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Flying around olde Boston

Interesting to see how much has changed - and hasn't - since the 1920s:

Via ArchBoston.org.

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Comments

You will be tested on it.

Was this film dated most by:

A) Technical quality
B) Automobiles
C) Everyone on street wearing suits and hats
D) The proud, optimistic, industrious spirit
E) Harvard's endowment being "over 100 million dollars"

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F) The automobiles pictured downtown were actually moving. In neat, orderly rows, no less.

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were jaywalking all over the place.

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F) The now-ironic "contrast" between the colonial-era Old State House and the modern, slender Customs House "skyscraper"

G) The narrator's accent, somewhere between WWII-era radio announcer, Bostonian, and Kermit the Frog, which reveals the film's true surprise:

This narrator was the historical basis for Art Carney's Ed Norton.

Oh, Chef of the Future, can it core a apple?

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Very cool

first thing I noticed. Not one t-shirt or pair of jeans in sight.

Second, no traffic.

Third, no Spare change guy?

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"who fifty years ago, founded a religion in *conservative* Boston."

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I was struck more by what hasn't changed.

The classic touristy vistas are largely the same!

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What a great film. Amazing how much is still the same. Funny that it should stop at the Wayside Inn.
It was the cars that finally clinched the era for me!!

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Somebody please help me out.

When I first saw the Old State House in the 1970's, there was no lion and unicorn. In recent years, the lion and unicorn were restored. At that time, I read somewhere that those two beasts were torn down by angry colonists and were not restored until that recent restoration. Based on this short movie, I was obviously misinformed. Can anybody tell me where I went astray, on this matter only? Thanks.

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I don't know what was there in the 1970s but they were torn down in 1776 & replaced in an 1882 restoration.

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