BEACON HILL, BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS

Cutting down Beacon Hill, about 1800; a view from the north toward the Massachusetts State House.

:''Other places are also named Beacon Hill.''
'Beacon Hill' is a neighborhood of Boston, Massachusetts, covering approximately one square mile (2.6 km²) and home to about 10,000 people. It is a wealthy neighborhood of Federal-style rowhouses, with some of the highest property values in the United States. It is known for its narrow streets, brick sidewalks, and gas-lit streets.
Like many similarly named areas, the neighborhood is named for the location of a former beacon atop the highest point in central Boston, once located just behind the current site of the Massachusetts State House. The hill, and two other nearby hills, were substantially reduced in height to allow the development of housing in the area and to create land by filling part of the Back Bay at the foot of the hill.
The Beacon Hill area is located just north of the Boston Common and the Boston Public Garden and is generally bounded by Beacon Street on the south, Somerset Street on the east, Cambridge Street to the north and Storrow Drive along the riverfront of the Charles River Esplanade to the west. The block bounded by Beacon, Tremont and Park Streets is included as well, as is the Boston Common itself. The level section of the neighborhood west of Charles Street, on landfill, is known locally as the "Flat of the Hill."
The entire hill was once owned by William Blaxton, the first settler of Boston from 1625 to 1635, who eventually sold his land to the Puritans. The south slope of Beacon Hill facing the Common was the socially desirable side in the 19th century. Black Beacon Hill was on the north slope. The two Hills were largely united on the subject of Abolition. Beacon Hill was one of the staunchest centers of the anti-slavery movement in the Antebellum era.
Until a major urban renewal project of the late 1950s, the red-light district of Scollay Square flourished just to the east of Beacon Hill, as did the West End neighborhood to the north.
Because the Massachusetts State House is in a prominent location at the top of the hill, the term "Beacon Hill" is also often used as a metonym in the local news media to refer to the state government or the legislature.
Beacon Hill was designated a National Historic Landmark on December 19, 1962.
2nd Harrison Gray Otis House, 85 Mount Vernon Street.


Contents
Notable residents
Sites of interest
Notable addresses in Beacon Hill
Beacon Street
Bowdoin Street
Brimmer Street
Cambridge Street
Charles Street
Chestnut Street
Grove Street
Irving Street
Joy Street
Mount Vernon Street
Phillips Street
Pinckney Street
Other residents
''Beacon Hill'', the television series
See also
Books
External links

Notable residents


Houses on Louisburg Square.

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

Louisa May Alcott, 10 Louisburg Square

William Blaxton, original owner of Beacon Hill

Edwin Booth, 29A Chestnut St.

Charles Bulfinch

John Singleton Copley

Robert Frost, 88 Mount Vernon St., 1941

John Hancock

Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr.

Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr.

Julia Ward Howe

John Kerry

Henry Cabot Lodge

James Russell Lowell

Robert Lowell

Harrison Gray Otis

Sylvia Plath

William Prescott

David Lee Roth

Anne Sexton

Carly Simon

Charles Sumner

Daniel Webster

Jack Welch

Teresa Heinz

Sites of interest


Acorn Street, built in the late 1820s.

Sites of interest in Beacon Hill include:

Massachusetts State House (Beacon Street): Home of the state's government

★ The Unitarian Universalist Association: Headquarters of the international, liberal religious denomination, next door to the Massachusetts State House

Louisburg Square

★ Nearby Acorn Street, a narrow lane paved with cobblestones, often mentioned as the most picturesque (or the most frequently photographed) street in the United States.

★ Mt. Vernon Street: "The finest address in all America"

★ Bull and Finch Bar (Beacon Street): Source of inspiration and exterior shots for the ''Cheers'' television show.

Charles Street Meeting House

The Club of Odd Volumes (Mount Vernon Street): Bibliophiles club, library, and archive

Suffolk University

Suffolk University Law School

Park Street Church

★ The route taken by the fictional Mrs. Mallard and her children, depicted in ''Make Way for Ducklings,'' a book for children by Robert McCloskey. The story is commemorated every year in May by a parade through Beacon Hill to the Boston Public Garden.

