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Park Square in downtown Boston, Massachusetts, is bounded by Stuart, Charles Street South, Boylston, and Arlington Streets.[citation needed]
Description
editPark Square is the home of the Boston Four Seasons Hotel, the Boston Park Plaza, and nearly a dozen restaurants. To the north across Boylston Street is the Boston Public Garden. To the east is the Washington Street Theatre District. The Bay Village neighborhood is to the south, and Back Bay is to the west.[1]
At one time, the terminus of the Boston and Providence Railroad was in the square; however, after South Station opened, the terminal was closed.
The Emancipation Memorial, commemorating the emancipation of American slaves, was installed in Park Square in 1879 and removed in December 2020.[2]
A small street in the district was renamed "Park Plaice" (plaice being a type of flatfish) in honor of Legal Sea Foods, a local restaurant.[3][4]
Education
editBoston Public Schools operates area district public schools.
Boston Renaissance Charter Public School was formerly located in a building in Park Square.[5] In 2010, it moved to Hyde Park.[6]
From 1964 to 1974, the University of Massachusetts Boston campus was located in Park Square.[7]
Image gallery
edit-
Railroad depot at Park Square in 1837, with the State House in the background, the tidal Charles River basin in the foreground
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Overview of Park Square, 1850
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Stereoscopic view of Park Square and train station, from Boston Common, 19th century
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Emancipation Memorial, on display 1879–2020
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Interior of Boston & Providence Rail Road depot, 19th century
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Office of the Colored American Magazine, 1902
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Cort Theatre, Park Square, c. 1915
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Boston Park Plaza and the former headquarters of the Boston Gas Company, 2009
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ GUERRA, CRISTELA (July 1, 2020). "Boston To Remove Statue Depicting Abraham Lincoln With Freed Black Man At His Feet". NPR News. Retrieved 2020-07-02.
- ^ "Controversial Emancipation Group Statue Being Removed From Boston's Park Square", Cbslocal.com, December 29, 2020
- ^ "It's Not a Typo!". The Boston Courant. March 30 – April 5, 2012. p. 1.
'Park Plaice' was named after the fish in honor of Legal Sea Foods' relocation to Park Square in 1999.
- ^ @CityOfBoston (February 26, 2016). "It's not a typo. Plaice is a type of fish. The street was renamed in honor of Legal Sea Foods' relocation to Park Sq in 1999" (Tweet). Retrieved 2020-07-02 – via Twitter.
- ^ Andersen, Travis (2013-02-26). "Renaissance Charter School on probation". Boston Globe. Retrieved 2017-04-20.
- ^ "New - About Archived 2016-02-05 at the Wayback Machine." Boston Renaissance Charter Public School. Retrieved on April 20, 2017.
- ^ Feldberg, Michael (2015). UMass Boston at 50: A Fiftieth-Anniversary History of the University of Massachusetts Boston. Amherst, Massachusetts: University of Massachusetts Press. pp. 49–69. ISBN 978-1625341693.
External links
edit- Google news archive. Articles about Park Square.
- The Evolution of Park Square
- Picture: "Pre-war New England Greyhound PDG-3701 backed in the old Park Square Greyhound Terminal in Boston."
- Picture: "A shot of an Almeida Aerocoach loading at their terminal just a few doors away."
- Picture: "The picture of the MacKenzie Line Beck loading shows the Greyhound Terminal off to the right."
42°21′06″N 71°04′06″W / 42.3516°N 71.0684°W