancient Israelite priests which was the source for the Star Trek Vulcan salute The Vilna Shul also has pews salvaged from the former Twelfth Baptist Church on which once sat former African American slaves and volunteers in the 54th Massachusetts Infantry Regiment popularized by the movie Glory The Vilna was the last of the approximately seven West End synagogues to stay open closing in 1985 Urban destruction edit nbsp Green Street 1959By the 1950s Boston s West End had turned into a working poor residential area with scattered businesses with small meandering roads much like the North End According to most residents the West End was a good place to live at this time 21 The once overcrowded neighborhood was in the process of deslumming 25 and the population had dropped to around 7 500 residents 26 By the end of the 1950s over half of the neighborhood would be completely leveled to be replaced with residential high rises as part of a large scale urban renewal project Political background edit The large scale renewal of the West End was first proposed in the 1930s by Nathan Strauss Jr among others shortly after the National Housing Act of 1934 was passed 22 The neighborhood was considered a slum by wealthy Bostonians who did not live there The working class residents of the West End felt strong ties to the community and so the plan would not become politically feasible until the 1950s 27 When the John B Hynes administration came into power in 1949 city officials recognized that the federal government s Housing Act of 1949 presented the opportunity to remake parts of Boston The Boston Housing Authority BHA held responsibility for developing Boston s urban renewal plans and was designated the city s local public authority for federal funds 28 Implementation edit nbsp One of the few buildings known as The Last Tenement House to survive the urban renewal of Boston s West End 42 Lomasney Way stands in one of the Super Blocks that was created by that projectAs part of a plan to create a New Boston the Boston Housing Authority BHA and its 1957 successor the Boston Redevelopment Authority redeveloped neighborhoods throughout the 1950s and 1960s The New York Streets section of the South End was redeveloped before the West End and in the 1960s Scollay Square was leveled to create the Brutalist Government Center afterwards The motivation behind these projects was to replace neighborhoods that had been classified as slums with neighborhoods that would bring in increased tax revenues It is estimated that before the renewal project the tax revenue from the West End was approximately 546 000 a year 26 The redevelopment of the West End was officially announced on April 11 1953 Mayor Hynes and the BHA stated that the project would be beneficial to the neighborhood The West End s narrow streets were a fire hazard and many of the buildings were not up to code with approximately 80 of them substandard or marginal 22 Tenants were assured that affordable housing would be found for them and many were led to believe that they would be able to move back into the West End after the project was complete The plan involved completely leveling a 46 acre 190 000 m2 portion of the West End displacing 2 700 families to make way for 5 residential high rise complexes that would contain only 477 apartments 22 The new development was aimed towards upper middle class residents most of those displaced would not be able to afford to return In October 1957 the BRA held a hearing on the new project At least 200 West End residents attended and the consensus was overwhelmingly opposed to the plan The Save the West End committee was formed with the support of Joseph Lee to organize protests against the new development Most residents believed that the project would not be realized and so did not act until it was too late 22 Residents received their eviction letters on April 25 1958 The BRA used the Housing Act of 1949 to raze the West End to the ground Working class families were displaced and superblocks replaced the original street layout The result was a neighborhood consisting of residential high rises shopping centers and parking lots Controversy edit Population of the West End 1910 1950 Year W End Boston1910 22 656 670 5851920 18 442 748 0601930 13 454 781 1881940 12 879 770 8161950 11 731 801 444Source 29 nbsp West End project area looking northeasterly circa 1959 1964The urban renewal of the West End has been attacked by critics for its destruction of a neighborhood and its careless implementation One of the main criticisms of the project is that the neighborhood was not considered a slum by the residents