Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Tremont Street begins at Government Center in Boston's city center as a continuation of Cambridge Street, and forms the eastern edge of Boston Common. Continuing in a roughly southwesterly direction, it passes through Boston's Theater District, crosses the Massachusetts Turnpike , and becomes a broad boulevard in the South End neighborhood.
The R. H. Stearns Building is an 11-story residence building (with shops at ground level) at 140 Tremont Street in Boston.It was built in 1909 for the businessman R. H. Stearns and his company and was the home of the R. H. Stearns and Company department store [2] until the company's demise in 1977.
Tremont Theatre, Boston, c. 1910s 1918 cover art from Tremont Theatre The Tremont Theatre (est. 1889) was a playhouse in Boston , Massachusetts , in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Henry E. Abbey and John B. Schoeffel [ 1 ] established the enterprise [ 2 ] and oversaw construction of its building [ 3 ] at no.176 Tremont Street in the ...
The Fenway High School is a Boston public pilot school. This school is located at 67 Alleghany St, Boston, MA 02120. Founded in 1983, [43] Fenway became one of Boston's six original pilot schools in 1994. It is devoted to providing a high-quality, personalized education to students from all over the city of Boston.
Tremont Row (1830s-1920s) in Boston, Massachusetts, was a short street that flourished in the 19th and early-20th centuries. It was located near the intersection of Court , Tremont , and Cambridge streets, in today's Government Center area. [ 1 ]
Prior to 1862, the Methodist Episcopal congregation had occupied the Hedding Church on Pelham Street in Boston for some 20 years. [3] The congregation's new church building, located at 740 Tremont Street, "is a large, Gothic, natural-quarry stone building, with two spires, respectively 150 feet and 100 feet high." [1]
The Fabyan building at 26-30 West Street was designed by Coolidge, Shepley, Bulfinch & Abbott, and built in 1926. The Schraffts Building at 16-24 West Street was built in 1922, and housed a flagship candy store and restaurant for more than fifty years. [2] The West Street District was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1980. [1]
Columbus Avenue (est.1860) in Boston, Massachusetts, [1] runs from Park Square to just south of Melnea Cass Boulevard, as well as from Tremont Street to Walnut Avenue and Seaver Street, where it continues as Seaver Street to Blue Hill Avenue and to Erie Street, where it ends. [2] It intersects the South End and Roxbury neighborhoods.