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Source Description

Towns located on rivers were often viewed from the river. Bird's eye views of two neighboring towns located on opposite sides of the Charles River Newton and Watertown illustrate the artists use of the river in composing their drawings. O.H. Bailey depicted both, viewing each from their opposing shores placing the river in the foreground. In his 1878 view of Newton, Bailey depicted the community from the north (or Watertown) side of the river, looking south toward Newton or, more precisely, the village of Newton Corner. Newton Township, incorporated in 1688, is comprised of thirteen villages, most of which developed during the 19th century as residential suburbs of Boston. Newton Corner was the oldest of these villages. The residential character of the village is evident in this view. The legend identifies sixteen prominent structures, but none of them are factories. Rather, there were seven commercial establishments, six churches, a public library, schools, and the railroad station, all suggesting a residential suburb linked to Boston by train. Although this village remains a residential suburb today, its physical appearance has changed radically. In the 1960s, the Massachusetts Turnpike was constructed along the Boston and Albany Railroads right of way, resulting in the demolition of many houses and commercial structures and the division of the village into two separate parts.

Scholar Source Context

Document identity
localId
x633fc50s
label
View of Newton, Mass
core
obj
dtoType
map
pageCount
1
Source metadata
id
x633fc50s
contentType
map
stage
normalized
title
View of Newton, Mass
description
Towns located on rivers were often viewed from the river. Bird's eye views of two neighboring towns located on opposite sides of the Charles River Newton and Watertown illustrate the artists use of the river in composing their drawings. O.H. Bailey depicted both, viewing each from their opposing shores placing the river in the foreground. In his 1878 view of Newton, Bailey depicted the community from the north (or Watertown) side of the river, looking south toward Newton or, more precisely, the village of Newton Corner. Newton Township, incorporated in 1688, is comprised of thirteen villages, most of which developed during the 19th century as residential suburbs of Boston. Newton Corner was the oldest of these villages. The residential character of the village is evident in this view. The legend identifies sixteen prominent structures, but none of them are factories. Rather, there were seven commercial establishments, six churches, a public library, schools, and the railroad station, all suggesting a residential suburb linked to Boston by train. Although this village remains a residential suburb today, its physical appearance has changed radically. In the 1960s, the Massachusetts Turnpike was constructed along the Boston and Albany Railroads right of way, resulting in the demolition of many houses and commercial structures and the division of the village into two separate parts.
date
["1878"]
year
1878
rights
No known copyright restrictions.
rightsUri
No known restrictions on use.
reuseAllowed
no restrictions
language
English
identifierLocal
06_01_001827
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
Newton (Mass.)--Aerial views
subjectsGeographic
Massachusetts
Middlesex (county)
Newton
North and Central America
United States
genreBasic
Maps
typeOfResource
Cartographic
Still image
country
United States
state
Massachusetts
county
Middlesex
city
Newton
pageCount
1
source
import
pubPlace
Boston
publisher
O.H. Bailey & Co.
Source extras
institutionArkId
sf268508b
collectionArkId
9s1621613
schema:latitude
42.3333
schema:longitude
-71.2
extent
1 view ; 46 x 64 cm.
notes
Indexed for points of interest.
hasTranscription
no
dcId
x633fc50s
type
map
Single page context