Robert Gould Shaw and 54th Massachusetts Regiment Memorial: Intersection of Beacon Street and Park Street, opposite the Massachusetts State House

Museum of African American History, New England’s largest museum dedicated to preserving, conserving and interpreting the contributions of African Americans, located at the African Meeting House.

Nichols House Museum, a historic 1804 townhouse

Harrison Gray Otis House, 1796. The Otis House also houses Historic New England's headquarters.

Notable addresses in Beacon Hill


Beacon Street


★ 10 1/2 Beacon Street - Boston Athenæum

★ 14 Beacon Street - Congregational House, site of the Congregational Library and City Mission Society

★ 22 Beacon Street - built in 1804 by Charles Bulfinch; now houses the Beacon Hill studio for Fox 25 News (WFXT) with a strategic rooftop camera position

★ 25 Beacon Street - headquarters of the Unitarian Universalist Association, an international liberal religious denomination

★ 33 Beacon Street - resident George Parkman

★ 34 1/2 Beacon Street - erstwhile headquarters of Family Service of Greater Boston, a private, nonprofit social service agency founded in 1835

★ 39-40 Beacon Street - Henry Wadsworth Longfellow courted and married Fanny Appleton

★ 42-43 Beacon Street - painter John Singleton Copley had a house on this site, as did David Sears II, whose house is now the home of the Somerset Club

★ 45 Beacon Street - 3rd Harrison Gray Otis house, now American Meteorological Society

★ 54-55 Beacon Street - resident William Prescott had William Makepeace Thackeray as houseguest
Bowdoin Street


★ 35 Bowdoin Street - Church of Saint John the Evangelist

★ 122 Bowdoin Street - nominal resident, John Fitzgerald Kennedy (registered voting address)
Brimmer Street


★ 30 Brimmer Street - Church of the Advent (official site)

★ 44 Brimmer Street - resident Samuel Eliot Morison
Cambridge Street


Massachusetts General Hospital - Bulfinch Pavilion and Ether Dome

★ 100 Cambridge Street, Upper Plaza - Garden of Peace

★ 131 Cambridge Street - Old West Church

★ 141 Cambridge Street - 1st Harrison Gray Otis house, architect Charles Bulfinch
Charles Street


★ 44A Charles Street - Mary Sullivan, last victim of the Boston Strangler, murdered here
Chestnut Street


★ 6 Chestnut Street - Beacon Hill Friends House

★ 13, 15, 17 Chestnut Street - architect Charles Bulfinch

★ 18 Chestnut Street - birthplace of poet Robert Lowell

★ 50 Chestnut Street - resident Francis Parkman, historian

★ 57A Chestnut Street - Harvard Musical Association
Grove Street


★ 28 Grove Street - Resident Rev. Leonard A. Grimes, prominent black clergyman associated with the Underground Railroad and Abolitionist movement. Noted for being one of the men who bought the freedom of Anthony Burns after his arrest.
Irving Street


★ 58 Irving Street - Birthplace of Charles Sumner, abolitionist, U.S. Senator.
Joy Street


★ 46 Joy Street - African Meeting House

★ 67 Joy Street - Resident Rebecca Lee Crumpler, prominent physician, considered to be the first black woman to receive a medical degree in the U.S.
=== Louisburg Square ===

★ 4 Louisburg Square - resident William Dean Howells while editor of the Atlantic Monthly

★ 10 Louisburg Square - residents Bronson Alcott and Louisa May Alcott and family

★ 19 Louisburg Square - residents John Kerry and Teresa Heinz Kerry

★ 20 Louisburg Square - singer Jenny Lind married Otto Goldschmidt here
Mount Vernon Street


★ 32 Mount Vernon Street - residents Dr. Samuel Gridley Howe and his wife Julia Ward Howe

