Boston on the Internet
Gerald Richman, Department of English
Scholarship of Application: Integration & Connection
Academic Conference 2007
Suffolk University
March 23, 2007
URL: webcas.cas.suffolk.edu/richman/Boston on the Internet
The goal of this workshop is to provide a guide to scholarly internet resources on Boston, especially sites that either are not available at all through a google search or that may be buried among thousands and thousands of hits for apartment rentals and trendy shops and restaurants--and some hands-on practice . My main academic interests in Boston are literary works (poems, plays, short stories, novels, memoirs) set in Boston (see my Annotated Bibliography of Works of Literature Set in Boston) and visual and documentary contextual materials, including maps, photographs, and contemporary documents, to illuminate my teaching of two courses, English 398 Boston: A City in Fiction and English/History 481 Boston in History, Literature, and Film, which I taught Spring 2006, and hope to teach again, with Prof. Bob Allison, Chair of the History Department and author of A Short History of Boston .
In part today, I will use Suffolk University's Centennial to illustrate resources and search strategies. On the screen, for instance, you have been viewing the best visual presentation of what Boston looked like in 1906, the year Gleason Archer began what became Suffolk University. These are the earliest films of Boston, created by the Edison Company, between 1901 and 1905--precursors in a way of this year's Academy Award winning film The Departed, which incidentally features views of the State House from this building. The Boston Public Library, provider of some of the best online material on Boston, has put these films (silent, of course) online at Boston at the Movies: First Films of the City 1901-1905.
Another view of Boston at the turn of the twentieth century is provided by Boston Close Up Windows on a New Century (Historic New England), a narrated tour using old photographs of common street scenes.
Also informative and entertaining is an an animation Boston 3D Time Machine showing physical changes of Boston (Future Boston, Inc.). See also on this topic 1811 Lithographs and especially Boston: History of the Landfills (Jefferey Howe, Boston C).
Major cultural and educational institutions in Boston also provide online access to many of their resources.
Other Interesting Sites
Boston Harbor Islands Visitor Guide (Boston Harbor Islands Partnership)
Harriet Hosmer. Boston and Boston People, in 1850 (poem, excerpt)
Boston Maps (66 maps, American Memory)
Maps
Use Zoom feature to magnify view to see individual sections clearly.
Images 1-20
Boston Images from the New York Public Library Digital Gallery (3,687 items) (link from ENC site)
Images of Boston from the Library of Congress Prints and Photographs division - keyword search: "Boston" (link from ENC site)
Prints, sketches, & paintings of Boston from Artcylopedia (link from ENC site)
Maps, engravings, and prints of Boston from the Yale University Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library - keyword search: "Boston" (link from ENC site)
Boston Illustrated (1886)
Historical Photographs of Suffolk Buildings and Locations (Bostonian Society)
Boston History & Innovation Collaborative
Searched http://www.earlyamerica.com for Boston (152 matches)
Amercian Antiquarian Society Digital Collections
Boston Online: Historic Photos
The City Record and Boston News-Letter
Old Colb urn House Before It Was Torn Down
Garland Junior College: A Brief History (Simmons C Libraries)
Simmons College Archives: Fenway Area Historical Photo Exhibit
Leather District (South Cove)
A view of Boston, after the Great Fire of November 9th and 10th, 1872.
Invitation to the B oston Tea Party (facsimile)
"The Decisive Day Is Come": The Battle of Bunker Hill (Massachusetts Historical Solciety)
The Sargent Murals (BPL)
Mission Hill (MIT)
Boston Massachusetts History (Hello Boston): Includes links to full texts of old books about Boston and early videos (e.g., Theodore Rossevelt attending the wedding of his son)
Boston 1775 (J.L. Bell)
WGBH Forums at Old South Meeting House, includes audio and video of lectures, including Bob Allison
Sullivan, Charles M. Harvard Square History and Development, Executive Director
Cambridge Historical Commission (2004)
Seaford, John Albert. Boston Byways and Highways
Boston History and architecture (iboston.org)
Medieval Boston, include 1956 photo of Stop and Shop on site of Ridgeway Building