and instead had a strong sense of community A later mayor of Boston Ray Flynn described the West End as a typical neighborhood and not blighted 30 The perception of the neighborhood as a slum was mostly held by wealthy outsiders and was enhanced by city policy For example the city stopped collecting garbage and cleaning the streets leaving the neighborhood a mess 22 A photographer for a local newspaper was even assigned to go to the West End overturn a trashcan and take a picture of it to create the impression of a blighted neighborhood 31 Many building owners were not adequately compensated for their property Due to city law as soon as tenement buildings were condemned by the BRA the city became the legal owner This meant that building owners had no income as rent was paid directly to the city Soon owners became desperate to sell their property at severely reduced prices 25 The justification for razing the West End has also been called into question Some say that as one of the neighborhoods that supported the former mayor it was in the political sights of the Hynes administration The entire net cost of the project was 15 8 million not including the additional loss of tax dollars for the years that the West End was vacant It is uncertain as to whether the increased tax revenue would ever be enough to justify the costs 26 The negative effect of urban renewal on the former residents of the West End has been well documented Between one quarter and one half of the former residents were relocated to substandard housing with higher rents than they were previously paying Approximately 40 also suffer from severe long term grief reactions 22 Many former residents share their memories and grief through the West Ender Newsletter published with the tag line Printed in the Spirit of the Mid Town Journal and Dedicated to Being the Collective Conscience of Urban Renewal and Eminent Domain in the City of Boston 32 The destruction of the West End community led to a strong distaste for urban renewal in Boston 21 In 2015 Boston Redevelopment Authority director Brian P Golden officially apologized for the demolition of the neighborhood 33 Present day edit nbsp 2009 view nbsp The Boston Museum of Science located in the West EndToday the West End is a mixed use commercial and residential area A few non residential areas were spared from the urban renewal of the 1950s such as Massachusetts General Hospital the Charles Street Jail and the Bulfinch Triangle a small section surrounded by Causeway Merrimac and North Washington Streets Massachusetts General Hospital and the Charles Street Jail are located in the northwest section while Government Center which was the former site of Scollay Square comprises the southern section Most of the northern section is covered by North Station and the TD Garden The character of the area prior to the urban renewal can still be seen in existing commercial and mixed use building of the Bulfinch Triangle Here there are a few pubs and restaurants that feed off the traffic traveling to and from Faneuil Hall and the Garden The residential areas that have been rebuilt are primarily upscale highrises though the neighborhood is currently making strides to re establish the close knit community that once was The West End Museum currently has a permanent exhibition outlining the history of the neighborhood and its residents while the West End Community Center hosts classes and events in addition to putting on the annual West End Children s Festival 42 Lomasney Way edit One of the survivors of the West End s redevelopment phase is 42 Lomasney Way Originally constructed in the 1870s the building survived multiple redevelopment attempts as well as two fires Called The Last Tenement due to it being the only tenement structure still located in the West End it also has been home to an associate of the Angiulo Brothers crime family 34 Demographics editAccording to the city of Boston the total population was 4 080 as of the 2010 United States Census 75 2 of residents were white 16 2 were Asian and 8 4 were some other race Housing in the West End was about 89 3 occupied 35 Notable people editJules Aarons 1921 2008 photographer remembered for his poignant portraits of Boston s West End 36 37 James George Barbadoes 1796 1841 abolitionist 38 Jennie Loitman Barron 1891 1969 suffragist lawyer and judge 39 Bernard Berenson 1865 1959 art historian 40 Lawrence Berk 1908 1995 founder of Berklee College of Music 41 Hyman Bloom 1913 2009 artist and key figure in the Boston Expressionist movement 42 Kirk Boott 1790 1837 industrialist 43 Buddy Clark 1912 1949 singer 44 John P Coburn 1811 