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Boston, Massachusetts, site of Puritan colony and beginning of Revolutionary War; digital copy of slide. Complete indexed photo collection at WorldHistoryPics.com.

Dusk at the Boston Public Garden. It is said that this is the world's smallest suspension bridge, however, I believe it was originally such, but later reworked so no longer can 'officially' be called a 'suspension' bridge.

Zakim Bridge, Boston

Boston Marathon 2009 at the halfway point coming up to the intersection of Route 16 and 128.

Title: Bob Dee of the Boston Patriots hands Mayor John F. Collins an autographed football while another unidentified man watches

Creator: John Lane

Date: circa 1960-1968

Source: Mayor John F. Collins records, Collection #0244.001

File name: 244001_1124

Rights: Copyright status not evaluated

Citation: Mayor John F. Collins records, Collection #0244.001, City of Boston Archives, Boston

(Boston, MA 11/5/22) Mayor Michelle Wu attends the Veterans Day Parade. (Mayor’s Office Photo by John Wilcox)

View On White

View On Black

 

Check it out big on white or black

 

First attempt of a panoramic with CS4

Think it came out pretty good

Unfortunately it comes out so small on flickr

   

Boston Skyline from Memorial Drive

  

BOSTON (April 19, 2014) - Cardinal Seán led the solemn celebration of the Easter Vigil at the Cathedral of the Holy Cross on Saturday evening, including the sacraments of initiation and reception into full communion with the Church for several catechumens.

 

(Photo credit: George Martell/The Pilot Media Group) All photos available under a Creative Commons license, Share-Alike, Attribution-required.

Boston rode the Slip-n-slide down the hill. He looked like he had a great time.

Governor Charlie Baker, Lt. Governor Karyn Polito, Massachusetts Transportation Secretary and CEO Stephanie Pollack, MBTA General Manager Steve Poftak and others celebrate the successful completion of accelerated work on the Green Line C and E branches this summer with a tour of completed work at the Museum of Fine Arts Station in Boston on Sept. 1, 2020. Governor Baker also provided a COVID-19 testing update. Stay informed about COVID-19 by visiting mass.gov/covid19, calling 2-1-1 or texting COVIDMA (COVIDMAESP for Spanish) to 888-777 for updates. [Joshua Qualls/Governor’s Press Office]

Boston Logan Airport as seen from runway 22R

Boston, Massachusetts, USA

As seen from the Millennium Bostonian Hotel overlooking Faneuil Hall Marketplace, Market Tower, and the Old State House.

I love the view atop this parking garage. Boston is beautiful in the Fall

 

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Boston Harbour and islands

Boston, Massachusetts.

 

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Boston Athletic Association 5k (Photo by SFC Richard Ruddle)

Boston, Massachusetts, site of Puritan colony and beginning of Revolutionary War; digital copy of slide. Complete indexed photo collection at WorldHistoryPics.com.

Boston Public Library

Would you believe that this place used to be an highway?

Boston, Massachusetts, site of Puritan colony and beginning of Revolutionary War; digital copy of slide. Complete indexed photo collection at WorldHistoryPics.com.

File name: 08_06_016134

 

Title: Boston Common, snowy corner at Tremont Park

 

Creator/Contributor: Jones, Leslie, 1886-1967 (photographer)

 

Date created: 1930 (approximate)

 

Physical description: 1 negative : glass, black & white ; 4 x 5 in.

 

Genre: Glass negatives

 

Subjects: Parks; Snow; Pedestrians

 

Notes: Title and date from information provided by Leslie Jones or the Boston Public Library on the negative or negative sleeve.

 

Collection: Leslie Jones Collection

 

Location: Boston Public Library, Print Department

 

Rights: Copyright © Leslie Jones.

 

Preferred credit: Courtesy of the Boston Public Library, Leslie Jones Collection.

  

File name: 08_02_004461

 

Box label: Boston Public Library: Interiors: Special library floor (see also: events & exhibitions)

 

Title: Boston Public Library. Albert H. Wiggin Gallery. Exhibition. Contemporary American Printe [sic]. Organized for the museums in Israel

 

Alternative title:

 

Creator/Contributor:

 

Date issued:

 

Date created: 1953-01-05-1953-01-31 (approximate)

 

Physical description: 1 photographic print : gelatin silver ; 8 x 10 in.

 

Genre: Gelatin silver prints

 

Subjects: Boston Public Library; Public libraries; Exhibitions; Galleries (Display spaces);

Exhibition facilities; Employees

  

Notes: Additional information on item indicates that image includes Paul B. Swenson, assistant (left), Arthur W. Heintzelman, keeper of prints (center), and Muriel C. Robinson, first assistant (right)

 

Provenance:

 

Statement of responsibility:

 

Location: Boston Public Library, Print Department

 

Rights: Rights status not evaluated.

