PhotosLocation


Fort_Point_Channel_Historic_District Latitude and Longitude:

42°21′4″N 71°3′2″W / 42.35111°N 71.05056°W / 42.35111; -71.05056
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Fort Point Channel Historic District
Fort Point Channel Historic District is located in Boston
Fort Point Channel Historic District
Fort Point Channel Historic District is located in Massachusetts
Fort Point Channel Historic District
Fort Point Channel Historic District is located in the United States
Fort Point Channel Historic District
LocationNecco Court, Thomson Place, A, Binford, Congress, Farnsworth, Melcher, Midway, Sleeper, Stillings, Summer Sts., Boston, Massachusetts
Coordinates 42°21′4″N 71°3′2″W / 42.35111°N 71.05056°W / 42.35111; -71.05056
Area55 acres (22 ha)
Built1836
ArchitectSafford, Morton; et al.
Architectural styleItalianate, Romanesque
NRHP reference  No. 04000959 [1]
Added to NRHPSeptember 10, 2004

The Fort Point Channel Historic District is an historic district located along Congress, Summer and A streets in South Boston on the south side of Fort Point Channel.

The district includes the Boston Children's Museum (pictured, right), located in a renovated 19th-century brick industrial building, and the Boston Fire Museum, housed in the 1891 Congress Street Fire Station.

History

Consisting of about 55 acres (22 ha) of land across the Fort Point Channel from Boston's Financial District, the area was developed by the Boston Wharf Company from 1836 to 1882, mainly for warehousing and manufacturing. The Boston Wharf Company parceled out all of the lots and laid out all of the streets from scratch, naming the streets after officers in the company and principal tenants in the buildings: Binford, Farnsworth, Melcher, Midway, Sleeper and Stillings streets, Necco Court, Thomson Place.

The Boston Wharf Company constructed most of the buildings for the manufacture and storage of a wide variety of goods, beginning with sugar and molasses and branching out into the wool trade by the end of the 19th century.

Concurrently, the company enlarged its operations to become a chief developer of warehouse and industrial facilities for local railroads and shipping companies. This district made Boston the main production and marketing center for wool for clothing and fabrics during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. [2]

After the wool trade declined, the district's buildings were abandoned. Artists gradually moved into the large, well-lit warehouse loft spaces, thus creating New England's largest enclave of artists, the Fort Point Arts Community. [3]

Architecture

The Fort Point Channel district mainly consists of a visually uniform collection of side-by-side loft buildings constructed between the 1880s and 1920s by the Boston Wharf Company, most bearing the company's trademark logo as a circular copper crest relief attached to each building.

According to the Boston Landmarks Commission, these buildings represent "an unusually coherent and well-preserved collection of late 19th and early 20th century lofts that reflect a critical period of social, economic, and physical development in the City and the region. The loft buildings are generally masonry, with simple volumes and flat roofs. Buildings are elegantly proportioned, with classically inspired details concentrated at entrances and cornices." [2]

Landmark designation

The Fort Point Channel Historic District was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2004. [1]

In 2001, the Fort Point District was petitioned [4] as a Landmark District with the Boston Landmarks Commission. [5] In 2008, a Mayoral-appointed Study Committee began drafting District guidelines. In December 2008, Mayor Menino and the Boston Landmarks Commission voted in favor of the guidelines which were officially approved on January 28, 2009 by the Boston City Council. [6]

See also

External links

References

  1. ^ a b "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. March 13, 2009.
  2. ^ a b "Fort Point Channel Landmark District". July 13, 2016.
  3. ^ "Home". fortpointarts.org.
  4. ^ "SAND News!". Archived from the original on March 11, 2008. Retrieved June 23, 2012.
  5. ^ Fort Point Channel Landmark District - City of Boston
  6. ^ Hillman, Michelle (January 2009). "Fort Point designated as landmark". Boston Business Journal.