CHAPTER 18: Hawaii

Geology

North view from the Prudential Building
(the tallest building)

The Boston's Prudential Building top view provides a geological history of the city. From the top of the building, visitors can see the remnants of exploding volcanoes, glacial debris, and colliding continents. The Wisconsin Ice Sheet, the last glacier to cover New England, formed Cape Cod and the islands of Martha's Vineyard and Nantucket. Around Boston, the glacier left dozens of drumlins and bowl-shaped hollows which formed most of the ponds of Boston’s Emerald Necklace, a chain of parks and parkways.



Middlesex Fells


a cliff in the Middlesex Fells Reservation



At the Middlesex Fells Reservation, aka the “Fells,” a Metropolitan Park System of Greater Boston, many can hike or mountain bike among 630-million-year-old volcanic rocks. The reservation comprised of 2,060 acres of wetlands and oak forests.

16 kilometers up the coast from the Fells is Castle Rock in Marblehead Neck, a favorite field trip of geology classes and rock climbers due to its interesting "swirled" texture. The 600-million-year-old volcanic rock was the remnant of the explosive volcanoes that once dominated the Boston area, before they eroded away. In addition, the Squaw Rock Park, just south of downtown Boston, offers a look at some 570-million-year-old rocks, which some researchers thought were deposited during the ice age period. These ancient sedimentary rocks can be found along the park's small northern beach, and offers an exquisite view of Boston Harbor and the Boston skyline.



Squaw Rock Park



“Swirling” rocks found in Castle Rock in Marblehead Neck








CHAPTER 16: The North Pacific Coast

Power and Dams

Charles River with Longfellow Bridge crossing over it

In the 19th century, the Charles River was one of the most industrialized areas in the United States and its hydropower soon fueled many mills and factories. By the century's end, 20 dams had been built across the river, mostly to generate power for industry. An 1875 government report listed 43 mills along the 9.5-mile (15 km) tidal estuary from Watertown Dam to Boston Harbor.

Charles River Dam


A lock on Charles River Dam

The Charles River Dam, built in 1978, controls the water level in the river basin. An earlier dam, the Charles River Dam Bridge, was completed in 1910 with the purpose of creating a fresh water river basin and riverfront park in Boston. The newly landscaped banks of the river became known as the Charles River Esplanade. The modern dam, has six pumps that provide flood control protection. The dam's lock system permits travel of recreational and commercial vessels from the river to the harbor year round. A fish ladder allows for passage of anadromous fishes, such as alewife, rainbow smelt, and shad during the migration season in late spring.

The purpose of the new dam is to control the surface level of the river basin, as well its contributing surfaces upstream, such as The Back Bay Fens and Muddy River. It also prevents sea water from entering the Charles River freshwater basin during high tides. The previous dam's one lock is now kept open for navigation. The older dam could not keep sea water out and a layer of salt water accumulated at the bottom of the fresh water basin, contributing to pollution and fish migration problems.





CHAPTER 15: California

Water Supply

Quabbin Reservoir


Wachusetts Reservoir at sunrise


Where does Boston's drinking water come from?

Two source reservoirs in central and western Massachusetts: the Quabbin and the Wachusetts Reservoirs. In addition to the reservoirs, the system includes surface aqueducts, covered storage tanks, treatment facilities and deep rock tunnels. This system is known as the Metropolitan Boston Water System. The Massachusetts Water Resources Authority (MWRA) and the Department of Conservation and Recreation (DCR) jointly manage the Metropolitan Boston Water System.
As mentioned from my previous post, MWRA provides treatment and distribution of drinking water to 50 communities in the metropolitan area, including Boston. The DCR manages the lands adjacent to the source reservoirs and is responsible for keeping the reservoirs free from water quality contamination to the greatest extent possible. Lastly, Boston Water and Sewer Commission (BWSC) delivers the water to homes and businesses throughout the City of Boston.
The Quabbin and Wachusetts combined, supplied an average of 214 mgd (millions of gallon a day) to consumers in 2007. The safe yield of the reservoir system is 320 mgd. Treatment of the water includes ozone disinfection, pH adjustment with sodium bicarbonate, and the addition of chloramines and fluoride. Water leaves the plant through the Metrowest Water Supply Tunnel and is stored in covered storage tanks.

