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The Boston Common (also known as the Common) is a public park in downtown Boston, Massachusetts. It is the oldest city park in the United States. Boston Common consists of of land bounded by Tremont Street (139 Tremont St.), Park Street, Beacon Street, Charles Street, and
Boylston Street Boylston Street is a major east–west thoroughfare in the city of Boston, Massachusetts. The street begins in Boston's Chinatown neighborhood, forms the southern border of the Boston Public Garden and Boston Common, runs through Back Bay, and e ...
. The Common is part of the Emerald Necklace of parks and parkways that extend from the Common south to Franklin Park in Jamaica Plain,
Roxbury Roxbury may refer to: Places ;Canada * Roxbury, Nova Scotia * Roxbury, Prince Edward Island ;United States * Roxbury, Connecticut * Roxbury, Kansas * Roxbury, Maine * Roxbury, Boston, a municipality that was later integrated into the city of Bosto ...
, and Dorchester. The visitors' center for the city of Boston is located on the Tremont Street side of the park. The Central Burying Ground is on the Boylston Street side of Boston Common and contains the graves of the artist
Gilbert Stuart Gilbert Charles Stuart ( Stewart; December 3, 1755 – July 9, 1828) was an American painter from Rhode Island Colony who is widely considered one of America's foremost portraitists. His best-known work is an unfinished portrait of George Washi ...
and the composer William Billings. Also buried there are Samuel Sprague and his son, Charles Sprague, one of America's earliest poets. Samuel Sprague was a participant in the Boston Tea Party and fought in the Revolutionary War. The Common was designated as a Boston Landmark by the Boston Landmarks Commission in 1977. The Common is sometimes erroneously referred to as the "Boston Commons". This stems from its use as a town commons starting in 1634; the modern park's name forgoes the s.


History


Blaxton's habitation

The first European owner of the land that became the Common was William Blaxton. Blaxton had arrived in Massachusetts as chaplain to the Robert Gorges expedition that landed in Weymouth in 1623. Every other member of this colonization attempt returned to England before the winter of 1625. By this time Blaxton had migrated five miles north to the Shawmut Peninsula, then a 1 mi2 rocky bulge at the end of a swampy isthmus, surrounded on all sides by
mudflat Mudflats or mud flats, also known as tidal flats or, in Ireland, slob or slobs, are coastal wetlands that form in intertidal areas where sediments have been deposited by tides or rivers. A global analysis published in 2019 suggested that tidal fl ...
s. Blaxton lived entirely alone for five years on the peninsula that would become Boston.


Puritans

In 1630, Blaxton wrote a decisive letter to the Puritan group led by Isaac Johnson, whose colony of Charlestown was then failing from lack of fresh water. Blaxton advertised the excellent natural springs of the peninsula and invited Johnson's group to settle with him on it, which they did on 7 September 1630. Johnson died less than three weeks later and Blaxton negotiated a grant of 50 acres around his home on the western edge of the peninsula from the new governor of the colony, John Winthrop. This amounted to around 10% of the available land on the Shawmut Peninsula and stretched from what is now Beacon Hill to Boylston Street. One of Johnson's last official acts as the leader of the Charleston community before dying on 30 September 1630 was to name the new settlement across the river "Boston," after his seaside hometown in Lincolnshire from which he, his wife (namesake of the '' Arbella'') and John Cotton (grandfather of
Cotton Mather Cotton Mather (; February 12, 1663 – February 13, 1728) was a New England Puritan clergyman and a prolific writer. Educated at Harvard College, in 1685 he joined his father Increase as minister of the Congregationalist Old North Meeting H ...
) had emigrated to New England.


Boston's common field

However the Episcopalian Blaxton quickly tired of the Puritan church fathers and the difficulty of retaining such a large plot of land in a town that had grown to nearly 4,000 people by 1633. This led Blaxton to sell all but six of his 50 acres back to Winthrop in 1634 for ₤30 ($5,455 adjusted). The governor purchased the land through a one-time tax on residents amounting to 6 shillings (around $50 adjusted) per person. Those 44 acres became the town commons of Puritan Boston and today form the bulk of Boston Common. The Common was used for a variety of purposes until its formal conversion into a public park during the 1830s. These uses gradually became more urban as the city developed, shifting from pastureland, to military drilling field, execution grounds, public gathering place and finally parkland. During the 1630s the Common was used by many families as a cow pasture. This traditional use for a commons quickly ended when the large herds kept by affluent families led to overgrazing and the collapse of the Common as pastureland. In 1646 grazing was limited to 70 cows at a time. The Common continued to host cows until they were formally banned in 1830 by Mayor Harrison Gray Otis.


