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The Boston Common is a public park in downtown Boston, Massachusetts. It is the oldest city park in the United States.[4] Boston Common consists of 50 acres of land bounded by Tremont Street, Park Street, Beacon Street, Charles Street, and Boylston Street. The Common was designated as a Boston Landmark by the Boston Landmarks Commission in 1977
SITE FEATURES
Gardens, Programs
On this site...
William Blaxton was the first European owner of the land. He had arrived in Massachusetts as chaplain to the Robert Gorges expedition that landed in Weymouth in 1623. Blaxton lived entirely alone for five years on the peninsula that became Boston. Blaxton sold all but six of his 50 acres back to Winthrop in 1634 for £30. The governor purchased the land through a one-time tax on residents amounting to 6 shillings per person. Those 44 acres became the town commons of Boston and today form the bulk of Boston Common. The Common was used for a variety of purposes until its formal conversion into a public park during the 1830s.
COMMON
EST. 1634
During the 1630s, the Common was used by many families as a cow pasture. The Granary Burying Ground located at the southern edge of the Common was established in 1660. Boston Common took over from the gibbet outside the gate of Boston Neck as the town execution grounds and was used for public hangings until 1817. Most of these executions were carried out from the limb of a large oak, which was replaced with a gallows in 1769. he Common's status as a civic property led to its use as a public speaking grounds, frequently used by evangelists such as George Whitefield.
On May 19, 1713, 200 citizens rioted on the Common in the Boston Bread Riot in reaction to a serious food shortage in the city. Also referred to as a "trayning field," over 1000 Redcoats made camp on the Common during the British occupation of Boston in 1775. It was from here that three brigades of Redcoats embarked to make the fateful trip to Lexington and Concord.
John Hancock's mansion overlooked Boston Common, and as the Governor’s wife, Dorothy Quincy Hancock was obliged to entertain 300 naval officers during a visit from Admiral D’Estaing’s French fleet in 1778. Facing a shortage of milk, she improvised and sent servants to the Common to milk the community cows. If the Hancocks felt free to take from Boston Common, it was because they also added to it. Hancock provided a large cask of Madeira wine and a fireworks display for the celebration held on the Common in 1765 for the repeal of the Stamp Act, and built a bandstand on the Common in 1771.
HISTORIC PEOPLE
John Hancock
President
Dorothy Quincy Hancock
Benjamin Franklin
Diplomat
John Adams
Ambassador
Samuel Adams
Delegate
Joseph Warren
Brigadier General
Artemas Ward
Major General
Charles Lee
Major General
Israel Putnam
Major General
Benjamin Lincoln
Major General
Henry Knox
Major General
John Quincy Adams
Elbridge Gerry
Delegate
Robert Treat Paine
Delegate
Lucy Flucker Knox
Benjamin Edes
Josiah Quincy II
William Molineux
Joshua Bracket
John Gill
Mercy Scollay Warren
Paul Revere
Post Rider
William Dawes
Post Rider
Thomas Gage
Lieutenant General
William Howe
Lieutenant General
Henry Clinton
Lieutenant General
John Burgoyne
Lieutenant General
Charles Cornwallis
Major General
Francis Smith
Major General
Alexander Leslie
Brigadier General
Hugh Percy
Brigadier General
Francis Rawdon
Captain
John Pitcairn
Major
Benjamin Hallowell
Peter Oliver Sr
Thomas Flucker
Margaret Kemble Gage
N/A
Sussanna Clarke Copley
Jonathan Sewall
Attorney General
Thomas Hutchinson
John Malcom
Customs Official
Francis Rotch
John Singleton Copley
Painter