Sources:



CHAPTER 14: The Southwest Border Area: Tricultural Development

Racial and Ethnic Diversity in Boston

The Immigrant Landing Station at Boston circa 1904

Steamship lines served the United States exceptional inducements to bring through immigrant passengers to places, such as Boston. These inducements were: a shorter ocean voyage; an inland rate of $1.00 to the West; and free piers in Boston with spacious quarters for handling immigrants.

Boston Immigrant Landing Station

Recently arrived immigrants entering the United States through the Port of Boston (1904)
Currently...
Boston has grown by 2.6% over the 1990s because of immigrants. As of the 2000 US Census, more than half the population of the City of Boston consisted of African-Americans, Asian-Americans, and Latinos. Boston’s young people tend to be even more racially and culturally diverse than older residents.  For example, as of the 2000 US Census, 75% of Boston’s residents between the ages of 14 and 17, the young adults of the next decade, were African Americans, Asian Americans, or Latinos.

More than one-quarter of Bostonians were foreign born, the highest rate since 1940. About 337,000 immigrants arrived in Massachusetts in the 1990s alone, accounting for 82% of the net growth in the labor force and making up 45% of the state’s blue-collar workforce, 27% of service employees, 14% of professionals and 10% of managers and executives, according to a study by the Center for Labor Market Studies at Northeastern University.



CHAPTER 13: The Empty Interior

The Mormon Presence

Boston Massachusetts Mormon Temple


Standing atop a wooded granite hillside in the northwest suburb of Belmont, the Boston Massachusetts Temple, the first temple built in New England, is a striking landmark along the busy Concord Turnpike.

It is the home to the church's most prominent member: Gov. Mitt Romney, Boston Celtics president of basketball operations, Danny Ainge, and several noted academics, including Pulitzer Prize-winning Harvard history professor Laurel Ulrich.

A Brief History...

Boston was home to a 400-member Mormon congregation in the mid-1800s, the largest in the eastern United States at the time. However, it disbanded shortly after the slaying of founder Joseph Smith in 1844, when Mormons fled widespread persecution with a mass migration to the valley of the Great Salt Lake.

After a century later, Mormons returned in notable numbers to Massachusetts in the 1960s. Mormons have also pushed evangelization in immigrant communities. About 140 Mormon missionaries work daily in Massachusetts, spreading the faith through street evangelism and door-to-door visits.

Between 1994 and 2004, Massachusetts membership in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints increased 56%, from 14,840 to 23,161. A small amount, compared to the state's 3 million-member Catholic church. But it approaches the 33,400 state members of the Unitarian Universalist Association, whose roots in Massachusetts go back to the 18th century.

To view more of the Boston Massachusetts Mormon Temple, click here .

Sources:

CHAPTER 12: The Great Plains and Prairies

Funnel cloud over Boston area
Extreme Weather

Like the Great Plains, Boston also experiences extreme weather condition. Fog is prevalent, especially in spring and early summer, and the occasional tropical storm or hurricane can threaten the region, particularly in early autumn. The city is often subjected to sea breeze because of its location along the North Atlantic, that occurs during the late spring when water temperatures are still quite cold and temperatures at the coast can be more than 20 °F (11 °C) colder than a few miles inland, sometimes dropping by that amount near midday. From May to September, the city experiences thunderstorms that are occasionally severe. In addition, large hail, damaging winds and heavy downpours accompany such severe events. Although downtown Boston has never been struck by a violent tornado, the city itself has had many tornado warnings.
Tornado Facts: Boston
Peak tornado month: July
Total tornadoes since 1950: 26
Strongest tornado: F3, September 29, 1974 (Middlesex County)
Click here to see a lightning storm over Boston
Deer Island
Waste Water Treatment

Water is an important resource in the Great Plains, and since this chapter talks about water control and irrigation, I thought it would be interesting to include Boston’s Deer Island Waste Water Treatment Plant. Deer Island has its own rich and tragic history. It served as an internment island for Native Americans (1675-76), a holding area for Irish immigrants fleeing the Great Famine (1800s), a major hospital (1847), and a prison (c. 1882-1988). Nowadays, the island is known for its natural resource protection, the home for Deer Island Waste Treatment Plant with its egg-like sludge digesters that serve as major harbor landmarks.

