Excerpted from the 1920's memories, "Those Were The Days," by Henry Keaveney, first President of the Jamaica Plain Historical Society.
Read MoreMary Glynn recounts her memories of Green Street in the 1920s. With the construction of the Boston Elevated Railway to Forest Hills with a stop at Green Street and Woolsey Square, and the surface cars out of Park and Dudley Streets, Green Street flourished as a commercial center for the at home residents and for commuters as well.
Read MoreThe development history of Green Street provides a unique window through which to observe the patterns of change that took place in the Jamaica Plain community over the last three quarters of the nineteenth century.
Read MoreIn 1975, the Boston Children’s Museum presented an exhibit and fair on Centre Street in Jamaica Plain. This book documents that event.
Read MoreOut in Jamaica Plain is a most peculiar and interesting house. It is dodecagonal in shape — or, in other words, has 12 sides. The odd dwelling is located at 17 Cranston St. Cranston St., formerly known as Terrace Ave., is a short street, the only exits of which are onto Sheridan St.
Read MoreThe damage to the building will be from $25,000 to $30,000. The building was erected by the old town of West Roxbury as a Town Hall in 1868. It became City property when the town became part of the city. It was named for Nelson Curtis, the old-time contractor. He gave the land on which the building stands to the town, of which he was a Selectman.
Read MoreIn 1640 the colonial legislature granted to Captain Joseph Weld, for his service in the Indian Pequot War, 278 acres in what was then the town of Roxbury, now mostly Jamaica Plain. The homestead included much of today’s Arnold Arboretum.
Read MoreBromley Park today is one half of the twenty-three acre public housing development in the north end of Jamaica Plain known as Bromley Heath.
Read MoreThe twentieth century was an epoch of vast experimentation and change. No where can this be seen more than in the design and construction of low-cost housing. The architectural heritage of Jamaica Plain has remarkable examples of the three phases in housing designed and built to be affordable to the working man.
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