This article is a of the history of the city of Boston, Massachusetts, US.
17th century
18th century
1700sâÂÂ1760s
1770sâÂÂ1790s
19th century
1800sâÂÂ1840s
- 1830
- Boston Society of Natural History established.
- July 24: Boston Evening Transcript begins publication.
- Population: 61,392.
- 1831
- The Liberator and The Boston Post begin publication.
- New England Anti-Slavery Society established.
- S.S. Pierce in business.
- 1832
- Boston Lying-In Hospital and Afric-American Female Intelligence Society established.
- Charles Wells becomes mayor.
- 1833
- The Boston Journal newspaper begins publication.
- Boston Female Anti-Slavery Society, Boston Seaman's Aid Society, and East Boston Company founded.
- Harding's Gallery active (approximate date).
- 1834
- Parker & Ditson and Boston Sugar Refinery (East Boston) in business.
- Temple School opens.
- Theodore Lyman becomes mayor.
- Thompson Island becomes part of Boston.
- 1835 â Abiel Smith School and American House (hotel) founded.
- William Lloyd Garrison attacked by anti-abolitionist mob.
- 1836
- East Boston annexed to Boston.
- Boston Pilot Catholic newspaper in publication.
- National Theatre and Lion Theatre open.
- Chamber of Commerce established.
- Samuel Turell Armstrong becomes mayor.
- Abolition Riot of 1836
- 1837
- June 11: Broad Street Riot.
- September 12: Montgomery Guards Riot.
- Sylvester Graham Riot.
- Samuel Atkins Eliot becomes mayor.
- Harvard Musical Association organized.
- 1838 â African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church established.
- 1839
- Lowell Institute lectures begin.
- Melodeon opens.
- City lunatic asylum established.
- 1840
- Friends of Ireland society founded.
- Durgin-Park restaurant and Peabody's West Street Bookstore in business.
- Cunard's steamship Britannia sails from Liverpool to Boston.
- Population: 93,383.
- Jonathan Chapman becomes mayor.
- 1841
- Boston and Albany Railroad in operation.
- Boston Museum, Boston Artists' Association, and Plumbe's photo gallery established.
- Probation for prisoners introduced.
- 1842 â Merchants Exchange built.
- 1843
- Tremont Temple established.
- Martin Brimmer becomes mayor.
- 1844
- Liverpool-Boston "White Diamond Line" begins operating.
- Phillips School established.
- 1845
- Chinese Museum, Howard Athenaeum, and New England Historic Genealogical Society established.
- Horticultural Hall built.
- William Parker becomes mayor, succeeded by Thomas Aspinwall Davis, Benson Leavitt, and Josiah Quincy Jr.
- McKay shipbuilder in business in East Boston.
- 1846
- October 16: First public demonstration of the use of inhaled ether as a surgical anesthetic, Ether Dome.
- J.B. Fitzpatrick becomes Catholic bishop of Boston.
- John P. Jewett bookseller in business.
- 1847
- City Point Iron Works, Bay State Iron Company, and Little, Brown and Company publisher in business.
- Irish Immigrant Society and Needle Woman's Friend Society established.
- 1848
- October 25: Water celebration.
- C.F. Hovey and Co. in business.
- Ladies Physiological Institute founded.
- 1849
- Custom House built.
- November 23: Beacon Hill Reservoir opens.
- Mendelssohn Quintette Club founded.
- John P. Bigelow becomes mayor.
1850sâÂÂ1890s
- 1850
- ParkmanâÂÂWebster murder case.
- Fetridge and Company in business.
- Roberts v. City of Boston racial segregation lawsuit decided.
- 1851
- Charles Street Jail built.
- Gleason's Pictorial Drawing-Room Companion begins publication.
- September 17âÂÂ19: Railroad Jubilee
- 1852
- February 9: Ordway Hall opens.
- October 24: Daniel Webster dies.
- Sovereign of the Seas (clipper ship) launched.
