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==Demographics==
==Demographics==
South Boston is well known for being an [[Irish-American]] neighborhood. A small portion of its residents are of [[Polish American|Polish]], [[Lithuanian American|Lithuanian]], and [[Italian-American|Italian]] descent.
South Boston is well known for being an [[Irish-American]] neighborhood. A small portion of its residents are of [[Polish American|Polish]], [[Lithuanian American|Lithuanian]], [[Lebanese Americans|Lebanese]], and [[Italian-American|Italian]] descent.


== Schools ==
== Schools ==

Revision as of 01:42, 29 March 2008

Mural in South Boston saying "Welcome to South Boston" in English and "Fáilte go mBoston dheas" in Irish. Also shown is a Celtic cross, the coats of arms of the Provinces of Ireland and the words "Sinn Féin" "Irish Republican Army" and "Noraid." This Mural has been torn down along with the building to make way for high end condominiums.

South Boston is a densely populated neighborhood in Boston, Massachusetts, located south of the Fort Point Channel and abutting Dorchester Bay. It was formerly known as Dorchester Neck and today is referred to as Southie by its residents. South Boston is well known for being a working class Irish-Catholic neighborhood. Almost all of the parishes are Irish-Catholic, the majority of restaurants and pubs Irish themed, and several Irish-American Clubs are located there. The politicians who represent the area are all Irish-Catholic.

History

Dorchester neck can be seen on this early map of Boston in the lower right.

Geographically, Dorchester Neck was an isthmus, a narrow strip of land that connected the mainland of the colonial settlement of Dorchester, Massachusetts with Dorchester Heights. Landfill has since greatly increased the amount of land on the eastern side of the historical neck, and widened the connection to the mainland to the point that South Boston is no longer considered separate from it. South Boston gained an identity separate from Dorchester, but the two were annexed by Boston in pieces, from 1804 to 1870.

See History of Boston, Massachusetts
File:Map of Boston (Massachusetts).jpg
South Boston in 1888 ("Süd Boston" on this German map.)

It was here on Dorchester Heights, during the American Revolutionary War that George Washington placed his cannon and forced the evacuation of the British troops from Boston on March 17, 1776. The British evacuated Boston and Fort William and Mary for Halifax, Nova Scotia. Fort William and Mary was replaced with a brick fortification known as Fort Independence. That fort was replaced by a granite fortification (bearing the same name) prior to the American Civil War, and still stands on Castle Island.

File:WestBroadway DorchesterSt.jpg
West Broadway and Dorchester Street

During the 1970s South Boston received national attention for its opposition to court mandated school (de facto) desegregation by busing students to different neighborhoods. In the 1990s, South Boston became the focus for a Supreme Court case on the right of gay and lesbian groups to participate in the Saint Patrick's Day (Evacuation Day) parade. The case was decided in favor of the parade's sponsors when the United States Supreme Court supported the South Boston Allied War Veterans' right to determine who can participate in their annual St. Patrick's Day parade. Local Dorchester author Paul Joseph Walkowski and Attorney William Connolly detailed the ordeals of the Veterans in their book "From Trial Court to the United States Supreme Court."

"Southie" is home to a memorial for Vietnam Veterans. It was dedicated on September 13, 1981 and is located at Independence Square, which is more commonly called "M Street Park."

The City Point area of South Boston, labeled "East Side" by realtors, has seen a major increase in property values due to its close proximity to downtown Boston and gentrification. Poorer areas around Andrew Square and the Lower End, referred to as the "West Side" by real estate brokers, face a lot of the same problems found in many city neighborhoods including drug addiction and street crime.

South Boston is a neighborhood that actively involves children and young adults. Two common places for children and young adults to attend to after a long school day would be the Neighborhood House (ollie) and the South Boston Boys & Girls Club. At the Neighborhood house, which is located up the point of South Boston, some children and teens are able to go there once schools let out. They are able to do their homework, play in the gym, use computers and attend dances on Friday nights. At the Boys & Girls Club the ages range from 6 to 18 year olds. At the Boys & Girls Club members are able to attend different area such as the gym, games room, discovery or the library. Each area is made for all the members to interact with different tasks. At the Boys & Girls club members are able to go from 3 to 9 o'clock if they are of appropriate age. There is always a great event that taks place on Fridays at the Boys & Girls Club. Both places for children and young adults allows them to have a better future because they are kept off the streets at night.

The section of South Boston north of First Street is targeted for massive redevelopment by the administration of Mayor Thomas Menino and the Boston Redevelopment Authority.[1] Initially referred to as the "Seaport District" by the BRA, this area was officially restyled the "South Boston Waterfront" after virulent protest from natives and local politicians, including City Council President James M. Kelly. The Central Artery/Tunnel (CA/T) Project, also known as the "Big Dig" has created a completely new transportation network for this area and quite a few new hotel and office projects have come online in the past few years. The recently opened Boston Convention and Exhibition Center straddles D Street and a new home for the Institute of Contemporary Art hangs over Boston Harbor just north of Northern Avenue.

