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Brattle Street (Boston)

Former street in Boston from 1694 to 1962
This article is about a former street in Boston. For the existing, historic street in Cambridge, see Brattle Street (Cambridge, Massachusetts).
Brattle Street in Boston (1855)

Brattle Street, which existed from 1694 to 1962, was a street in Boston, Massachusetts, located on the current site of City Hall Plaza, at Government Center.[1] [2] [3]

History

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Around 1853, former Virginia slave Anthony Burns worked for "Coffin Pitts, clothing dealer, no.36 Brattle Street."[4] Nearby, abolitionist John P. Coburn managed a clothing store at 20 Brattle Street.[5] In 1850, Joshua Bowen Smith, a black abolitionist and member of Boston's Vigilance Committee, operated a catering business at 16 Brattle Street."[6]

In 1921, the first Radio Shack store opened at 46 Brattle Street. John Adams' Boston house and his law practice was on this street. During the bull dozing of Scolley Square, his house was not saved.

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ Boston (Mass.). Street laying-out Dept. (1910), A record of the streets, alleys, places, etc. in the city of Boston (2nd ed.), Boston: City of Boston Printing Dept., OL 16574538M
  2. ^ Walter Muir Whitehill (1968), Boston: a topographical history (2nd ed.), Cambridge, Massachusetts: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, ISBN 0674079507, OL 21601121M, 0674079507
  3. ^ David Kruh (1999), Always something doing: Boston's infamous Scollay Square (Rev. ed.), Boston: Northeastern University Press, ISBN 1555534104, 1555534104
  4. ^ Boston slave riot, and trial of Anthony Burns: Containing the report of the Faneuil Hall meeting, the murder of Batchelder, Theodore Parker's Lesson for the day, speeches of counsel on both sides, corrected by themselves, a verbatim report of Judge Loring's decision, and detailed account of the embarkation, Boston: Fetridge and Company, 1854, OL 6948460M
  5. ^ Snodgrass, Mary Ellen (2015). "Coburn, John P.". The Underground Railroad: An Encyclopedia of People, Places, and Operations. Routledge. p. 123. ISBN 9781317454168.
  6. ^ "Universalist General Reform Association," Christian Freeman and Family Advertiser, June 7, 1850, page 2
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Boston African American community prior to the Civil War
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  • Italics denote streets and squares that no longer exist.
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Neighborhoods in Boston
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42°21′37.08′′N 71°3′28.44′′W / 42.3603000°N 71.0579000°W / 42.3603000; -71.0579000

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