Photos
Prudential tower tonight
By adamg - 4/22/13 - 8:20 pmPhelan Canney looked out the window this evening.
RedSox223 photographed the Pru from the Charles:
Remembering in different ways
By adamg - 4/22/13 - 3:12 pmNeal Gaffey watched people come out of City Hall and nearby offices for the moment of silence.
In the Financial District, Jed Hresko watched a lone woman come out and observe the moment of silence.

Our own Stevil reports from Boylston and Berkeley that "the silence made you want to cry:"
Tribute to Sean Collier
By adamg - 4/22/13 - 2:21 pmDana noticed the Alchemist at the MIT student center is sporting a new shoulder patch today.
Peace
By adamg - 4/21/13 - 11:42 pm
Martin Richard's words.
Liz Carney led a Dot Art Paint for Peace Day at Savin Hill Beach today that ended with the hanging of this banner across I-93. Photo by Peter McNamara.
Some fresh paint on Tremont Street
By adamg - 4/21/13 - 7:41 pmAlli Knothe photographed the side of an auto-parts store on Tremont Street near the Roxbury Crossing T stop this afternoon.
The peace-wave generator
By adamg - 4/21/13 - 2:22 pm
Masstreehugger spotted this guy and his contraption in the Public Garden today.
Backing Ortiz
By adamg - 4/21/13 - 12:32 pmCherie L. King photographed a sign on Newbury Street this morning.
Free fuzzies at Boylston and Berkeley
By adamg - 4/20/13 - 12:31 pm
Neal Gaffey photographed therapy dogs walking through the crowd in the Back Bay this morning. That's Liberty and Independence in the foreground.
Tree falls on Boylston Street
By adamg - 4/20/13 - 1:24 am
Brig Dauber captured the Public Garden tree that plunged to its demise across Boylston Street Friday night.
Meter maid don't care
By adamg - 4/18/13 - 1:43 pmYes, that is a Boston parking ticket on the windshield of one of the trucks that has turned the Charles Street side of the Common into a National Guard encampment. Richard Lynds couldn't believe it, either.
UPDATE: See comment below: The city didn't ticket the truck.
Reflecting
By adamg - 4/18/13 - 11:26 amBennett Wilson reports City Hall set up screens so that workers and visitors there could watch the interfaith service.
On Huntington Avenue last night
By adamg - 4/18/13 - 9:07 amNathaniel Jewett captured the building across from Symphony Hall last night.
Vigil for a little boy
By adamg - 4/16/13 - 10:24 pm
Jed Hresko attended the vigil tonight in Garvey Park, across from St. Ann Church in Dorchester.
The Dorchester Reporter reports 1,000 people attended.
Landsmen in Lexuses
By adamg - 4/16/13 - 6:42 pm
Last November, I spotted a Lexus with an ironic Yiddish license plate. Turns out the owner, Ruth Shuman, saw the post. And she reports:
This Saturday I was in Auburndale and pulled into a parking spot. When I looked over to the car next to me, look at what I saw! Interesting how we both drive the same model car! I thought this was pretty hysterical.
Six years later, Virginia Tech still deserves a vote. #DemandAction from Congress
By Anonymous - 4/16/13 - 2:36 pm
Destroyed
By adamg - 4/15/13 - 9:10 pmBrian D'Amico was near the finish line and took photos, including this one of the remains of somebody's sneaker.
Grief, shock in Kenmore Square
By adamg - 4/15/13 - 8:30 pmPhotographynatalia was in Kenmore Square this afternoon to photograph runners when the bombs went off. A shocked runner reacted to the news of the explosions.
Copyright Photographynatalia. Posted in the Universal Hub pool on Flickr.
Revolutionary Roslindale
By adamg - 4/15/13 - 2:41 pm
Capt. John Baker, died in 1781, aged 75.
Roslindale is not the sort of place you associate with the Revolution, but it turns out a cemetery there, by the side of a road Washington's forces used to ferry supplies from Dedham to Boston, was the final resting place for a number of Revolutionary War soldiers.
You can see the remains of the Walter Street Burying Ground on Peters Hill in the Arnold Arboretum. Go into the Peters Hill entrance of the Arboretum where South Street meets Walter Street and start up the path on the hill. As you walk, keep in mind that back in the day, Roslindale as a place didn't exist - the area was a hinterland of the town of Roxbury. And Walter Street, then known as the Dedham Road was a key supply route for the Americans.
Sounding the alarm
By adamg - 4/15/13 - 1:44 pm
Paul Revere hoofed it out of the North End this morning to warn the colonists the Redcoats were coming.
Afterwards, Minutemen stood at attention in front of the Paul Revere statue and Old North Church as Taps were played and a wreath laid at a memorial for fallen patriots on the Prado.
Now wait just a minute, man
By adamg - 4/14/13 - 6:39 pm
The Patriots Day parade in Arlington was fun, but it didn't really have a lot of Minutemen - way more Shriners, in fact (and a troop of Civil War re-enactors, um, what?).
A word of advice for people thinking about driving anywhere near Copley Square today
By adamg - 4/14/13 - 12:19 pm
Don't.
Jed Hresko captured the scene down Boylston yesterday. Mike the Mad Biologist has more photos.
Ewok awaits reinforcements at Prudential Shaw's
By adamg - 4/12/13 - 9:10 pm
Jed Hresko spotted this extra fuzzy thing among the carriages tonight.
Run, Johnny, run!
By adamg - 4/12/13 - 9:38 amJust in time for Patriots Day, the BPL has posted Marathon photos by Leslie Jones, including the immortal Johnny Kelley finishing the race second in 1940 and on the way to his first-place finish in 1945 (on far right; in Natick Center, ye ed thinks):
They don't build them like they used to
By adamg - 4/10/13 - 10:27 amThe folks at the Boston City Archives wonder if you can you figure out when and where this photo was taken. See it larger.
Opening Day at Fenway
By adamg - 4/8/13 - 6:40 am
Opening Day, 1937: Gov. Charles Hurley throws out the first pitch, flanked by managers Joe Cronin of the Red Sox (l.) and Joe McCarthy of the Yankees.
Over the decades, news photographer Leslie Jones spent quite a bit of time at Fenway, including on Opening Day.
In 1963, the Red Sox opened the home season while the Prudential tower was still under construction (see it larger):