★ 41 Mount Vernon Street - home of Beacon Press, a department of the Unitarian Universalist Association, that published the Senator Mike Gravel edition of the Pentagon Papers in 1971

★ 45-47 Mount Vernon Street - site of Portia School of Law, founded for and by women in 1908

★ 51-57 Mount Vernon Street - architect Charles Bulfinch

★ 57 Mount Vernon Street - residents Daniel Webster and later Charles Francis Adams

★ 72 Mount Vernon Street - erstwhile site of the Boston University School of Theology

★ 77 Mount Vernon Street - House of the Club of Odd Volumes

★ 85 Mount Vernon Street - 2nd Harrison Gray Otis house, architect Charles Bulfinch

87 Mount Vernon Street - architect Charles Bulfinch

★ 127 Mount Vernon Street - Home of and Spenser for Hire, former Boston Fire Department station.
Phillips Street


★ 2 Phillips Street - Resident John Coburn

★ 18 Phillips Street - Vilna Shul, now the Boston Center For Jewish Heritage

★ 41 Phillips Street - Erstwhile site of the Northeast Institute of Industrial Technology

★ 66 Phillips Street - Hayden House, associated with the Abolitionist movement and the Underground Railroad

★ 83 Phillips Street - Resident John Sweat Rock, prominent black dentist, attorney, and abolitionist activist
Pinckney Street


★ 15 Pinckney Street - a site of Elizabeth Peabody's Kindergarten
Other residents


Writers Brad Meltzer and Judd Winick lived in a tiny apartment in Beacon Hill in 1993 before they achieved success. While living there, Winick developed his first successful comic strip and Meltzer worked at ''Games Magazine'' by day while working on his first novel at night.

''Beacon Hill'', the television series


In 1975, a short-lived dramatic television series was called ''Beacon Hill'' and was shown on CBS. The show focused on the fictitious Lassiter family and their Irish servants who lived on Louisburg Square. It was considered to be an Americanized version of the popular series, ''Upstairs, Downstairs'', of which the premise was almost the same. The wealthy family lived upstairs, and the servants ruled belowstairs.
The show starred Stephen Elliott as Ben Lassiter, who worked as the "Gray eminence" at Boston City Hall; Linda Purl as his granddaughter, Betsy Bullock; Beatrice Straight as their head housemaid, Mrs. Emmeline Hacker (She was married to the family butler, Arthur Hacker); Maeve McGuire as daughter, Maude Lassiter Palmer; Edward Herrman played Maude's husband; Kathryn Walker as Fawn Lassiter, the maverick and artistic daughter, Michael Nouri as Giorgio Bellonci, Fawn's music teacher; DeAnn Mears as Emily Lassiter Bullock, Betsy's more reserved mother; Kitty Winn as Rosamond Lassiter, the plain-jane daughter, who was a whiz at the family business; David Dukes as their only son, Robert Lassiter; Holland Taylor as Marilyn Gardiner, Mrs. Lassiter's personal secretary; and Nancy Marchand as the mother, Mary Lassiter. The premiere episode was a ratings success, but the ratings dropped drastically as the show went along, and was soon after cancelled.

See also



Boston By Foot for guided architectural tours

Cambridge Railroad

Books



★ ''Beacon Hill: The Life & Times of a Neighborhood,'' Moying Li-Marcus, 2002. ISBN 1-55553-543-7

★ ''Beacon Hill: A Walking Tour,'' A. McVoy McIntyre, 1975. ISBN 0-316-55600-9

★ ''Joy Street'' Frances Parkinson Keyes, 1950, fiction.

External links



Beacon Hill Online

Black Beacon Hill

Vilna Shul

Back Bay - Beacon Hill 2000 Census of Population and Housing

Beacon Hill Quick-Walk
'History'

The Book of Boston, 1916 by Robert Shackleton, text and photos online

Colonial Society discussion of the development of Beacon Hill.

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