Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Tremont Row
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
Tremont Row (1830s-1920s) in Boston, Massachusetts, was a short street that flourished in the 19th and early-20th centuries. It was located near the intersection of Court, Tremont, and Cambridge streets, in today's Government Center area.[1] It existed until the 1920s, when it became known as Scollay Square.[2] In 1859 the Barre Gazette newspaper described Tremont Row as "the great Dry Goods Street of Boston."[3]

Remove ads
Tenants
Summarize
Perspective
Anthony Feola Photographer
- Thomas Gold Appleton
- Austin and Stone's Dime Museum
- Thomas Ball, sculptor[4]
- Hammatt Billings, architect[5]
- Boston Artists' Association
- Comstock & Ross[5]
- Cutting & Turner, photographers[6]
- John J.P. Davis, daguerreotype artist[5]
- Dobson & Schumann, photographers[7]
- R.A. Dobson, photographer[8]
- John Doggett & Co.[9]
- Thomas Edwards (artist)
- Marguerite F. Foley, "cameo cutter"[10]
- E.J. Foss, photographer
- Miss Addie M. Gendron, photographer
- Frederick Gleason, publisher
- Mr. Gray, portrait artist[11]
- Harris & Stanwood, silver[12]
- Haven, Pierce & Co., shoes[5]
- Josiah Johnson Hawes, photographer
- Heard & Moseley
- John B. Heywood
- Albert Gallatin Hoit
- Charles Hubbard (artist)
- William Hudson Jr., artist[13]
- F.A. Jones & Co. "Great Silk and Shawl House"[14]
- Joseph Leonard, auctioneer; Leonard & Cunningham[5]
- Leonard & Pierce[15]
- G.H. Loomis, photographer
- Mayer's Confectionary[16]
- Mechanic Apprentices Library Association
- Naismith Photographer
- New England Art Union
- William H. Oakes
- Alfred Ordway
- Pavilion Hotel[17]
- George P. Reed, publisher[5]
- Scollay Theatre
- Sharp & Michelin lithographers
- Southworth & Hawes, photographers
- I.A. Wetherbee
- Merrill G. Wheelock
- Moses Wight, artist
new york dental parlors
Remove ads
Images
- Detail of map of Boston in 1838, showing Tremont Row.
- Advertisement for Tuttle & Oakes boots and shoes, 1848
- Advertisement for Southworth & Hawes, daguerreotypists, 1848
- Brattle Street, looking up towards Tremont Row, c. 1860s (Bostonian Society)
- Advertisement for J.S. Hunt & Co. detective office, 1868
- Theatre Comique, Tremont Row, Boston, c. 1916
See also
References
Further reading
External links
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads