Posts in Locales
Eliot Hall: National Register of Historic Places Materials

Eliot Hall was built as a public meeting hall ca. 1832. Since 1878, it, has been the home of the Footlight Club of Jamaica Plain, which has been recognized by the New England Theater Conference as the oldest continuing amateur theatrical organization in the United States. The building is an architecturally notable Greek Revival/Italianate frame meeting hall located near what has been the historic, social, and political center of Jamaica Plain

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The History of 3474-3476 Washington Street

3474-3476 Washington Street in Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts is a three-story, two-family house that was built sometime between 1874 and 1886 by Isaac Harris Cary, a prominent merchant and real estate developer from Jamaica Plain. The double-frame house, located at the corner of Washington and Gartland Streets, is built in the Gothic Revival style with simple decorative trusses above the third-floor dormers and a hip-on-gable, or jerkinhead, roof.

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Milmore Memorial at Forest Hills Cemetery

The Milmore Memorial is a masterwork by the great American sculptor, Daniel Chester French. It honors two Irish-American brothers who were both sculptors - Martin and Joseph Milmore. The sculpture Death Arresting the Hand of the Sculptor was first installed in August 1893. It has since moved locations within Forest Hills Cemetery and gone through several pedestals/surrounds.

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197 Green Street

At first glance, the house at 197 Green Street is unique for its small size and the colorful graffiti that has covered its exterior since 2016. But if we look behind its 1950’s siding, and comb the historical record, we discover that the house is not, as it might first appear, an outdated structure. Rather, the house represents a significant period of time in the development of Jamaica Plain, and of Green Street in particular.

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