The Chester Harding House , a National Historic Landmark occupied by portrait painter Chester Harding from 1826–1830, now houses the Boston Bar Association .
The List of notable addresses in Beacon Hill, Boston contains information, by street, of significant buildings and the people who lived in the community. Many of the street names have changed. For instance, Phillips street was once called Southack Street.
Map of Beacon Hill from 1842
Anderson Street – West Centre Street
Bowdoin Street – Middlecott Street
Bulfinch Street
Court Street – Prison Lane, then Queen Street
Howard – Southack's Court (after Capt. Cyprian Southack )
Irving Street – Butolph Street
Joy Street
Clapboard Street (between Cambridge and Myrtle Streets in 1735)
Belknap Lane (between Myrtle and Mount Vernon Streets)
Mt. Vernon Street – Sumner
Phillips Street – Southack Street (after Capt. Cyprian Southack)
Revere Street – May Street
Smith Court – May's Court
State Street – King Street
Tremont – Common (NE of School Street where Beacon Street ends)
West Cedar Street – George Street[ 1]
Notable addresses in Beacon Hill [ edit ]
Beacon Street, 1887 Beacon Street, 2010
Beacon Street is a main thoroughfare from the Tremont Street and School Street intersection to Charles Street . Hancock Manor was located at 30 Beacon Street; Its land is now part of the grounds of the Massachusetts State House .
One Beacon Street – An eponymous office tower at the corner of Tremont Street; the 14th-tallest building in the city
8 Beacon Street – late 19th- and early 20th-century home of the Osgood Family: Dr. Osgood, Margaret Osgood and daughters Gretchen and Mary
10½ Beacon Street – Boston Athenæum
14 Beacon Street – Congregational House , site of the Congregational Library and City Mission Society
16 Beacon Street – Chester Harding House , now home to the Boston Bar Association , was home to the famous portrait painter Chester Harding from 1826–1830
22 Beacon Street – Amory-Ticknor House , built in 1804 by Charles Bulfinch ; used to house the Beacon Hill studio for Fox 25 News (WFXT) , with a strategic rooftop camera position
24 Beacon Street – Massachusetts State House
25 Beacon Street – former headquarters of the Unitarian Universalist Association , an international liberal religious denomination , which is now located at 24 Farnsworth Street
33 Beacon Street – resident George Parkman ; building designed by Cornelius Coolidge [ 2] [ 3]
34½ 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 – Third Harrison Gray Otis House , now American Meteorological Society
57 Beacon Street - Thomas J. Eckley house, Ephraim Marsh, architect (1819). Notable as town residence of George Nixon Black, Jr., also owner of Kragsyde , iconic Shingle Style cottage and Woodlawn Museum , his Asher Benjamin ancestral home in Maine. Black was a major benefactor of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston .
54–55 Beacon Street – resident William H. Prescott had William Makepeace Thackeray as a houseguest. The pair of buildings is now the Headquarters House
84 Beacon Street – Cheers Beacon Hill. Formerly known as the Bull & Finch Pub , this pub was the inspiration for the classic television show, Cheers , and was shown during the opening credits of the sitcom.
Bowdoin Street, 2010
Located near the West End , Bowdoin Street extends from the top of Beacon Street , down Beacon Hill to Cambridge Street
View of downtown from Massachusetts General Hospital , Cambridge Street, Beacon Hill
Running north to south, Charles Street runs through the middle of Boston.
Chestnut 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.
Joy Street, c. 19th century
Named for the Siege of Louisbourg , the square is a private park and the name of the area around it.