Egg-like sludge digesters

This sewage treatment plant is run and operated by the Massachusetts Water Resources Authority. The water treatment plant cost over 3.8 billion dollars, making it the seventeenth most expensive object ever constructed. The plant began operating in 1995 and is considered the second largest sewage treatment plant in the US. The plant removes human, household, business and industrial pollutants from wastewater that originates in homes and businesses in forty three greater Boston communities.

Sources:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boston

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deer_Island_Waste_Water_Treatment_Plant

CHAPTER 11: The Agricultural Core


Boston Commons


Boston is not a part of the agricultural core; however, a different kind of agriculture is emerging in the city, known as urban agriculture. Urban agriculture is the practice of cultivating, processing and distributing food in, or around (peri-urban) town, village, or city. This type of agriculture can also involve animal husbandry, aquaculture, and horticulture.
The documentary “Planting for Peace: Bury Seeds, Not Bodies” shows the impact of urban agriculture and support from organizations like The Food Project.

Urban agriculture in Boston, not only creates new food production and delivery systems, it also involves public health and service. One example is The Food Project, established in 1992, has been bringing young people and adults together to learn about creating new food systems through urban agriculture. They farm 4 acres in 7 urban communities and 36 additional suburban acres. Most recent harvests included over 200,000 pounds of produce, with 50,000 pounds donated to many different hunger relief organizations. The rest is sold via 492 Community Supported Agriculture and 4 farmers markets in low-income neighborhoods.


Innovative approaches to urban farming are also pursued by agricultural entrepreneurs in Boston. One technology is called “Verticrop,” a High Density Vertical Growing System (HDVGS) employed in a controlled environment, such as a glasshouse or warehouse. Plants are grown in a vertical plane in specially designed trays suspended from an overhead track. This system can be adapted successfully to the needs of vegetable, herb, fruit and flower producers.







CHAPTER 10: The Southern Coastlands




Like the Southern Coastlands that benefit from tourism and industrial production, Boston, Massachusetts’ tourism comprises a large part of its economy. In 2004, tourists spent $7.9 billion and made the city one of the ten-most-popular tourist locations in the country. The city is also a major seaport along the United States' East Coast and is also the oldest continuously operated industrial and fishing port in the Western Hemisphere. The center of the region's high-tech industry can also be found along Route 128.
Fenway Park

Gold-domed State House

Boston is a popular destination, as it is famous from everything, from the Red Sox to Cheers to clam "chowdah.” It is part modern metropolis and part history lesson. It is easy to get around in Boston, either on foot or by the user-friendly public transportation system called the T. Hop on the Freedom Trail, a well-preserved pedestrian path that weaves in and out of historic neighborhoods. It goes around from the lively Boston Common and Public Garden to the gold-domed State House and Fenway Park. Between landmarks, tourists can also shop the stores on Newbury Street or browse the antique shops and distinctive red-brick buildings of Beacon Hill.
Follow the "red-brick path"
Freedom Trail


Sources: 


CHAPTER 9: The Changing South


The first Africans arrived in Boston in February of 1638, eight years after the city was founded. They were brought as slaves, purchased in Providence Isle, a Puritan colony off the coast of Central America. By 1676 Boston ships had pioneered a slave trade to Madagascar, and were selling black slaves to Virginians in 1678. There were over 400 slaves in Boston by 1705, and the beginning of a free black community in the North End. Boston was about 10 percent black in 1752.
The American Revolution was a turning point in the status of Africans in Massachusetts. At the end of the conflict, there were more free black people than slaves. When the first federal census was enumerated in 1790, Massachusetts was the only state in the Union to record no slaves.


Maria Weston Chapman, active in the Boston Female Anti-Slavery
Society, constant colleague and confidant to Garrison
(photo of a portrait, courtesy, Rare Books, Boston Public Library)
The Boston Female Anti-Slavery Society (1833-1840) was an abolitionist, interracial organization in Boston, Massachusetts, in the mid-19th century. It made three national women's conventions, organized a multistate petition campaign, sued southerners who brought slaves into Boston, and sponsored profitable fundraisers.


         BOSTON-BASED ABOLITIONIST NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED BY WILLIAM LLYOD   GARRISON, 1831-1865


Garrison spoke out articulately and passionately against slavery and for the rights of America's black inhabitants for more than three decades, from the first issue of his weekly paper in 1831, until after the end of the Civil War in 1865 when the last issue was published.