- Mount Hope Cemetery consecrated.
- Orpheum Theatre built.
- Sailors' Snug Harbor of Boston incorporated.
- Somerset Club established.
- Benjamin Seaver becomes mayor.
- 1853
- Cambridge-Boston horsecar line established.
- Henry Hastings & Company in business.
- 1854
- Jerome V. C. Smith becomes mayor.
- Boston Watch and Police ceased, and Boston Police Department came into being.
- Boston Public Library, Adath Israel synagogue, and Boston Theatre open.
- Boston Art Club founded.
- Ticknor and Fields publishers in business.
- May: Anthony Burns arrested; abolitionist unrest ensues.
- July: City Regatta begins.
- 1855
- Massachusetts Homoeopathic Hospital established.
- Parker House hotel and Williams & Everett in business.
- 1856 â Alexander H. Rice becomes mayor.
- 1857
- State Street Block built.
- November 1: Atlantic Monthly begins publication.
- 1858
- Frederic W. Lincoln becomes mayor.
- Der Pionier German-language newspaper in publication.
- Area of city: 1,801 acres.
- 1859
- August: New England Colored Citizens' Convention held in city.
- Boston Aquarial Gardens open.
- 1860
- Public Garden and Gibson house built.
- Old Feather Store demolished.
- October 18: Edward VII of the United Kingdom visits Boston.
- Young's Hotel in business.
- Population: 177,840.
- 1861
- Arlington Street Church and Studio Building constructed.
- Emmanuel Church established.
- Jordan Marsh opens.
- Joseph Wightman becomes mayor.
- 1862 â Boston Educational Commission and Oneida Football Club founded.
- 1863
- March 24: National Theatre burns down.
- May 28: 54th Regiment Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry departs for South Carolina.
- July 14: Protest against draft.
- Boston College, Boston Children's Aid Society and Union Club of Boston established.
- Hancock Manor demolished.
- Frederic W. Lincoln becomes mayor again.
- 1864
- New England Museum of Natural History built.
- Boston City Hospital opens.
- De Vries, Ibarra & Co. in business (approximate date).
- 1865
- City Hall and Horticultural Hall built.
- Massachusetts Institute of Technology opens.
- Ropes & Gray in business.
- Bostoner Zeitung German-language newspaper begins publication.
- 1867
- New England Conservatory and Boston Society of Architects established.
- YWCA Boston incorporated.
- Otis Norcross becomes mayor.
- December: Charles Dickens kicks off his second and final American reading tour at Tremont Temple
- 1868
- Roxbury annexed to Boston.
- Boston Lyceum Bureau established.
- August 20: Chinese embassy visits Boston.
- Woman's Board of Missions headquartered in Boston.
- Nathaniel B. Shurtleff becomes mayor.
- 1869
- June 15: National Peace Jubilee opens.
- Boston University chartered.
- Shreve, Crump & Low, Boston Musical Instrument Company, and Frost & Adams in business.
- Boston Children's Hospital, Horace Mann School for the Deaf, and Evening High School established.
- American Woman Suffrage Association headquartered in city.
- 1870
- Dorchester annexed to Boston.
- Woman's Journal begins publication.
- Population: 250,526.
- 1871
- May 16: South End Grounds open.
- Globe Theatre and Apollo Club (chorus) established.
- William Gaston becomes mayor.
- 1872
- Lauriat's bookshop in business.
- March 4: The Boston Globe newspaper begins publication.
- June 17: World's Peace Jubilee and International Musical Festival opens.
- November 9: Great Boston Fire of 1872.
- 1873
- Old South Church and St. Leonard's Church built.
- Brookline-Boston annexation debate of 1873.
- Massachusetts Normal Art School and Catholic Union of Boston founded.
- Henry L. Pierce becomes mayor, succeeded by Leonard R. Cutter.
- 1874
- Allston, Brighton, Charlestown, Jamaica Plain and West Roxbury annexed to Boston.
