Winter Street (Boston)
Appearance
Winter Street in Boston, Massachusetts is located between Tremont Street and Washington Street, near the Common. It is currently a pedestrian zone.[1] Prior to 1708, it was called Blott's Lane and then Bannister's Lane.[2][3]
See also
- Former tenants
- M.M. Ballou, publisher
- Deloss Barnum, photographer
- Central Church[4]
- Walter Lofthouse Dean, 3 Winter Street, painter [5]
- Draper & Folsom, publishers
- Fadettes of Boston
- Gilchrist's store
- A.N. Hardy, photographer
- Josiah Leavitt
- New England Emigrant Aid Company
- Polyanthos (magazine)
- Henry and John Christian Rauschner, portraitists
- Schoenhof & Moeller
- S.R. Urbino, foreign books
References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Winter Street (Boston).
- ^ City of Boston. "Street Book".
- ^ Boston Street Laying-Out Dept. A record of the streets, alleys, places, etc. in the city of Boston. Boston: City Printing Dept., 1910.
- ^ Thomas Wait Tucker. Bannisters Lane, 1708-1899: being sundry remarks, some historical and all new and interesting, on Bannisters Lane now named Winter Street and the district immediately thereabout. Boston: Shepard, Norwell & Co., 1899
- ^ "Central Church". Gleasons Pictorial. 5. Boston, Mass. 1853.
- ^ Biennial Exhibition of Contemporary American Painting, Volumes 1-3, By Corcoran Gallery of Art
Image gallery
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Detail of 1743 map of Boston, showing Winter St. and vicinity
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Ann Grayham, importer & retailer, 1767
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"Very neat green and blue umbrilloes, to be sold exceeding low, by Oliver Greenleaf," 1768 (Boston Evening-Post)
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Central Congregational Church, ca.1851
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Atlantic Monthly, no.1, 1857; published by Phillips, Sampson & Co., 13 Winter St.
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Joseph Lyon's "umbrellas, parasols, canes, etc.," 1861
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New England Crape and Lace Refinishing Co., ca.1870
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Winter Street, Boston, March 2010