Mount Vernon Street [ edit ]
Second Harrison Gray Otis House , 85 Mount Vernon Street
A door knocker in Beacon Hill, Boston
5 Mount Vernon Street – former site of Dr. Park 's "Boston Lyceum for the Education of Young Ladies"[ 4]
8 Mount Vernon Street – home of Fiske Warren and Gretchen Osgood Warren
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, which is now located at 24 Farnsworth Street. Former home of the Watch and Ward Society [ 5] [ 6]
45–47 Mount Vernon Street – site of Portia School of Law , founded for women in 1908
51–57 Mount Vernon Street – architect Charles Bulfinch
55 Mount Vernon Street – home of Rose Standish Nichols , now the Nichols House Museum[ 7]
57 Mount Vernon Street – residents Daniel Webster and later Charles Francis Adams
67 Mount Vernon Street – home of Samuel Dennis and Susan Cornelia Warren, paper manufacturer and one time president of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
72 Mount Vernon Street – site of the Boston University School of Theology
76 Mount Vernon Street – home of Margaret Deland
77 Mount Vernon Street – resident Sarah Wyman Whitman and later the clubhouse of the Club of Odd Volumes
85 Mount Vernon Street – Second Harrison Gray Otis House , architect Charles Bulfinch
87 Mount Vernon Street – Colonial Society of Massachusetts, architect Charles Bulfinch [ 8]
127 Mount Vernon Street – home of The Real World: Boston and Spenser: For Hire , former Boston Fire Department station
109 Myrtle Street – resident Lysander Spooner , an American individualist anarchist.
Park Street is a small but notable road.
Formerly known as Southack Court, after the owner Cyprian Southack
William C. Nell House
Tremont Street is a main thoroughfare; Its name evolved from trimount including Beacon Hill, Mount Vernon and Pemberton Hill. Beacon Theatre was once located at 47–53 Tremont Street.
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.
^ Boston Street Laying-Out Department (1910). A record of the streets, alleys, places, etc. in the city of Boston .
^ a b Michael and Susan Southworth (2008). AIA guide to Boston (3rd ed.). Guilford, CT: Globe Pequot. ISBN 9780762743377 .
^ "Our Flag over the Common" . Northeastern Alumni Magazine . 32 (3). Northeastern University: 56–60 (of pdf). Spring 2007. Retrieved April 27, 2013 .[permanent dead link ]
^ Boston Directory . John Norman. 1823.
^ Miller, Neil (2010). Banned in Boston: The Watch and Ward Society's Crusade against Books, Burlesque, and the Social Evil . Beacon Press. ISBN 978-0-8070-5112-2 .
^ "Photograph of 41 Mt. Vernon Street, April 6, 1947" . Archived from the original on July 14, 2014. Retrieved July 8, 2014 – via Bostonian Society.
^ "Welcome" . Nichols House Museum. Retrieved April 27, 2013 .
^ Elton W. Hall. "The Colonial Society's House: 87 Mount Vernon Street, Boston" . Colonial Society of Massachusetts. Archived from the original on April 15, 2012. Retrieved April 29, 2012 .
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Macon Bolling Allen (lawyer, judge)
William G. Allen (college professor)
Crispus Attucks (killed during Boston Massacre )
Leonard Black (minister, slave memoirist)
John P. Coburn (abolitionist, soldier)
Ellen and William Craft (slave memoirists, abolitionists)
Rebecca Lee Crumpler (physician)
Lucy Lew Dalton (abolitionist)
Thomas Dalton (abolitionist)
Hosea Easton (abolitionist, minister)
Moses Grandy (abolitionist, slave memoirist)
Leonard Grimes (abolitionist, minister)
Primus Hall (abolitionist, Rev. War soldier)
Prince Hall (freemason, abolitionist)
Lewis Hayden (abolitionist, politician)
John T. Hilton (abolitionist, author, businessman)
Thomas James (minister)
Barzillai Lew (Rev. War soldier)
George Latimer (escaped slave)
Walker Lewis (abolitionist)
George Middleton (1735–1815) (Rev. War soldier, Freemason, activist)
Robert Morris (lawyer, abolitionist, judge)
William Cooper Nell (abolitionist, writer)
Susan Paul (teacher, abolitionist, author)
Thomas Paul (minister)
John Swett Rock (dentist, doctor, lawyer, abolitionist)
John Brown Russwurm (college grad., teacher)
John J. Smith (abolitionist, politician)
Maria W. Stewart (abolitionist, public speaker, journalist)
Baron Stow (minister)
Samuel Snowden (minister, abolitionist)
Edward G. Walker (abolitionist, lawyer, politician, son of David Walker)
David Walker (abolitionist, father of Edward G. Walker)
Phillis Wheatley (poet, author)
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