- Pastene's food shop in business.
- Samuel C. Cobb becomes mayor.
- 1875 â Cathedral of the Holy Cross and Hayden Building constructed.
- 1876
- February 15: Great Elm felled by storm, Boston Common.
- July 4: Museum of Fine Arts opens on Art Square.
- Appalachian Mountain Club headquartered in city.
- Boston Merchants' Association and MIT Woman's Laboratory established.
- 1877
- April: A telephone line connects Boston and Somerville, Massachusetts.
- Trinity Church built.
- Marcella-Street Home opens.
- Women's Educational and Industrial Union and Footlight Club (theatre group) founded.
- Frederick O. Prince becomes mayor.
- 1878
- Gaiety Theatre opens.
- New England Society for the Suppression of Vice founded.
- Henry L. Pierce becomes mayor again.
- Horatio J. Homer, Boston's first black police officer, is hired.
- 1879
- Boston Cooking School, Massachusetts Bicycle Club, New England Manufacturers' and Mechanics' Institute, Copley Society of Art, Irish Athletic Club, and Park Theatre established.
- Frederick O. Prince becomes mayor again.
- 1880
- September 17: 250th anniversary of settlement of Boston.
- Boston Conservatory of Elocution, Oratory, and Dramatic Art founded.
- Population: 362,839.
- 1881 â Boston Symphony Orchestra, The Bostonian Society, Filene's, Boston Camera Club, and Associated Charities of Boston established.
- 1882
- Bijou Theatre established.
- Whitman's Leaves of Grass banned.
- Samuel Abbott Green becomes mayor.
- Long Island becomes part of Boston.
- 1883
- Chickering Hall built.
- Albert Palmer becomes mayor.
- 1884
- August 4: Thomas Stevens (cyclist) arrives from Oakland, California.
- Cyclorama Building built.
- Tavern Club founded.
- Augustus Pearl Martin becomes mayor.
- Boston Ecclesiastical Seminary opens.
- 1885
- Boston Pops Orchestra, North Bennet Street Industrial School, and New England Woman's Press Association established.
- Hugh O'Brien becomes mayor.
- Boston Fruit Company (importer) in business.
- First Spiritual Temple built.
- Children's playground opens in the North End.
- 1886 â June: New England Fair exhibition building burns down.
- 1887 â Forest Hills disaster
- 1888
- Grand Opera House established.
- Sacred Heart Church built.
- Bellamy's fictional Looking Backward: 2000âÂÂ1887 published.
- 1889
- January 7: Thomas N. Hart becomes mayor.
- Tremont Theatre opens.
- Boston Architectural Club organized.
- Thomas N. Hart becomes mayor.
20th century
1900sâÂÂ1940s
- 1944 â Fenway Garden Society established.
- 1945
- John E. Kerrigan becomes acting mayor.
- Schillinger House and French Library founded.
- 1946
- Fidelity in business.
- City Department of Veteransâ Services created.
- Community Boating incorporated.
- James Michael Curley becomes mayor yet again once more.
- American Meteorological Society headquartered in city.
- 1947
1950sâÂÂ1970s
- 1968
- April 4: Racial unrest.
- April 5: James Brown concert, Boston Garden.
- May 2: Boston Celtics win basketball championship.
- National Center of AfroâÂÂAmerican Artists, Alianza Hispana, Sociedad Latina de South Boston, Community Change http://communitychangeinc.org and city Council on Aging established.
- Blackside films in business.
- Kevin White becomes mayor.
- 1969
- February: Boston City Hall new building dedicated.
- February 24âÂÂ27: Snowstorm.
- May 5: Boston Celtics win basketball championship again.
- Pine Street Inn homeless shelter begins operating.
- New England Aquarium opens.
- Walk for Hunger begins.
- 1970
- May: Antiwar demonstration held.
- May 10: Boston Bruins win ice hockey championship.
- Boston Pride begins.
- Aerosmith (musical group), Boston Center for the Arts, and city Rent Board established.
