by Linda Conte in Events, Neighborhoods and Squares
Posted on October 28, 2008 at 3:15 pm
Last Modified on October 29, 2008 at 9:51 am
| November 2, 2008 | ||
| 2:00 pm | to | 5:00 pm |
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Sunday, November 2nd, 2008
Somerville’s Winter Hill
and Hinckley / Magoun Neighborhoods
2:00 P.M.
Tour Leader: Edward W. Gordon, President, VSA/NE
Tour meets at the Winter Hill Congregational Church, 404 Broadway, at
the corner of Central Street.
Directions: Take the No. 89 bus from Sullivan Square Station in
Charlestown to the Broadway / Central Street stop.
Admission: $5.00 Members VSA/NE and Somerville residents; $8.00
Nonmembers.
PLEASE join us as we explore two of Somerville’s most interesting
neighborhoods. While Winter Hill was host to Somerville gentry beginning
in the 1880s, the Hinckley / Magoun neighborhood was the home of hard
working families who toiled as laborers, teamsters, Boston & Maine
Railroad employees and the like-families who built up the neighborhood
in three stages during the second half of the nineteenth century.
Running up and over Winter Hill, Broadway was part of the route of Paul
Revere’s famous Midnight Ride. Still extant near the top of Winter Hill
is the late eighteenth century Adams-Magoun that retains its original
siting, form, and Late Georgian elements. Much later-by the 1880s-Winter
Hill was built up with substantial wooden Queen Anne residences and
(here and there) handsome brick town houses.
Two houses of worship will also be featured during the tour, including
the Winter Hill Congregational Church (1891) and B’nai B’rith Synagogue
(1919-1925). The former was designed by Hartwell, Richardson and Driver,
while the latter represents the early work of Boston apartment building
specialist S.S. Eisenberg.
From Winter Hill, we will stroll westward to Magoun Square and enter
the small Hinckley / Magoun neighborhood. Represented within this small
enclave are houses that constitute a fascinating urban village within
the larger city where siting and the visual dialogue between distinctive
structural forms is of primary interest. Hinckley / Magoun highlights
will include an early nineteenth century residence that was moved from
its original location, mid nineteenth century dwellings tucked away on a
cul-de-sac off of Lowell Street as well as the narrow way known as
Henderson Street with its modest 1890s houses built by contractor Jacob
W. Wilbur.
Following the tour we will enjoy refreshments at a Olde Magoun’s Pub on
Medford Street.
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