Further public uses


Civic institutions

What is now called the Granary Burying Ground, located at the southern edge of the Common, was established in 1660. Two years later part of this land was separated from the Common, with the southwest portion used for public buildings including a Granary and house of correction, and the north portion dedicated to an
almshouse An almshouse (also known as a bede-house, poorhouse, or hospital) was charitable housing provided to people in a particular community, especially during the medieval era. They were often targeted at the poor of a locality, at those from certain ...
(probably the first in the Thirteen Colonies).


Execution grounds

Boston Common took over from the gibbet just outside the gate guarding Boston Neck as the town execution grounds and was used for public hangings until 1817. Most of these executions were carried out from the limb of a large oak, which was replaced with a gallows in 1769. Those executed included common criminals, military deserters, Indians and other enslaved persons, captured pirates and most notably, religious dissidents. The most famous victims of the Common's era as an execution grounds were the group of Quakers known almost immediately after their deaths as the Boston martyrs. The most famous of the Boston Martyrs was executed on 1 June 1660. This was the
Quaker Quakers are people who belong to a historically Protestant Christian set of Christian denomination, denominations known formally as the Religious Society of Friends. Members of these movements ("theFriends") are generally united by a belie ...
Mary Dyer, who was hanged from the oak by the Puritan government of Boston for repeatedly defying a law that banned Quakers from the Massachusetts Bay Colony.


Public speaking

The Common's status as a civic property led to its use as a public speaking grounds, frequently used by evangelists like
George Whitefield George Whitefield (; 30 September 1770), also known as George Whitfield, was an Anglican cleric and evangelist who was one of the founders of Methodism and the evangelical movement. Born in Gloucester, he matriculated at Pembroke College at th ...
, the orator who famously persuaded a reluctant Benjamin Franklin to part with all the money he carried (more than $2,000 adjusted) during a 1739 meeting in Philadelphia. On 19 May 1713, two hundred citizens rioted on the Common in reaction to a food shortage in the city. They later attacked the ships and warehouses of wealthy merchant Andrew Belcher, who was exporting grain to the British West Indies for higher profits. The lieutenant governor was shot during the riot. The Common was used as a camp by the British before the American Revolutionary War, from which they left for the Battle of Lexington and Concord.