Statue of Garrison (covered in snow), on Commonwealth Ave. in Boston, Massachusetts.
 One of the famous Garrison quotes are seen at the base of the statue.


    Sources: 

 

CHAPTER 8: Appalachia and the Ozarks

Unlike the Appalachia which relies heavily on the coal production, Massachusetts does not have any coal mines, or any coal companies based in the state. However, the Boston area is a renowned technology hub and home to many energy start-up companies. There are at least two of the area's companies that focus on coal-fired plants and "clean coal" technology, which aims at eliminating various environmental and health impacts of coal.
Connection to Mountaintop Removal Coal Mining
Salem Harbor Station is a coal-fired power station owned and operated by Dominion in Salem, Massachusetts. It purchases coal from companies who practice mountaintop removal mining. The plant is located on a sixty-five acre site and has been operating since 1951. The cities of Boston, Cambridge, Newton, Quincy, Lynn, and Lowell are all within a thirty-mile radius of the Salem Harbor station.

Salem Power Station

"Boston Rallies for a Coal Free Massachusetts"
On October 10, 2010, nine local groups joined Greenpeace to call for a coal-free Massachusetts. Over 150 people joined the call for clean energy and green jobs. They asked the governor to join in shutting down the Salem Harbor coal plant.


Sources:



CHAPTER 7: The Bypassed East

A map of America's eastern seaboard shows a lack of large cities along the coast north of Boston. The interior cities are generally smaller than those along the ocean, and only a few major overland routes extend inland from this coast. This area is referred to as the Bypassed East, comprising the northern New England and Adirondacks of New York.

The Bypassed East and Boston: Their Connection

  • Bypassed East is close to the Manufacturing Core and Megalopolis such as Boston.

  • Because of the region’s proximity to Megalopolis, tourism continues to increase, as second-home development arises. City dwellers visit in droves, and some move there permanently.

  • The Lake Champlain Lowland’s short distance to Megalopolis enables the Lowland to be part of Boston’s milksheds; making it a major milk source for their urban populations.
                           Lake Champlain
    • New peripheral areas became part of urban America, as Megalopolis cities such as Boston grew larger. People looked for residences farther away from the core cities, and Megalopolis’ periphery moved out, steadily pushing New England northward.

    Boston & the Bypassed East share sceneries such as this

    CHAPTER 5: Manufacturing Core

    TIMELINE
    
    Boston Harbor
    
    17th Century
    = With its excellent harbor, Boston became the leading commercial center in the colonies. Colonial Boston was a world leader in shipbuilding and the primary port of North America.
    18th Century
    = The growth of the Boston area continued in the 18th century. As settlements grew into towns around the city, overseas trade increased, and mills were built along the rivers for logging, the forging of iron, and processing wool.
    
    Boston Manufacturing Company 1813-1816
    Boston Manufacturing Company, 1978

    
    19th Century
    Boston Manufacturing Co. Logo in 1918
    Image: Textile Brands and Trademarks

     
    = In 1814, James Cabot Lowell of Boston built a factory in Waltham, up the Charles River from Boston. Later, the Boston Associates built an entire mill town on the Merrimack River, and later named it "Lowell" in memory of James Cabot Lowell.





    = Massachusetts prospered in the early 19th century with improved roads, new canals, and the construction of railways, linking cities and towns.
    = The Civil War was a profitable time for Boston manufacturers, with the production of weapons, shoes, blankets, and other materials for the troops.
    = The late 19th century was Boston's greatest industrial era. As millions of immigrants from around the world came to America, Boston continued as a leading manufacturer of a wide variety of goods and products.

    20th Century
    = Boston's manufacturing went into a state of decline during the first decade of the 20th century. The once thriving factories and mills had become old and obsolete.
    = Prosperity continued in the Hub with the development of service industries, banking and finance, and retailing and wholesaling.
    = By the 1950's the Boston area emerged as a leader in the fledgling computer and high-tech industries. Many of these new businesses were created and staffed by graduates of MIT and the other colleges in the Boston area. The financial and service industries continued to expand.
                Today, the Boston skyline is brimming with skyscrapers and office towers

                                                                        http://www.textilehistory.org/