- One Boston Place and 28 State Street built.
- Boston Properties in business.
- 1971
- Massachusetts Rehabilitation Hospital and Boston Food Co-op established.
- Government Service Center built.
- Nova Scotia's donation of the Boston Christmas Tree tradition resumes.
- 1972
- June 17: Hotel Vendome fire.
- Labor demonstration.
- Maison Robert restaurant in business.
- Boston Public Library Johnson building opens.
- 1973
- The Boston Caribbean Carnival, is founded (same year as New York City and Washington, D.C.)
- Bunker Hill Community College, Roxbury Community College, Boston Harbor Association, City Life/Vida Urbana, and Boston Baroque founded.
- 1974
- Desegregation busing conflict due to outcome of verdict Morgan v. Hennigan.
- Inquilinos Boricuas en Acción active.
- July 4: Arthur Fiedler and the Boston Pops begin the annual tradition of a concert and fireworks show at the Hatch Shell on the Charles River Esplanade, courtesy of local businessman and philanthropist David G. Mugar.
- The Rathskeller music venue opens.
- Rosie's Place founded.
- 1975
- Boston Landmarks Commission and ArtsBoston established.
- Boston Consulting Group in business.
- New Boston Review begins publication.
- 1976
- John Hancock Tower built.
- July 4: America's Bicentennial celebrations.
- First Night begins.
- Boston Irish News begins publication.
- Boston Film/Video Foundation and Boston By Foot established.
- WGBH Ten OâÂÂClock News (local news) begins broadcasting.
- Faneuil Hall marketplace developed.
- 1977
- Federal Reserve Bank Building constructed.
- Chinese Progressive Association founded.
- 1978
- January 20âÂÂ21: Snowstorm.
- February 6âÂÂ7: Snowstorm.
- Newbury Comics in business.
- American Buddhist Shim Gum Do Association headquartered in Brighton.
- Boston Preservation Alliance founded.
- L'Espalier restaurant in business.
- 1979
- WBCN Rock & Roll Rumble begins.
- Boston Children's Museum building and Computer Museum open.
- John F. Kennedy Library built.
- Center for Chinese Art and Culture, and Mission of Burma (musical group) established.
- Brian J. Donnelly becomes U.S. representative for Massachusetts's 11th congressional district.
1980sâÂÂ1990s
- 1980
- Boston Early Music Festival, Boston Alliance for Gay and Lesbian Youth, The History Project, and Culinary Historians of Boston founded.
- The Channel (nightclub) opens.
- Sister city relationship established with Barcelona, Spain.
- Population: 562,994.
- 1981
- Boston Society of Film Critics, Dance Umbrella, and Boston Area Feminist Coalition founded.
- Boston Food Bank incorporated.
- J.P. Licks in business.
- November 6: PRISM New England is launched, becoming Boston's first regional sports and entertainment network to launch.
- 1982
- January 23: World Airways Flight 30 is crashed as Logan International Airport, 2 people are killed, but 210 people survived.
- Suffolk Construction Company in business.
- Boston Gay Men's Chorus and Boston Fair Housing Commission established.
- Sister city relationship established with Hangzhou, China.
- Cheers fictional television program begins broadcasting.
- 1983
- Dorchester Reporter begins publication.
- Boston Community Access and Programming Foundation established.
- Bayside Expo Center opens.
- Sister city relationship established with Padua, Italy.
- 1984
- Raymond Flynn becomes mayor.
- Bernard Law becomes Catholic bishop of Boston.
- Bain Capital, Trident Booksellers, and Copley Place Cinemas in business.
- April 4: New England Sports Network is launched as Boston. becoming only the 2nd regional sports network in Boston to launch.
- Boston Human Rights Commission, and city Office of Business and Cultural Development established.
- 1985
- Dudley Street Neighborhood Initiative and Universal Buddhist Congregation established.