Use as park

True park status seems to have emerged no later than 1830, when the grazing of cows was ended and renaming the Common as Washington Park was proposed. Renaming the bordering Sentry Street to Park Place (later to be called Park Street) in 1804 already acknowledged the reality. By 1836, an ornamental iron fence fully enclosed the Common and its five perimeter malls or recreational promenades, the first of which, Tremont Mall, had been in place since 1728, in imitation of
St. James's Park St James's Park is a park in the City of Westminster, central London. It is at the southernmost tip of the St James's area, which was named after a leper hospital dedicated to St James the Less. It is the most easterly of a near-continuous ch ...
in London. Given these improvements dating back to 1728, a case could be made that Boston Common is in fact the world's first public urban park, since these developments precede the establishment of the earliest public urban parks in England— Derby Arboretum (1840), Peel Park, Salford (1846), and Birkenhead Park (1847)—which are often considered the first. The park was originally "out of bounds" for Black and American Indian people, a restriction that was fought by the Black community in Boston until it was lifted on July 4, 1836. Originally, the Charles Street side of Boston Common, along with the adjacent portions of the Public Garden, were used as an unofficial dumping ground, due to being the lowest-lying portions of the two parks; this, along with the Garden's originally having been a salt marsh, resulted in the portions of the two parks being "a moist stew that reeked and that was a mess to walk over", driving visitors away from these areas. Although plans had long been in place to regrade the Charles Street-facing portions of Boston Common and the Public Garden, the cost of moving the amount of soil necessary (approximately , weighing , for the Common, plus an additional , weighing , for the adjoining portions of the Public Garden) prevented the work from being undertaken. This finally changed in the summer of 1895, when the required quantity of soil was made available as a result of the excavation of the Tremont Street subway, and was used to regrade the Charles Street sides of both Boston Common and the Public Garden. A hundred people gathered on the Common in early 1965 to protest the Vietnam War. A second protest happened on October 15, 1969, this time with 100,000 people protesting in the Moratorium to End the War in Vietnam. Today, the Common serves as a public park for all to use for formal or informal gatherings. Events such as concerts, protests, softball games, and ice skating (on Frog Pond) often take place in the park. Famous individuals such as Martin Luther King Jr. and Pope John Paul II have made speeches there. Judy Garland gave her largest concert ever (100,000+) on the Common, on August 31, 1967. It was declared a U.S. National Historic Landmark in 1987. and   The Boston Common is a public park managed by the Boston Park Department and cared for by Friends of the Public Garden, a private advocacy group, which also provides additional funding for maintenance and special events.
Mikhail Gorbachev Mikhail Sergeyevich Gorbachev (2 March 1931 – 30 August 2022) was a Soviet politician who served as the 8th and final leader of the Soviet Union from 1985 to dissolution of the Soviet Union, the country's dissolution in 1991. He served a ...
gave a speech in the Common on May 31, 1990, on his way to Washington D.C. to sign agreements with U.S. President
George H. W. Bush George Herbert Walker BushSince around 2000, he has been usually called George H. W. Bush, Bush Senior, Bush 41 or Bush the Elder to distinguish him from his eldest son, George W. Bush, who served as the 43rd president from 2001 to 2009; pr ...
. On October 21, 2006, the Common became the site of a new world record, when 30,128 Jack-o'-lanterns were lit simultaneously around the park at the Life Is Good Pumpkin Festival. The previous record, held by Keene, New Hampshire since 2003, was 28,952. On August 27, 2007, two teenagers were shot on the Common. One of the bullets fired during the shooting struck the
Massachusetts State House The Massachusetts State House, also known as the Massachusetts Statehouse or the New State House, is the List of state capitols in the United States, state capitol and seat of government for the Massachusetts, Commonwealth of Massachusetts, lo ...
. A strict curfew has since been enforced, which has been protested by the
homeless Homelessness or houselessness – also known as a state of being unhoused or unsheltered – is the condition of lacking stable, safe, and adequate housing. People can be categorized as homeless if they are: * living on the streets, also kn ...
population of Boston. On January 21, 2017, approximately 175,000 people marched from the common to the Back Bay vicinity to profess resistance to the anti-female viewpoints held by president Donald Trump. On August 19, 2017, approximately 40,000 people marched from Roxbury Crossing to Boston Common to protest hate speech and white supremacy, in the wake of events in Charlottesville, VA the week before. A right-wing "Free Speech" rally had been planned on Boston Common, which some feared would draw members of the KKK, Neo Nazis and other hate groups. Boston Mayor Marty Walsh deemed the "Fight Supremacy" counter protest a great success.


Notable features


Grounds

The Common forms the southern foot of
Beacon Hill Beacon Hill may refer to: Places Canada * Beacon Hill, Ottawa, Ontario, a neighbourhood * Beacon Hill Park, a park in Victoria, British Columbia * Beacon Hill, Saskatchewan * Beacon Hill, Montreal, a neighbourhood in Beaconsfield, Quebec United ...
. Boston Common is the southern end of Boston's Freedom Trail. The Boston Common Frog Pond sits at the heart of Boston Common. Managed by The Skating Club of Boston in partnership with the City of Boston, Frog Pond is home to a winter ice skating rink and learn-to-skate school, a reflecting pool in the spring and fall, and a summer spray pool and children's carousel. The softball fields lie in the southwest corner of the Common. A grassy area forms the western part of the park and is most commonly used for the park's largest events. A parking garage lies under this part of the Common. A granite slab there commemorates Pope John Paul II's October 1, 1979 visit to Boston. The Pope said mass that day to an estimated 400,000 people. In 1913 and 1986, prehistoric sites were discovered on the Common indicating Native American presence in the area as far back as 8,500 years ago. Since 1971, the Province of Nova Scotia has donated the annual Christmas Tree to the City of Boston as an enduring thank-you for the relief efforts of the Boston Red Cross and the Massachusetts Public Safety Committee following the Halifax Explosion of 1917.


