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5–7 Broad Street is a historical building in Boston, Massachusetts. Designed by Boston architect Charles Bulfinch in 1805, it is one of the few remaining commercial Federal period structures within the Central Business District of Boston.
Photo of Esplanade, rear of Beacon Street, Boston, Massachusetts, c. 1900-1920; Historic American Engineering Record. View of pier-cap and pedestal at Pier 13, west side, Boston Embankment and pedestrian stairway in background - Harvard Bridge, Spanning Charles River at Massachusetts Avenue, Boston, Suffolk County, Massachusetts, 20th century
Flyer advertising Too Many Girls opening at the Shubert Theatre (Boston, Mass.) (1939) Program (May 11-23, 1942) for All's Fair, the pre-Broadway title for By Jupiter, at the Shubert Theatre (Boston, Mass.) Bostonian Society: Photo of 263-265 Tremont Street, c. 1943; Photo of interior of Shubert Theater, c. 1935-50
Massachusetts General Hospital (Mass General or MGH) is a teaching hospital located in the West End neighborhood of Boston, Massachusetts. [4] It is the original and largest clinical education and research facility of Harvard Medical School/Harvard University, and houses the world's largest hospital-based research program with an annual research budget of more than $1.2 billion in 2021. [5]
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 ...
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Cunard Building (1901), 122–130 State Street [4] Employees Liability Building (1904), 33 Broad Street; Exchange Club Building (1893), 22 Batterymarch Street; Farlow Building (1895), 92 State Street [5] Fidelity Building (1915), 144–148 State Street; Flour and Grain Exchange Building, aka Boston Chamber of Commerce (1892), 177 Milk Street
Enjoy a classic game of Hearts and watch out for the Queen of Spades!