- Lecco's Lemma hip-hop radio program begins broadcasting on WMBR.http://thephoenix.com/boston/music/153093-in-memoriam-magnus-johnstone-1952-2013/
- Sister city relationship established with Melbourne, Australia.
- Massachusetts State Archives moves to Columbia Point.
- 1986 â Pixies (musical group), and city Office of Arts and Humanities established.
- 1987
- ACT UP/Boston and Jamaica Plain Historical Society founded.
- Back Bay (MBTA station) rebuilt.
- Partners In Health nonprofit headquartered in city.
- Joseph P. Kennedy II becomes U.S. representative for Massachusetts's 8th congressional district.
- Hamersley's Bistro in business.
- 1988
- City of Boston Archives and City Year established.
- Hynes Convention Center and 75 State Street built.
- Aberdeen Group in business.
- Michael Dukakis presidential campaign and Pioneer Institute headquartered in city.
- Tent City (housing complex) dedicated.
- 1989
- October 23: Stuart shootings in Mission Hill.
- Biba restaurant in business.
- Sister city relationship established with Haifa, Israel.
- Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church and New England Shelter for Homeless Veterans http://nechv.org/about/history/ founded.
- 1990
- March 18: Gardner Museum heist.
- Population: 574,283.
- 1991- Deer Island Prison closes.
- The no-name weather system on Halloween becomes known as the Perfect Storm due to how it came together.
- 1992
- Spare Change News begins publication.
- Ten Point Coalition founded.
- Chinese Historical Society of New England headquartered in city.
- Avalon nightclub opens.
- 1993
- July 12: Thomas Menino, president of the Boston City Council, becomes acting mayor when Mayor Flynn resigns to accept his appointment by President Clinton to become Ambassador to the Holy See.
- November 2: Menino is elected mayor in his own right.
- Urban College of Boston established.
- C-Mart grocery in Chinatown and Alpha Management Corp. (landlord) in business.
- 1994
21st century
2000s
2010s
- 2010
- One City One Story, Boston Rising program in Grove Hall, Girls Rock Boston, JP Music Festival, and Design Museum Boston established.
- MuckRock headquartered in Boston.
- Island Creek Oyster Bar in business.
- Population: 617,594; metro 4,552,402.
- 2011
- September 30: Occupy Boston begins.
- Hubway (bike system) and Future Boston Alliance established.
- Boston Urban Iditarod begins.
- Population: 625,087; metro 4,591,112.
- 2012
- October: Hurricane Sandy.
- Data.cityofboston.gov website launched.
- Mitt Romney presidential campaign, 2012 headquartered in Boston.
- Boston Contemporary Dance Festival begins.
- Population: 636,479.
- 2013
- February 8âÂÂ9: Blizzard.
- April 15: Boston Marathon bombing.
- April 19: City shuts down for manhunt of marathon bombing suspect Dzhokhar Tsarnaev. His brother Tamerlan died in a shootout with Watertown Police three after the tragedy. Towards the end of the manhunt, Dzhokhar was found hidden in a boat in a Watertown backyard. He was surrounded by police and was later taken into custody.
- June 12: Whitey Bulger trial begins.
- October 30: The Boston Red Sox, in an end-of-year triumph, win the 2013 World Series against the St. Louis Cardinals; the first win at Fenway Park since 1918, and the third they've won since 2004.
- November 5: Boston mayoral election, 2013.
- Millennium Tower construction begins.
- Digital Public Library of America headquartered in Boston.
- Code for Boston active.
- Longfellow Bridge renovation begins.
2020s
See also
- Annual events in Boston
- History of Boston
- List of mayors of Boston
- Past Members of the Boston City Council
- of other municipalities in the Greater Boston area of Massachusetts: Cambridge, Haverhill, Lawrence, Lowell, Lynn, New Bedford, Salem, Somerville, Waltham, Worcester
- Timeline of Holyoke, Massachusetts
References
Bibliography
published in the 19th century
published in the 20th century
published in the 21st century
External links