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Giving Boston the works

The Works in old Boston

The folks at the Boston City Archives wonder if you can place this photo. See it larger.

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Found this link giving an address for W.A. Sylvester, Mechanical Draughtsman, Pattern and Model Maker

The page says he started his business in 1883, so the photo is some time between then and the 1910s when automobiles mostly displaced horse-drawn carriages, reducing the demand for horse shoers.

I would guess that the buildings were torn down in the 1950s for the elevated Central Artery. It's now a pretty deserted back alley of service entrances and loading docks.

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I agree. PF Harrigan was also at 37 Haverhill Street.

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Is it a quirk of the lens and perspective or is that building severely leaning?

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I was thinking it looked like the old part of Amsterdam where 1/2 of the buildings are leaning at almost alarming angles against each other

In both cases, probably due to old construction on old fill.

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Still not quite as dramatic as that triple decker on Western Ave in Cambridge. I wonder every time I walk by what it's like to live there.

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Love the old clawfoot bathtub in the window,

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I wonder if that one ended up getting dragged to a hilltop for a Cialis ad?

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MT Hope Street
Rosilindale

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I think I saw it being used as a space saver on a street in Dorchester

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IMAGE(https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/7/79/-29--33_Haverhill_Street_%2815645381543%29.jpg/800px--29--33_Haverhill_Street_%2815645381543%29.jpg)

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Using your clue, I just searched for images related to Haverhill St.

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You have to love the doors on the second and third floors of the building to the left. The first step is a doozy.

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Looks like carpenters and woodworkers up there. I suspect the doors are to load lumber on the upper floors. I'm surprised there isn't a hoist arm above them.

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Thanks for playing, folks! This shows 35-37 Haverhill Street in 1895.

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