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Boston
Boston
The Oxford Companion to United States History
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2001
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© The Oxford Companion to United States History 2001, originally published by Oxford University Press 2001. (Hide copyright information)
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Boston. Located on a peninsula the Indians called Shawmut and now the capital of Massachusetts, Boston was settled in 1630 by Puritans led by John
Winthrop. Winthrop set the tone for Boston's tradition of civic responsibility when, aboard the
Arbella en route to
New England, he urged the settlers to build a harmonious, godly community that would be “a city upon a hill” and “a beacon to all nations.” As Boston prospered as a maritime center, Puritan ministers like Increase and Cotton
Mather struggled to preserve Winthrop's vision.
England interfered only sporadically in Massachusetts's affairs, so when imperial policy tightened after 1763, Bostonians reacted strongly. Urban unrest culminated in the
Boston Tea Party (1773), which led to the Coercive Acts and to the First
Continental Congress (1774), putting Boston in the forefront of the American Revolution.
Boston's economic development, already eclipsed by that of
New York City by the 1770s, was further stunted by the postwar depression, New England's agricultural decline, and trade disruptions associated with the
War of 1812. Ultimately, however, the war spurred domestic manufacturing to replace imported goods. A group of businessmen known as the Boston Associates helped bring
industrialization to America by building textile mills in nearby Waltham, Lowell, and Lawrence.
Amid shifting economic fortunes, Boston thrived as an intellectual and cultural center. The artist John Singleton
Copley and the architect Charles
Bulfinch were Boston natives. The transcendentalist utopian experiment Brook Farm (1841–1847) was located nearby. Many leading lights of the American literary renaissance including Ralph Waldo
Emerson, Henry David
Thoreau, and Nathaniel
Hawthorne, lived in Boston or such nearby towns as Concord and Salem. The city was a major publishing center, and across the Charles River in Cambridge was Harvard College. Winthrop's “city on a hill” became the poet Oliver Wendell Holmes's “hub of the solar system.” Boston was home to many
Antebellum Era reformers, including William Lloyd
Garrison, publisher of the abolitionist journal
Liberator. The reformist impulse drew strength from the liberal Protestant movement exemplified by Unitarianism, also rooted in Boston. The later nineteenth century saw the establishment of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1865), the Museum of Fine Arts (1870), and the Boston Symphony Orchestra (1881). The
Christian Science “Mother Church” was dedicated in Boston in 1895.
The nineteenth century also brought great demographic changes, as the native‐born “Brahmin” elite confronted successive waves of immigrants, including French Canadians, Irish (especially after Ireland's 1840s famine years), and, by the turn of the century, Italians and eastern European Jews. A growing African American community included William Monroe
Trotter, editor of a black newspaper, the
Boston Guardian. The Irish gained political power through such colorful figures as James Michael Curley (1874–1958) and John F. “Honey Fitz” Fitzgerald (1863–1950), grandfather of President John F.
Kennedy.
Suburbanization and a decline in manufacturing caused economic problems and population losses through much of the twentieth century. The 1960s saw racial conflicts over school busing between black and white ethnic neighborhoods. But beginning around the same time, Boston experienced dynamic economic growth based a on high‐tech electronics industry, finance, medicine, education, and publishing. As the century ended, thanks to these knowledge‐based industries and its rich history, Boston retained its cachet as an intellectual and cultural mecca.
See also
Civil Rights Movement;
Colonial Era;
Early Republic, Era of the;
Immigration;
Irish Americans;
Italian Americans;
Literature: Early National and Antebellum Eras;
Puritanism;
Revolutionary War;
Revolution and Constitution, Era of the;
Sixties, The;
Textile Industry;
Transcendentalism;
Unitarianism and Universalism;
Utopian and Communitarian Movements.
Bibliography
Shaun O'Connell , Imagining Boston: A Literary Landscape, 1990.
Thomas H. O'Connor , Bibles, Brahmins, and Bosses: A Short History of Boston, 3d ed., 1991.
Christopher Berkeley
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Newspaper article from: The Boston Herald; 11/28/2003; ; 700+ words
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Magazine article from: Canadian Journal of Family Law; 1/1/2004; ; 700+ words
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PR Newswire; 11/7/2001; 700+ words
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Magazine article from: Central Penn Business Journal; 12/17/1999; ; 700+ words
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Newspaper article from: The Christian Science Monitor; 2/3/2004; 700+ words
; ...writer of The Christian Science Monitor BOSTON -- Despite a spectacular victory, the...quarterback Tom Brady, who urged the people of Boston not to pull the city apart during postgame...it may have seemed an unusual image: Boston residents rioting down rabbit- warren...
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Business Wire; 3/16/2004; 700+ words
; Business Editors/Calendar Editors BOSTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--March 16, 2004 35 New England...New England's best minds will gather June 7-8 in Boston for the launch of "IDEAS Boston 2004," a two-day conference hosted by The Boston...
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News Wire article from: PRWeb; 4/13/2009; 700+ words
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Newspaper article from: The Boston Herald; 4/24/2003; ; 700+ words
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Boston: Economy
Encyclopedia entry from: Cities of the United States
Boston: Economy Major Industries and Commercial...Since the 1988–1992 downturn, Boston experienced an ongoing economic recovery...As in many places across the country, Boston's economy was affected by the events on...
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Boston
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Boston city (1990 pop. 574,283), state capital and seat of Suffolk co., E Mass., on Boston Bay, an arm of Massachusetts Bay; inc...Economy The largest city in New England, Boston is an educational, governmental, and financial...
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Boston Market Corporation
Book article from: International Directory of Company Histories
Boston Market Corporation 14103 Denver West Parkway Golden, Colorado...722211 Limited-Service Restaurants; 722320 Caterers Boston Market Corporation — formerly Boston Chicken Inc. — grew rapidly after its start in...
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Boston Properties, Inc.
Book article from: International Directory of Company Histories
Boston Properties, Inc. 8 Arlington Street Boston, Massachusetts 02116 U.S.A. (617) 859-2600 Fax...he amassed in commercial real-estate development. When Boston Properties, Inc. was reorganized in 1997 from a partnership...
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Boston: Education and Research
Encyclopedia entry from: Cities of the United States
Boston: Education and Research Elementary and Secondary Schools Boston's school district is one of the nation's 60 largest. Boston spends nearly 30 percent of its annual budget on school matters, and its system excels in special education...
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