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Source Description
Located on the Neponset River, defining Boston's southeastern boundary, Hyde Park developed into a street car suburb of Boston during the last half of the 19th century. In this drawing, the village is viewed from the east. The artist selected a vantage point, as if he was positioned above Brush Hill looking westward across the village as it straddles the river. Besides being a residential suburb, Hyde Park had its own industrial base, with ten large factories identified in the legend, five of which were also pictured in the marginal insets. All of these are located near the river and its tributary, Mother Brook, which runs diagonally through the middle of the picture. Proximity to water power was doubtless an important consideration in determining the original location of these factories. Two railroad lines are shown running through the village, also providing access to the industrial sites. Interestingly, on both lines trains are approaching from opposite directions. It is not clear that double tracks are available before the opposing trains meet. In comparison to other communities near Boston, the town of Hyde Park was established rather late in metropolitan history. Hyde Park was incorporated as a township in 1868 by consolidating a number of small neighboring villages that were formerly part of the older towns of Dorchester, Milton, and Dedham. In 1912, Hyde Park was annexed by Boston, constituting the last major addition to the city by annexation.
Scholar Source Context
Document identity
localId
x633fc32v
label
Hyde Park, Massachusetts
core
obj
dtoType
map
pageCount
1
Source metadata
id
x633fc32v
contentType
map
stage
normalized
title
Hyde Park, Massachusetts
description
Located on the Neponset River, defining Boston's southeastern boundary, Hyde Park developed into a street car suburb of Boston during the last half of the 19th century. In this drawing, the village is viewed from the east. The artist selected a vantage point, as if he was positioned above Brush Hill looking westward across the village as it straddles the river. Besides being a residential suburb, Hyde Park had its own industrial base, with ten large factories identified in the legend, five of which were also pictured in the marginal insets. All of these are located near the river and its tributary, Mother Brook, which runs diagonally through the middle of the picture. Proximity to water power was doubtless an important consideration in determining the original location of these factories. Two railroad lines are shown running through the village, also providing access to the industrial sites. Interestingly, on both lines trains are approaching from opposite directions. It is not clear that double tracks are available before the opposing trains meet. In comparison to other communities near Boston, the town of Hyde Park was established rather late in metropolitan history. Hyde Park was incorporated as a township in 1868 by consolidating a number of small neighboring villages that were formerly part of the older towns of Dorchester, Milton, and Dedham. In 1912, Hyde Park was annexed by Boston, constituting the last major addition to the city by annexation.
date
["1890"]
year
1890
rights
No known copyright restrictions.
rightsUri
No known restrictions on use.
reuseAllowed
no restrictions
language
English
identifierLocal
06_01_001570
creators
O.H. Bailey & Co
institution
Boston Public Library
collections
Urban Maps
Boston and New England Maps
Norman B. Leventhal Map & Education Center Collection
subjects
Hyde Park (Boston, Mass.)--Aerial views
Boston (Mass.)--Aerial views
subjectsGeographic
Boston
Hyde Park
Massachusetts
North and Central America
Suffolk (county)
United States
genreBasic
Maps
typeOfResource
Cartographic
Still image
country
United States
state
Massachusetts
county
Suffolk
city
Boston
thumbnailUrl
largeImageUrl
pageCount
1
source
import
pubPlace
Boston
publisher
O.H. Bailey
Source extras
institutionArkId
sf268508b
collectionArkId
9s1621613
citySection
Hyde Park
schema:latitude
42.25
schema:longitude
-71.1167
extent
1 view : col. ; 47 x 69 cm.
notes
Indexed for points of interest.
Includes ill.
Bird's-eye view.
hasTranscription
no
dcId
x633fc32v
type
map
Single page context
seq
1
pageIndex
0
type
photo
mediaId
ca647da7739696a0