statler
Senior Member
- Joined
- May 25, 2006
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Surviving as a retail or restaurant space is a challenge anywhere and surviving for 100+ years is especially impressive. Perhaps Boston have been lucky in this regard and we had more than our fair share of such places, however it seems that we have lost A LOT of spaces recently that had previously survived a Great Depression, countless recessions, two worlds wars, white flight, urban renewal and the ensuing gentrification. They are probably a myriad of reasons for this, but to me it just seems like as a society we have decided that old things should either be declared 'historic' and put into (or made into) a museum or discarded. Living history is either out of vogue or just too expensive (or to put a finer point on it, not profitable enough).
I recently found out that M. Steinert & Sons will be closing it's Boston location at the end of the year and I was compiling a mental list of local spots that have closed recently(ish) - Filene's, Filene's Basement, Locke-Ober, Stoddard’s (the store, not the restaurant), Jacob Wirth, Durgin-Park, Doyles, Steinarts, etc... and I started to think, "Well, what's left?"
So I started a list of really old retail establishments and restaurants we still have left (as of this writing at least). Unfortunately, I could only come up a really short list and it mostly confined to downtown, so I know I mist be missing a ton. Anything you can add would be appreciated. I'm mostly thinking about larger, more well known places, but places like a tailor shop that been operating in the basement in Dorchester since 1902 are cool too.
Warren Tavern
EB Horn
Union Oyster House
Parker House
Fairmont Copley
Park Plaza (yeah, this is 1927 but still fits I think)
Long's Jewelers (they are not in their original location and I think they may have left Boston altogether at some point for a while?)
So I know I am missing some really obvious stuff as well as probably some smaller places. I'm not including government, educational or cultural/art institutions.
I recently found out that M. Steinert & Sons will be closing it's Boston location at the end of the year and I was compiling a mental list of local spots that have closed recently(ish) - Filene's, Filene's Basement, Locke-Ober, Stoddard’s (the store, not the restaurant), Jacob Wirth, Durgin-Park, Doyles, Steinarts, etc... and I started to think, "Well, what's left?"
So I started a list of really old retail establishments and restaurants we still have left (as of this writing at least). Unfortunately, I could only come up a really short list and it mostly confined to downtown, so I know I mist be missing a ton. Anything you can add would be appreciated. I'm mostly thinking about larger, more well known places, but places like a tailor shop that been operating in the basement in Dorchester since 1902 are cool too.
Warren Tavern
EB Horn
Union Oyster House
Parker House
Fairmont Copley
Park Plaza (yeah, this is 1927 but still fits I think)
Long's Jewelers (they are not in their original location and I think they may have left Boston altogether at some point for a while?)
So I know I am missing some really obvious stuff as well as probably some smaller places. I'm not including government, educational or cultural/art institutions.
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