1873 abolitionist 45 Thomas Dalton 1794 1883 abolitionist 38 George W Forbes 1864 1927 journalist librarian Eliza Ann Gardner 1831 1922 abolitionist and religious leader 46 Leonard Grimes 1815 1873 pastor abolitionist 38 Alan L Gropman b 1938 military officer and college professor 47 Primus Hall 1756 1842 civic leader 38 Lewis Hayden 1811 1889 abolitionist 38 John T Hilton 1801 1864 abolitionist 38 Robert Dwyer Joyce 1830 1883 poet 48 Joseph E Levine 1905 1987 film producer 49 Barzillai Lew 1743 1822 Revolutionary War soldier 38 Annie Londonderry Cohen Kopchovsky 1870 1947 first woman to ride around the world on a bicycle 50 Thomas Melvill 1751 1832 American patriot 51 William Cooper Nell 1816 1874 abolitionist 38 Leonard Nimoy 1931 2015 actor 52 53 John Boyle O Reilly 1844 1890 poet 48 Harrison Gray Otis 1765 1848 politician 54 Thomas Paul 1773 1831 minister abolitionist 38 Sumner Redstone 1923 2020 media magnate 49 Ruth Roman 1922 1999 actress 44 George Lewis Ruffin 1834 1886 the first African American graduate of Harvard Law School and the first black judge in the United States 55 Josephine St Pierre Ruffin 1842 1924 and her daughter Florida Ruffin Ridley 1861 1943 civil rights activists 55 John J Smith 1820 1906 abolitionist 38 Isaac H Snowden 1826 1869 physician Liberian colonist 38 David Walker 1796 1830 abolitionist 38 Daniel A Whelton 1872 1953 politician 56 See also editBowdoin Square Charles Street Jail Leverett Street Jail 1822 1851 Massachusetts General Hospital Mission Hill Boston Nashua Street Park National Theatre 1836 1863 North Station Old West Church Revere House 1847 1912 West End MuseumReferences edit Boston Neighborhoods BostonRedevelopmentAuthority org Retrieved 21 April 2016 Gilbert David A 2007 Why Dwell on a Lurid Memory Deviance and Redevelopment in Boston s Scollay Square Massachusetts Historical Review 9 103 133 JSTOR 25081214 How Eminent Domain Destroys Neighborhoods youtube com Retrieved 15 September 2019 Urban Renewal The West End Museum 16 February 2015 Historic photos of the Scollay Square transformation Boston Globe Retrieved 15 September 2019 The West End Through Time From Farmland to Subway Suburb Massachusetts Institute of Technology Retrieved 15 September 2019 Oakes Bob As BRA Seeks To Extend Urban Renewal Powers Exhibit Looks At Controversial Past WBUR com Retrieved 15 September 2019 The West End Global Boston Boston College Retrieved 15 September 2019 Strahan Derek Scollay Square Boston Lost New England Retrieved 15 September 2019 Noren Anders 1 Introduction FAH 198 05 GOVERNMENT CENTER Tufts University City Hall Plaza tclf org The Cultural Landscape Foundation Retrieved 15 September 2019 Roberge Pete 13 June 2016 THROWBACK FIGHTING FOR THE WEST END Medium com Retrieved 15 September 2019 RENEWAL IN BOSTON GOOD AND BAD New York Times 19 April 1964 Retrieved 15 September 2019 Ross Suzannah City Hall Plaza The Landscape Architect s Guide to BOSTON Retrieved 15 September 2019 Seasholes Nancy 1999 Gaining Ground Landmaking in Boston s West End PDF Old Time New England Spring Summer 24 Retrieved 9 March 2013 a b c d O Connor Thomas H The Hub Boston Past and Present Northeastern University Press Boston 2001 ISBN 1 55553 474 0 a b Whitehill Walter Muir and Kennedy Lawrence W Boston A Topographical History 3rd Ed Harvard University Press 2000 ISBN 0 674 00267 9 Club History West End House Retrieved 2022 10 31 Belfanti Sebastian 7 October 2022 West End HouseThe West End Museum Retrieved 2022 10 31 Ueda Reed 1949 West End House 1906 1981 a b c Gans Herbert J The Urban Villagers Group and Class in the Life of Italian Americans Free Press 1962 ISBN 0 02 911240 0 a b c d e f g O Connor Thomas H Building a New Boston Politics and Urban Renewal Northern University Press 1993 ISBN 1 55553 161 X O Connor Thomas H Boston A to Z Harvard University Press 2000 ISBN 978 0 674 00310 1 Benarsky M Leonard Nimoy Boston Native Dies at 83 Jamaica Plain Patch February 27 2015 11 01am a b Jacobs Jane The Death and Life of Great American Cities page 287 Random House Inc NY 1961 ISBN 0 679 74195 X a b c Anderson Martin The Federal Bulldozer A Critical Analysis of Urban Renewal 1949 1962 The MIT Press 1964 Weaver Robert C Dilemmas of Urban America Harvard University Press 1966 ISBN 0 674 20700 9 O Connor Thomas H Building a New Boston Politics and Urban Renewal Northern University Press 1993 pp 126 27 Simonian Kane Urban Redevelopment Division Boston Housing Authority The West End Project Report A Redevelopment Study Boston March 1953 Accessed 24 July 2014 Jones Michael The Slaughter of Cities Urban Renewal and Ethnic Cleansing p 524 St Augustine s Press South