 

File name: 08_06_016269

 

Title: Boston Common in front of State House, in the snow

 

Creator/Contributor: Jones, Leslie, 1886-1967 (photographer)

 

Date created: 1928-02-19

 

Physical description: 1 negative : glass, black & white ; 4 x 5 in.

 

Genre: Glass negatives

 

Subjects: Massachusetts State House (Boston, Mass.); Parks; Snow; Capitols

 

Notes: Title and date from information provided by Leslie Jones or the Boston Public Library on the negative or negative sleeve.

 

Collection: Leslie Jones Collection

 

Location: Boston Public Library, Print Department

 

Rights: Copyright © Leslie Jones.

 

Preferred credit: Courtesy of the Boston Public Library, Leslie Jones Collection.

  

Boston Marriott Copley Place, Boston, Massachusetts

Stained Glass Window

 

16 - Fragments including head.

 

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Welcome to Boston Guildhall Museum and Tourist Information Centre.

 

Built in the 1390’s this building is a testament to the wealth and influence of the Guild of St Mary at a time when Boston’s power as a centre of trade was second only to London. This wonderfully preserved building, with a wealth of original features, has survived the centuries and is to be enjoyed as one of Boston’s finest visitor attractions.

 

A wealth of stories, secrets and experiences are told and shared throughout the building including the history of the Guild of St Mary, international trade with the Hanseatic League, the foundation of the Corporation of Boston and the very famous trial and imprisonment of the Pilgrims.

Boston Guildhall Museum is free to visit and our opening hours are Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday 10:30am – 3:30pm, last admission to the museum is 3pm.

 

www.mybostonuk.com/bostonguildhall/

 

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Boston’s wealth was due to the activities of the Guildsmen of St Mary – an internationally significant religious fraternity in one of the most important ports of medieval England who were able to communicate directly with the pope.

 

The merchant’s Guild of St Mary was a religious guild founded in 1260. For a gold coin fee and annual subscription, men, and unusually for the time, women, could be members and they maintained the Lady Chapel in Boston Stump for the purposes of “get out of purgatory” prayer. They also made provision for support of the poor of the parish.

 

The merchants made their fortunes trading mainly in wool – the backbone and driving force of medieval English economy. Boston’s Guildsmen worked hard and played hard. They recruited paupers of the town, giving them board, lodging and pay, to be beadsmen. The Beadsmen, so named because of the rosary beads they used during prayer, were paid by the merchants to help save their souls from the torture of eternal damnation. They believed that they could carry on living sinful and debauched lives so long as they continued to pay the Beadsmen to say prayers to reduce the time they would have to spend in the limbo of purgatory where their souls would be purified from sin.

 

When the Crown gave approval for guilds to possess assets, Boston’s fantastically rich merchants almost immediately built the Guildhall, making it one of the first in the country. The Guildhall was built from a new material not readily available in the 13th Century. The clay to mike its red bricks was dug out locally, and even Flemish brick makers were employed when it would have been much easier and cheaper to build out of more traditional materials such as stone or timber.

 

Their Beadsmen now had a home from which to pray for doomed souls – and the merchants celebrations went on, much of it actually in the new Guildhall’s banqueting hall. Many of these celebrations or festivities centred around religious dates on the calendar – feast and saints’ days – but there would always be food galore and mead and wine on these occasions.

 

They believed that in order to further to reduce their time in purgatory, gifts of property and land were given to the guild in return for salvation, calculated on a “pay” scale, ranging from 100 days remission from penance all the way up to 500 years of absolution. Over the centuries the guild acquired many sacred relics including a silver and gilt case containing an image of the Virgin and Child and, most fantastically, a sample of the Virgins breast milk. These items, along with others, recorded on an inventory on display in the Council Chamber. Were such alleged artefacts to still exist today Boston would be a world centre for pilgrimage to rival Lourdes and Turin. Along with a silver and gilt case containing part of the stone of Calvary, Boston Guildhall’s treasures have been long lost, claimed by King Henry VIII when he broke his ties with the pope and renounced religious guilds, taking land and property from them.

 

The Guildhall’s use as a religious building ended with the dissolution of the guilds and the founding of the new Corporation in 1545.

 

www.mybostonuk.com/bostonguildhall/museum/

 

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Boston Guildhall is a former municipal building in Boston, Lincolnshire. It currently serves as a local museum and also as a venue for civil ceremonies and private functions. It is a Grade I listed building.

 

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boston_Guildhall

A view of the Back Bay skyline during our Duck Boat tour of Boston.

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