place

Publicity Building

Beaux-Arts architecture in MassachusettsBoston Registered Historic Place stubsBoston building and structure stubsBuildings and structures completed in 1916Commercial buildings on the National Register of Historic Places in Massachusetts
National Register of Historic Places in BostonOffice buildings in Boston
Publicity Building Bromfield Boston
Publicity Building Bromfield Boston

The Publicity Building is a historic Class-B commercial office building located at 40-44 Bromfield Street in downtown Boston, Massachusetts.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Publicity Building (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Publicity Building
Hamilton Place, Boston Downtown Boston

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Publicity BuildingContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 42.356388888889 ° E -71.061388888889 °
placeShow on map

Address

Hamilton Place 7,9
02108 Boston, Downtown Boston
Massachusetts, United States
mapOpen on Google Maps

Publicity Building Bromfield Boston
Publicity Building Bromfield Boston
Share experience

Nearby Places

Horticultural Hall (Boston, 1865)
Horticultural Hall (Boston, 1865)

Horticultural Hall (1865-1901) of Boston, Massachusetts, was the headquarters of the Massachusetts Horticultural Society in the later 19th century. It stood at no.100-102 Tremont Street, at the corner of Bromfield Street, opposite the Granary Burying Ground. Architects Gridley J.F. Bryant and Arthur Gilman designed the building. Sculptor Martin Milmore created horticulturally-themed statuary for the building's exterior: "three ancient Roman goddesses ... Ceres, goddess of agriculture; Flora, goddess of flowers; and Pomona, goddess of fruit trees." In the 1880s: "the ground floor [was] occupied by stores; the second story by the Library Room of the society and a hall for the weekly exhibitions; and the upper story by a large and elegant hall used ... at the annual and other important exhibitions. Both of these halls [were] often used for concerts and the better class of entertainments. The society's library, comprising over 4,000 volumes, [was] the most valuable collection of horticultural works in the United States. The halls [were] adorned with portraits and busts of the presidents, founders, and benefactors of the society."By 1899 the society's rooms in the building seemed old-fashioned, small, inconvenient, and expensive to maintain. After internal debate the society sold Horticultural Hall in 1900 and leased space there for some months thereafter. In 1901 the society transferred to its new building in the Back Bay, and the building on Tremont Street was demolished the same year. At the time, Milmore's architectural statues were removed to the home of society president Albert C. Burrage (later the Glen Urquhart School) in Beverly, Massachusetts. In the mid-1990s the society restored Milmore's statues (only torsos survived) and installed them in their new headquarters in Wellesley, Massachusetts.