Bend IN 2004 ISBN 1 58731 775 3 Jones Michael The Slaughter of Cities Urban Renewal and Ethnic Cleansing p 175 St Augustine s Press South Bend IN 2004 ISBN 1 58731 775 3 Belmont Vivienne West End Residents Struggle to Raise Neighborhood s Profile Old Loyalties Survive Boston City in Transition BRA director offers formal apology for West End s demolition The Boston Globe BostonGlobe com Retrieved 2019 09 15 Moskowitz Eric 16 August 2015 Boston s last tenement an island awash in modernity Boston Globe Retrieved 29 January 2016 West End Neighborhood 2010 Census cityofboston gov Gibran Jean 2014 Love Made Visible Scenes from a Mostly Happy Marriage Interlink Publishing p 213 ISBN 9781623710521 Retrieved 6 December 2015 About Jules Aarons Jules Aarons Archived from the original on 2017 06 12 Retrieved 2016 01 30 a b c d e f g h i j k l Jacobs Donald M ed 1993 Appendix B Black Persons of Prominence Who Resided in Boston s West End Section Prior to the Civil War Courage and Conscience Black amp White Abolitionists in Boston Indiana University Press p 226 ISBN 0 253 20793 2 Ross Michael A 2003 The Jewish Friendship Trail Guidebook BostonWalks pp 86 87 ISBN 9780970082510 Retrieved 6 December 2015 Morgenroth Lynda 2007 Boston Firsts Beacon Press p 127 ISBN 9780807071328 Retrieved 6 December 2015 Bass Warner Sam 2001 Greater Boston Adapting Regional Traditions to the Present University of Pennsylvania Press p 120 ISBN 9780812217698 Retrieved 6 December 2015 Bookbinder Judith 2005 Boston Modern Figurative Expressionism as Alternative Modernism Durham NH University of New Hampshire Press pp 58 60 ISBN 9781584654889 Alan Emmet 1997 Radishes and orchids the Boott s garden in Boston So Fine a Prospect Historic New England Gardens Hanover NH University Press of New England ISBN 9780874517743 a b Marcus Jonathan P 2003 Our Boston MBI p 50 ISBN 9781610604697 Cromwell Adelaide M 1994 The Other Brahmins Boston s Black Upper Class University of Arkansas Press p 53 ISBN 9781610752930 Retrieved 6 December 2015 Smith Jessie Carney 1996 Notable Black American Women VNR AG p 239 ISBN 9780810391772 Retrieved 8 December 2015 Thanks for keeping the West End together The West Ender Somerville Massachusetts March 2010 p 3 a b O Connor Thomas H 1998 Boston Catholics A History of the Church and Its People UPNE p 143 ISBN 9781555533595 Retrieved 6 December 2015 a b Important People The West End Museum Retrieved 8 December 2015 Vargo Dina 2015 Wild Women of Boston Mettle and Moxie in the Hub Arcadia Publishing p 73 ISBN 9781625853080 Retrieved 8 December 2015 Descriptive catalogue of a map of the town of Boston in 1775 Boston 1866 Sammarco Anthony Mitchell 1998 Boston s West End Charleston SC Arcadia Publishing p 85 ISBN 0 7524 1257 4 LCCN 98087140 OCLC 40670283 Remembering Leonard Nimoy A Look Back at His Time in Boston s West End BDCWire 27 February 2015 Archived from the original on 1 March 2015 Retrieved 6 December 2015 Otis House Historic New England Retrieved 6 December 2015 a b Mitchell Verner Davis Cynthia 2011 Literary Sisters Dorothy West and Her Circle A Biography of the Harlem Renaissance Rutgers University Press pp 85 89 90 ISBN 9780813552132 1880 Census Archived 2011 06 07 at the Wayback MachineFurther reading editCollins Monica August 7 2005 Born Again The Boston Globe via Boston com Glazer Nathan P February 1 1963 West End Story The New York Review of Books review of The Urban Villagers Group and Class in the Life of Italian Americans by Herbert J Gans Merrill Kate July 26 2018 It Happens Here The Unique History Of Boston s West End WBZ TV Seasholes Nancy 1999 Gaining Ground Landmaking in Boston s West End PDF Old Time New England Vol 77 no 266 BooksDel Vecchio Frank 2016 City Streets A Memoir CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform ISBN 978 1534957909 Fisher Sean M 1992 Carolyn Hughes ed The Last Tenement Confronting Community and Urban Renewal in Boston s West End The Bostonian Society ISBN 0934865000 Gans Herbert J 1962 The Urban Villagers Group and Class in the Life of Italian Americans Free Press ISBN 0 02 911240 0 Langone Frederick C 1994 The North End Where It All Began Boston Post Gazette American Independence Edition pp 49 55 ASIN B000KJD760 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to West End Boston category Boston Pictorial Archive Boston Public Library on Flickr Images of West End Boston The West End Community Center Global Boston The West End Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title West End Boston amp oldid 1160914752, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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