Park Street Church photo

The Park Street Congregational Church replaced the Town granary on the Common’s eastern corner in 1809. Peter Banner designed this brick Georgian structure with a 217-foot steeple, inspired by the latest London architecture.

Granary Burying Ground photo

Granary Burying Ground, Boston, MA

The Old Granary Granary contains the earliest casualties of rebellion.  Victims of the Boston Massacre and the Battle of Bunker Hill lie here, alongside Paul Revere, John Hancock, Samuel Adams and James Otis.

Old South Meeting House – aerial photo 1860

First successful aerial photograph in the US, by J. W. Black, Oct 13, 1860. Ambrotype print from a wet-plate negative. Old South Meeting House is at the middle left.  More detail on this image, and my “same view” photograph made Oct 13, 2012 in the next post.  Original print at Boston Public Library

Latin School marker photo

Latin School site, School St., Boston, MA Freedom Trail

In 1635, Boston established the first “public” Latin or Grammar School in America, resolving that Philemon Purmont, a shopkeeper, “be entreated to become a schoolmaster for the teaching and nourtering of the children with us.” The original Latin School was demolished in 1844 to make way for City Hall. This plaque decorates the sidewalk nearby.

Copps Hill Burying Ground photo

Copps Hill tombstoneTombstone of William Hough, 1714.  Copp’s Hill, the Town’s second burying ground, was established in 1659 on a hill named for shoemaker William Copp.  The site soon rivaled the Common as a public venue, hosting such spectacles as the 1704 execution of seven pirates.

Boston Common photo

Brewer Fountain, Boston Common, Boston, MABritish troops bivouacked on the Boston Common from 1758 to 1776, when George Washington forced them out, demolished their trenches, and sent them packing with loyalists to Nova Scotia. Cast in Paris in 1868, the Fountain was donated by Gardner Brewer and named for him. The fountain was restored in 2009-2010.

Park Street Church photo

Park Street ChurchThe Park Street Congregational Church replaced the Town granary on the Common’s eastern corner in 1809.  Peter Banner designed this brick Georgian structure with a 217-foot steeple, inspired by the latest London architecture.