Structures

* The
Boston Common Tablet Boston Common Tablet is a 1913 sculpture by R. Clipston Sturgis, installed at Boston Common in Boston, Massachusetts, United States. Description and history The slate and granite tablet is installed near the intersection of Park and Tremont stree ...
is installed near the corner of Park Street and Tremont Street. * '' Declaration of Independence Tablet'' * Plaque to the Great Elm tree, which had been adorned with lanterns to represent liberty, used as a point of fortification, and used for hangings. It was destroyed in a storm in 1876. * The
Robert Gould Shaw Memorial The ''Memorial to Robert Gould Shaw and the Massachusetts Fifty-Fourth Regiment'' is a bronze relief sculpture by Augustus Saint-Gaudens opposite 24 Beacon Street, Boston (at the edge of the Boston Common). It depicts Colonel Robert Gould Shaw lea ...
to Robert Gould Shaw and the Afro-American
54th Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry The 54th Massachusetts Infantry Regiment was an infantry regiment that saw extensive service in the Union Army during the American Civil War. The unit was the second African-American regiment, following the 1st Kansas Colored Volunteer Infantry ...
stands at Beacon and Park Streets, the northeast corner of the Common, opposite the State House. * The Soldiers and Sailors Monument is a victory column on Flag Staff Hill in the Common, commemorating Civil War dead. * The ''
Boston Massacre Monument The Boston Massacre Monument, also known as the Crispus Attucks Monument and ''Victory'', is an outdoor bronze memorial by Adolph Robert Kraus, installed in Boston Common, in Boston, Massachusetts, United States. Description and history The monu ...
'' was dedicated November 14, 1888. * The Oneida Football Club Monument memorializes the Common as the site of the first organized football games in the United States, played by the Oneida Football Club in 1862.Winthrop Saltonstall Scudder, ''An historical sketch of the Oneida football club of Boston, 1862-1865'' (Boston, 1926) *
Brewer Fountain Brewer Fountain is a 1868 bronze sculpture by Michel Joseph Napoléon Liénard. It stands near the corner of Park and Tremont Streets in Boston, Massachusetts, by Park Street Station. History The 22-foot-tall (6.7 m), 15,000-pound (6,800  ...
stands near the corner of Park and Tremont Streets, by Park Street Station. * Boylston and Park Street stations, the first two subway stations in the United States, lie underneath the southern and eastern corners of the park, respectively; both stations have been in near-continuous operation since the opening of the first portion of the Tremont Street subway (now part of the
MBTA The Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (abbreviated MBTA and known colloquially as "the T") is the public agency responsible for operating most public transportation services in Greater Boston, Massachusetts. The MBTA transit network in ...
's
Green Line Green Line may refer to: Places Military and political * Green Line (France), the German occupation line in France during World War II * Green Line (Israel), the 1949 armistice line established between Israel and its neighbours ** City Line ( ...
) on September 1, 1897. * Parkman Bandstand, in the eastern part of the park, is used in musical and theatrical productions. * Parkman Plaza features the statues ''Industry'', ''Learning'', and ''Religion''. File:Beacon St. Mall, Boston Common, by E. L. Allen.png, Beacon St. Mall, 19th century (photo by E.L. Allen) File:Old elm tree, Boston Common, from Robert N. Dennis collection of stereoscopic views 3.jpg, Old Elm tree, 19th century File:GreatElmSiteBoston.JPG, Plaque to the Great Elm tree File:Robert Gould Shaw Memorial (36053).jpg, ''
Robert Gould Shaw Memorial The ''Memorial to Robert Gould Shaw and the Massachusetts Fifty-Fourth Regiment'' is a bronze relief sculpture by Augustus Saint-Gaudens opposite 24 Beacon Street, Boston (at the edge of the Boston Common). It depicts Colonel Robert Gould Shaw lea ...
'' File:Soldiers and Sailors Monument, Boston Common (2007).jpg, Soldiers and Sailors Monument File:Boston Massacre Memorial - IMG 9560.JPG, Boston Massacre Memorial File:Frog Pond at Boston Common.jpg, The Frog Pond File:Parkman Bandstand.JPG, Parkman Bandstand File:USA-Boston Common.jpg, Massachusetts State House/Massachusetts Statehouse ("New" State House) File:USA-Boston Common0.jpg, Boylston station File:Boston Common (2014) IMG 2995.JPG, Boston Common File:Aerial View Parkman Bandstand at Boston Common 2.jpg, Aerial view of Parkman Bandstand


