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House of Edward Atkinson, Heath Hill
[Source: Brookline Preservation Department]
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Cypress St. at Boylston St.
Looking east on Boylston St. with Cypress St. on the right. On the corner is the house at 136 Cypress St., no longer standing. To the right is a partial view of 144 Cypress St., still standing. In the middle background are the rears of houses on E. Milton Rd., still standing.
[Source: Brookline Preservation Department]
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Looking West From the Brookline Reservoir.
Lee St. is in the foreground, Hillside Rd. and Heath Hill are above.
[Source: Brookline Preservation Department]
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Preparation for the 4th Town Hall
The third town hall is on th left.
[Source: Brookline Preservation Department]
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Larz Anderson Mansion
[Source: Brookline Preservation Department]
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Coolidge Corner, 1930s
[Source: Brookline Preservation Department]
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Baldwin School, 1957
Opened in 1927
[Source: Digital Commonwealth]
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Kindergarten, Baldwin School
Opened in 1927
[Source: Digital Commonwealth]
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Toyerama, 293 Boylston St.
[Source: Digital Commonwealth]
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170 - 201 Davis Ave.
Looking north at Davis Ave., all the houses are still standing. Behind the crowd, center photo, is a wagon advertising “Balls’ Homemade Bread” which was a business in Cambridgeport during the 1890s. From left to right:
- 201 Davis Ave., hidden behind trees
- 195 Davis Ave., partial view.
- 191 Davis Ave. with the double towers
- 185 Davis Ave.
- 181 Davis Ave.
- 179 Davis Ave.
[Source: Digital Commonwealth]
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999 - 1003 Beacon St.
The storefronts from 999-1007 Beacon St. were constructed by Charles Hitchcock in 1906 and still stand. From left to right:
- #999 Beacon St., C. H. Hitchcock, Druggist which first opened 1906 and remained at this location for sixty years.
- #1001 Beacon St., B.A. Freeman, Provisions opened in late 1906. The most recent record available shows the "Freeman Grocery” still there in 1955
- #1003 Beacon St., Coolidge Cleansers Inc.
[Source: Digital Commonwealth]
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26 Still St.
In the background is Pleasant St. The house is no longer standing. John Reece, president of Reece Button Hole Machine Co., and his wife, Marietta Shea, moved to this house when they got married and they raised three sons there. John Reece died at the age of 41 after trying to rescue a worker in his factory during an elevator accident.
[Source: Historic New England]
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26 Still St.
In the background is Pleasant St. The house is no longer standing. John Reece, president of Reece Button Hole Machine Co., and his wife, Marietta Shea, moved to this house when they got married and they raised three sons there. John Reece died at the age of 41 after trying to rescue a worker in his factory during an elevator accident.
[Source: Historic New England]
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Brookline Visiting Nurse Service, 10 Walter Ave.
The Brookline Visiting Nurse Service worked from the headquarters of the Brookline Friendly Society, a health and human services agency located at 10 Walter Ave. in the area known as The Farm. They relocated in 1956 prior to the 1959 takeover of the building by the Brookline Redevelopment Authoirty and its demolition in 1960.
[Source: Brookline Preservation Department]
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Brandon Spa, 1473/1475 Beacon St.
To the right is 1477 Beacon St. Both are still standing.
[Source: Brookline Preservation Department]
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Beacon St. From Carlton St.
Looking at Beacon St. from 79 Carlton St. sometime before 1912 when an apartment building at #1038 Beacon St. was added. From left to right:
- The circular driveway of 79 Carlton St.
- Rear of 1032 Beacon St., the house of Josephine Cunniff. No longer standing.
- The apartment building spanning 1013–1029 Beacon St., still standing.
- The rear of 68 Monmouth St. and the top of 69 Monmouth St., both still standing.
- The house at 1041 Beacon St., no longer standing.
- The rear corner of 71 Carlton St in the foreground, still standing.
[Source: Brookline Preservation Department]
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Carlton St. At Beacon St.
Looking south on Carlton St. from Beacon St. All buildings are still standing. The apartment building on the corner, 1051 Beacon St., has a sign in the window - “Rooms For Rent”.
[Source: Brookline Preservation Department]
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Beacon St., circa 1920
The inbound side of Beacon St. looking east. From left to right, all buildings still standing:
- The “Royal” apartment building at 1469 Beacon St.
- The “Empire” apartment building (entrance obscured) at 1471 Beacon St.
- The Community Service Kitchen at 1473-75 Beacon St. There are two delivery wagons parked in front.
- 1477 Beacon St., apartment building. The visible entrance has been replaced by a window and made part of an apartment.
The Community Service Kitchen was opened in June 1919 by two young Newton brothers-in-law: Guy E. Wyatt and Roger A. Wheeler, both 23. Wyatt had been in the leather business and Wheeler had left Columbia University to serve in the ambulance corps in World War I. (He was awarded the Croix de Guerre for his role in rescuing wounded French soldiers while under fire.) Initially operating solely as a business that prepared and delivered full meals to customers, it expanded two months after opening to #1475, adding an eat-in restaurant. Despite adopting a name more apt to describe a "soup kitchen", Wyatt and Wheeler targeted middle- and upper-class women in Brookline, Newton, and the Back Bay. It’s advertising read: “Dine at home or dine with us. Announcing Brookline’s newest restaurant. A quiet refined home-like dining room.”
[Source: Massachusetts Historical Society]
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Beacon St. Looking West From Corey Rd., 1896
The first street on the right is Kilsyth Rd. followed by Englewood Ave. and Strathmore Rd. Only the building at 1874-1880 Beacon St. with the most distant tower remains.
[Source: Digital Commonwealth]
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73 Gardner Rd.
Standing on Gardner Rd. looking up at Wintrhop Rd. Replaced the William Aspinwall house. No longer standing.
[Source: Digital Commonwealth]
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