Demographics

South Boston is well known for being an Irish-American neighborhood. A small portion of its residents are of Polish, Lithuanian, Lebanese, and Italian descent.

Schools

Public

  • Excel High School (9-12)
  • Monument High School (9-12) Separate Division
  • Odyssey High School (9-12) Separate Division
  • James Condon Elementary School (K-5)
  • Joseph P. Tynan School (K-5)
  • Michael J. Perkins School (K-5)
  • Oliver Hazard Perry School (K-8)
  • Patrick F. Gavin Middle School (6-8)

Private

  • Gate Of Heaven Elementary School (K-8)
  • St Brigid School (K-8}
  • St Peter Academy (K-8)

Cultural and Language Schools

  • Szkola Jezyka Polskiego w Bostonie (John Paul II Polish School for Children and Teens)


Source:[2]

Public housing

South Boston is home to some of the oldest public housing projects in the United States.[3] In the last 30 years they have changed from having a mostly white population to a more ethnically mixed population. These housing facilities are under the control of the Boston Housing Authority[4] and include West Broadway,[5] West Ninth Street[6](these two facilities are next to each other and commonly called the "D Street Projects"), Old Colony,[7] and Mary Ellen McCormack[8] (also known as the Old Harbor). The West Broadway Ninth Street Projects where knocked down in 2005 and are now a retirement housing building.

Other developments are the Foley[9] and Monsignor Powers.[10] According to recent information from the Boston Herald (January 14, 2007), three out of the six most dangerous housing projects in Boston are in "Southie". West Broadway, Mary Ellen McCormack, and Old Colony ranked fourth, fifth, and sixth on the list with 88, 77, and 72 reported crimes last year.[citation needed]

Transportation

South Boston is served by three Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority Red Line rapid transit stations: Broadway, Andrew and JFK/UMass and Broadway (MBTA Station)(formerly Columbia).

MBTA bus service connects these stations with the residential areas of South Boston, downtown Boston and the Back Bay. The MBTA Silver Line, a bus rapid transit service running partly in a tunnel from South Station, also serves the north side of South Boston and City Point. South Boston is also served by five bus routes including the numbers 5, 7, 9, 10, 11.

Notable residents

Pop culture references

South Boston is the home of the fictional Irish-American character "Will Hunting", a troubled young prodigy played by Matt Damon, who works as a janitor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Good Will Hunting, a 1997 film directed by Gus Van Sant.

Mystic River directed by Clint Eastwood and starring Tim Robbins, Kevin Bacon, and Sean Penn was partially filmed in South Boston. A local corner store, Miller's Market of 366 K Street, was used as one of the character's businesses.

The movie The Boondock Saints also takes place in South Boston, paying homage to the area's loyalty to Catholicism, St. Patrick's Day, and Irish heritage.

The movie The Verdict takes place in South Boston and was filmed there. The movie starred Paul Newman and was a legal thriller about an alcoholic lawyer who takes on the Catholic church in a case of medical malpractice involving a Catholic hospital, 2 doctors and a plaintiff left in a vegetative state.

The movie Southie is set in South Boston, about a mobster who returns home to South Boston and finds that things have not changed in the old neighborhood. It stars Donnie Wahlberg, a native of nearby Dorchester and former singer with New Kids on the Block.

Two recent films have been shot in South Boston: The Departed starring Jack Nicholson, Matt Damon and Leonardo DiCaprio, and Gone Baby Gone the directorial debut of Ben Affleck.

There have been many books written about the South Boston culture ranging from the political, in The Boston Irish, the personal in All Souls: A Family Story from Southie, the gang-related Black Mass, and/or the historical, political, social, and personal in That Old Gang of Mine.

The punk band Dropkick Murphys frequently reference South Boston's Irish heritage and sports loyalties in their songs — despite forming in nearby Quincy.

The Chicago improv comedy show Dirty Water takes place in a fictional bar by the same name in "Southie." The bar is loosely based on Kiley's Tavern[12] (formerly "Lally's Tavern") on Old Colony Avenue and D Street.

In the movie Broadcast News, a young Aaron Altman (played by Dwayne Markee) states, "You're never gonna leave South Boston and I'm gonna see the whole damn world."

Further reading

  • Alcorn, Frank, "Southie Boy", Carmel, Ind.: Cork Hill Press, c2005.
  • Malloy, Ione, "Southie won't go : a teacher's diary of the desegregation of South Boston High School", Urbana : University of Illinois Press, c1986
  • MacDonald, Michael Patrick, "All Souls", London: Little, Brown, 2000, c1999.
  • McMullin, Thomas A., "South Boston: My Home Town, The History of an Ethnic Neighborhood", Historical Journal of Massachusetts, Winter 2000. Review of Thomas O'Connor's book.
  • O'Connor, Thomas H., "South Boston: My Home Town, The History of an Ethnic Neighborhood", Northeastern University Press, 360 Huntington Ave., Boston, MA 02115, 1994.

References