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Houses of Worship
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Temple Ohabei Shalom, 1928
Photograph by the Boston Herald newspaper on November 25, 1928 for a story on the upcoming dedication ceremony on December 12. At the time, the congregation was already the oldest in Boston at 86 years old. The still-undeveloped land on Kent St., part of a large estate, can be glimpsed on the left. Beacon St. is in the foreground.
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St. Aidan's Church
Freeman St. , built 1912
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Harvard Congregational Church; Erected 1873
Corner Marion St. and Harvard St.
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Harvard Congregational Church, Harvard St. South of Coolidge Corner
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Church of St. Lawrence, 774 Boylston St.
Second Roman Catholic church to open (1897) in Brookline. Boylston St. west of Chestnut Hill Ave.
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St. Lawrence Catholic Church, 1907
774 Boylston St. Just west of Chestnut Hill Ave.
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Sears Chapel, Longwood Area
Before the creation of Chapel St. and Longwood Station. David Sears house (now divided into townhouses) at the corner of Hawes & Colchester visible to the right
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Sear's Chapel, Longwood Station, Muddy River
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Muddy River & Sears Chapel
Newly constructed Longwood train station with Chapel St. behind it.
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Episcopal Church of Our Saviour, Carlton & Monmouth
Carlton to the left, Monmouth going west to the right
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First Parish Church, Second Building
In 1806, this church was erected on the present-day site of the First Parish Unitarian Church. It replaced the original church which was located across Walnut St. opposite the Pierce Hall building.
[Source: Digital Commonwealth]
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Women's Dinner, First Parish Church, 1887
It is speculated that this is one of two photographs of a supper described in the May 7, 1887 issue of the Brookline Chronicle.
“The sewing circle connected with the First Parish closed the seasons laborers on May 3rd with a pleasant supper, and the exhibition of some views by a member recently returned from a journey to the South and West. A most important part of the entertainment was the voluntary offer of two young ladies to photograph the assembled company in a group around the table, thus giving tangible proof of the existing existence of a society which was organized in 1824.”
The room does not match ay rooms currently in Pierce Hall, which was a common site for similar gatherings, and remains unidentified. Nineteen names were listed with the photo: Mrs. Cobb, Eunice Noyes, Mary F. Wicks, Suey A. Brown, Bessie Noyes, Mrs. Clark, Miss Howard, Miss Adriana Brown, Susie Hayes, Mrs. Noyes, Mrs. Poor, Sadie Brown, Mrs. Mellen, Louise Brown, Mrs. Stearns, Annie Stearns, Mrs. Jinney, Mrs. Train, Mrs. Stodder. Eighteen women are seated and four younger girls are serving. All the participants who have been tentatively identified lived in the immediate area of the First Parish Church and Pierce Hall. There are several clusters of extended family members.
A speculative analysis of the names shows:
Noyes Family (Walnut St.)
- Mrs. Noyes (1840-1915) - Susan Prescott (Wright) Noyes, wife of George Dana Noyes
- Elizabeth (“Bessie”) C. Noyes (1873-1955), daughter. An existing tintype of Elizabeth bears a resemblance to the older girl standing at the rear left of the table
- Emma Noyes (1876-1950), daughter. The roster actually names a “Eunice Noyes” but no records are evident for a “Eunice Noyes” in Brookline at this time, we are speculating that she is Emma, the other daughter of Susan Noyes. An existing tintype of Emma bears a significant resemblance to the young girl approaching the table on the left side
Extended family of Rev. Howard Nicolson Brown, Pastor of the First Parish Church
- Sarah (“Sadie”) Brown (1878 - 1955), daughter
- Mary Louise Brown (1873-1947), daughter
- Mary F. Wicks (1828-1904), mother of Inez Wicks, wife of Howard Brown
Extended Stearns Family
- Mrs. Stearns (1824- 1904), Anna Maria (Mellen) Stearns, wife of Charles Henry Stearns
- Mrs. Mellen (1803-1899), the mother of Mrs. Stearns
- Annie Stearns (1864-1901). Listed with her maiden name although she married Alexander Stoddard Jenney in 1886. After Annie’s death he married her sister.
- Mrs. Jenney (1836-1912). Mary Hannah (Howes) Jenney, wife of Noah Stoddard Jenney; mother-in-law of Annie Stearns; lived on Walnut St.
Others
- Mrs. Cobb (1830-1911), wife of Albert A. Cobb, nee Mary Russell Candler. Lived on Walnut Terrace
- Miss Adriana Brown (1805-1893), never married. Lived on Cypress St. near Walnut St. No apparent relation to the other Browns.
- Mrs. Poor (1820-1912), Wife of Henry Varnum Poor, nee Mary Wild Pierce. Daughter of Lucy Tappan and Rev. John Pierce, former pastor of the church. Lived across Walnut St. from the church.
- Frances (“Fanny”) G. Train, widow of Samuel F. Train. Lived on nearby Chestnut Pl.
- Mrs. Stodder (1830-1921) , wife of Henry Franklin Stodder, nee Isabella Binney. Lived on Walnut St.
- Susan Frances Haynes (1841-1934), never married.
Unidentified
- Miss Howard
- Suey A. Brown
- Mrs. Clark
[Source: Digital Commonwealth]
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Walnut St., First Parish Church, 1880s
Looking West, Pierce Hall is on the left, still standing. It was the first town hall and later the high school. Center is the First Parish Church which was torn down in 1891 and replaced by the current First Parish Unitarian Church.
On the right is the house of Henry Varnum Poor, still standing (although highly modified). Poor was a
New York attorney who married Mary Pierce, daughter of the Rev. John Pierce, minister at the First Parish Church across the street. At
the time he bought this house, Poor was best known as the editor of the American Railroad Journal. One of the first people to systematically
collect, compile, and disseminate reliable business information, he went on to found the Standard and Poor Corporation, publishers of widely
read compendiums of business information. The next owner of the house was Olive Higgins Prouty (1882-1974), a novelist most active in the
period between the First and Second World Wars.
[Source: Brookline Preservation Department]
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First Parish Church, Third Building
Replaced in 1891 by the current First Parish Unitarian Church.
[Source: Brookline Preservation Department]
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First Parish Church, Third Building, 1880s
Looking west on Walnut St. just past the Pierce Hall.Torn down in 1891. Replaced by the current First Parish Unitarian Church
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First Parish Unitarian Church, Fourth Building
[Source: Olmsted]
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First Parish Unitarian Church, Fourth Building
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