Hey, there! Log in / Register

Police: Brookline man was loaded for bear - and humans

Brookline Police report seizing what they said was a cache of high-powered armaments and ammunition in a raid yesterday afternoon at a man's apartment at 181 Harvard St.

Recovered were 36 firearms included 14 high powered weapons, several silencers and a large collection of high powered ammunition capable of penetrating bullet proof vests.

Richard Becker is scheduled for arraignment on a variety of weapons charges in Brookline District Court today.

Innocent, etc.


Ad:


Like the job UHub is doing? Consider a contribution. Thanks!

About that helicopter buzzing over Chelsea and Charlestown early this morning

UPDATE: The Globe reports warrants for 30 people in Charlestown, Jamaica Plain and Everett were issued and that 19 people are now in custody.

Probably related to a major bust of crack dealers and related miscreants this morning. Multiple arraignments expected in Charlestown District Court, the Suffolk County District Attorney's office reports, adding Boston Police, prosecutors specializing in gangs and the FBI were involved.


Ad:


Like the job UHub is doing? Consider a contribution. Thanks!

There's only so much remoulade a burger needs

Cissy Huang is left feeling unpleasantly stuffed after consuming an entire oyster burger at Grass Fed in Jamaica Plain:

I mostly blame the remoulade.


Ad:


Like the job UHub is doing? Consider a contribution. Thanks!

Oh, FFS: Town bans swearing in public

Yes, Middleborough town meeting up and approved fines for public cussing.

One of Middleborough's ponds is known as Assawompset.

Ed. note: However, Assawompset Elementary School is in a neighboring town.


Ad:


Like the job UHub is doing? Consider a contribution. Thanks!

On the plus side, the tax break is still less than the CEO's yearly compensation

The Globe reports the BRA wants to give State Street an $11.5-million tax break to move into the Innovation District (so there must be innovative new ways to service the financial needs of the bank's rich clients, no?). It would be spread out over several years, the city would make a boatload of taxes on the building and, besides, the CEO made $16 million in salary and other compensation last year.


Ad:


Like the job UHub is doing? Consider a contribution. Thanks!

Menino: Too hip to be square

We don't get nearly enough chances to use the word "kerfuffle" these days and it's a shame. In any case, the mosh-hating mayor says there's more to hip life in the city than 24-hour gyms and says he's just the hip kinda guy to provide what the young'uns want, rather than some upstart high-tech whippasnappas (who, as John Carroll notes, don't even have a functional Web site yet).


Ad:


Like the job UHub is doing? Consider a contribution. Thanks!

Man hit, killed by Blue Line train at Maverick

MBTA Transit Police report a man who "suddenly entered" the tracks at Maverick shortly before service ended early this morning died. Police say he was white, 47.


Ad:


Like the job UHub is doing? Consider a contribution. Thanks!

Developer proposes 600-foot tower for the Hole

The Herald reports Millennium Partners is doubling down on the original Vornado project with a building that would be taller and bigger.


Ad:


Like the job UHub is doing? Consider a contribution. Thanks!

Why Boston has a professional fire department

A storeowner's record of damages from the riots.

The origins of today's Boston Fire Department date to 1837. Alas, the reason had relatively little to do with improving fire protection in the city - and a lot to do with a riot that began 175 years ago today as some smack talking between some drunken Boston firefighters and participants in an Irish funeral procession.

The City of Boston Archives has posted some original documents related to the riot and the reorganization of the Boston Fire Department, including a report by a committee chaired by Mayor Samuel Eliot on the riots.

Eliot's committee was unable to discover exactly what words were passed between some Engine 20 firefighters, many of whom had "repaired to a neighboring store for refreshments" after returning from a Roxbury fire, and a group of mourners awaiting a procession on Broad Street - now Atlantic Avenue near South Station, around 4 p.m.

But whatever inflamed passions, things ignited when a firefighter was either pushed off the sidewalk or fell - again nobody could say for sure. Enraged mourners headed to the fire station, a commander there ordered the fire engine out and the bell rung, which brought other companies racing to the scene - in great enough numbers to make the mourners pull back, even though many were now armed with clubs from a nearby yard.

As the bells rang, still more fire companies came - and so did many average Bostonians, eager to see what all the fuss was about and not above getting into some fisticuffs - or store windows - themselves. At its height, more than 1,000 men brawled and looted, Eliot's report concluded, adding that, fortunately, the hearse and the body it carried was withdrawn early to a place of safekeeping. Some of the Protestant onlookers decided to smash up nearby Irish homes - and to beat any Irish men they found (they magnanimously allowed women and children to flee).

Eliot called out the city militia to quell the riots, although it took awhile for militia members to assemble at Faneuil Hall - and to stand guard at the city's churches, to keep anybody from raising false alarms. He called the militia out again the following Sunday to patrol Faneuil Hall and other gathering spots just in case.

A month later, the city board of aldermen approved a formal, professional fire department.

A Complete History of the Boston Fire Department, through 1888.
Boston Fire History before 1859
Riot on Broad Street by the Mighty, Mighty Bosstones.


Ad:


Like the job UHub is doing? Consider a contribution. Thanks!

Wife, bystanders pull man off tracks at Central Square

The MBTA says a Florida man walked off the southbound Red Line platform shortly before 5 p.m. yesterday, possibly because he just couldn't stop while trying to get to a train pulling out of the station - a train going the opposite direction from the one he wanted. He plunges into the pit starting around 1:00 on the video; look down the platform, past the guy who walks all the way down, seems to be right there when the guy goes over the edge, then just turns around and walks away.

At 4:52 pm yesterday, a 56-year old Florida man walked off the southbound Red Line platform, and dropped into the pit at Central Station in Cambridge. Within seconds, he was assisted out of the pit by his wife and others. He did not make contact with the third rail, but he was transported to Mt. Auburn Hospital for elbow and back pain. The man said he fell into pit when he attempted to reach the northbound train (on the opposite track). He said he mistakenly believed the Alewife-bound train was the one he wanted.


Ad:


Like the job UHub is doing? Consider a contribution. Thanks!

Pages