Neighboring structures

* The
Massachusetts State House The Massachusetts State House, also known as the Massachusetts Statehouse or the New State House, is the List of state capitols in the United States, state capitol and seat of government for the Massachusetts, Commonwealth of Massachusetts, lo ...
stands across Beacon Street from the northern edge of the Common. * The Boston Public Garden, a more formal landscaped park, lies to the west of the Common across Charles Street (and was originally considered an extension of the Common). * The Masonic Grand Lodge of Massachusetts headquarters sits across from the southern corner of the Common at the intersection of Boylston and Tremont Streets. * Across from the southern corner of the Common, along Boylston and Tremont Streets, lies the campus of
Emerson College Emerson College is a private college with its main campus in Boston, Massachusetts. It also maintains campuses in Hollywood, Los Angeles, California and Well, Limburg, Netherlands ( Kasteel Well). Founded in 1880 by Charles Wesley Emerson as a ...
. * Across from the Common, to the southeast,
Suffolk University Suffolk University is a private research university in Boston, Massachusetts. With 7,560 students (includes all campuses, 7,379 at the Boston location alone), it is the eighth-largest university in metropolitan Boston. It was founded as a l ...
has a dormitory on Tremont Street.


Notable recurring events

* Frog Pond Skating Spectacular at the Boston Tree Lighting and First Night Boston, featuring skaters from The Skating Club of Boston * Commonwealth Shakespeare Company's Shakespeare on the Common * Boston Lyric Opera's Outdoor Opera Series * Ancient Fishweir Project Installation Event * Massachusetts Cannabis Reform Coalition's
Freedom Rally The Boston Freedom Rally (often confused with Seattle's Hempfest) is an annual event in Boston, in the U.S. state of Massachusetts. Held on the third Saturday in September, it is traditionally the second largest annual gathering demanding marijuan ...
* Lighting of the Christmas tree gifted by Halifax, Nova Scotia. * Fireworks display on the evening of December 31 as part of Boston's First Night celebration


See also

* Alameda Central * Boston martyrs * Common land * Granary Burying Ground * King's Chapel Burying Ground * List of National Historic Landmarks in Boston *
National Register of Historic Places listings in northern Boston __NOTOC__ Boston, Massachusetts is home to many listings on the National Register of Historic Places. This list encompasses those locations that are located north of the Massachusetts Turnpike. See National Register of Historic Places listings in s ...
* List of parks in Boston


References


Further reading

* The public rights in Boston Common: Being the report of a committee of citizens. Boston: Press of Rockwell and Churchill, 187
Google books
* Samuel Barber. Boston Common: a diary of notable events, incidents, and neighboring occurrences, 2nd ed. Boston: Christopher Publishing House, 1916
Internet Archive


External links

*

" article on Boston Common
Boston National Historical Park

Friends of the Public Garden
an advocacy group formed in 1970 to preserve and enhance Boston Common * New York Historical Society
Afternoon Rainbow
Boston Common from Charles Street Mall. Watercolor by George Harvey, 19th century * BPL
Illus. by Winslow Homer
* City of Boston Archives
Ticket for July 4, 1883 bicycle race
* City of Boston
Boston Landmarks CommissionBoston Common Study Report
{{Authority control 1634 establishments in Massachusetts Busking venues Emerald Necklace Historic districts in Suffolk County, Massachusetts History of Boston National Historic Landmarks in Boston Parks in Boston Urban public parks Historic districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Massachusetts National Register of Historic Places in Boston