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    <eadid>1400</eadid>
    <filedesc>
      <titlestmt>
        <titleproper>Guide to the Town of West Roxbury records
                    <num>1400.001</num></titleproper>
        <author>Finding aid prepared by Zachary Enright</author>
        <sponsor>With funding from a grant from the National Historical Publications and Records Commission (NHPRC)</sponsor>
      </titlestmt>
      <publicationstmt>
        <publisher>City of Boston Archives and Records Management Division</publisher>
        <address>
          <addressline>201 Rivermoor Street</addressline>
          <addressline>West Roxbury, MA, 02132</addressline>
          <addressline>(617)635-1195</addressline>
          <addressline>archives@cityofboston.gov</addressline>
        </address>
        <date>2008 March 24</date>
      </publicationstmt>
    </filedesc>
    <profiledesc>
      <creation>This finding aid was produced using the Archivists' Toolkit
                <date>2009-01-05T10:46-0500</date></creation>
      <langusage>English</langusage>
      <descrules>Describing Archives: A Content Standard</descrules>
    </profiledesc>
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  <archdesc level="recordgrp">
    <did>
      <unittitle>Town of West Roxbury records</unittitle>
      <unitid>1400.001</unitid>
      <repository>
        <corpname>City of Boston Archives and Records Management Division</corpname>
      </repository>
      <langmaterial>
        <language langcode="eng" />
      </langmaterial>
      <physdesc>
        <extent>5.0 Cubic feet</extent>
        <extent>1 Document Box
59 Volumes
3 Oversize Boxes</extent>
      </physdesc>
      <unitdate normal="1851/1874" type="inclusive">1851-1874</unitdate>
      <origination label="creator">
        <corpname source="naf" role="Creator (cre)">West Roxbury (Boston, Mass.).</corpname>
      </origination>
      <origination label="creator">
        <corpname source="local" role="Creator (cre)">West Roxbury (Boston, Mass.). Constable.</corpname>
      </origination>
      <origination label="creator">
        <corpname source="local" role="Creator (cre)">West Roxbury (Boston, Mass.). Assessors.</corpname>
      </origination>
      <origination label="creator">
        <corpname source="local" role="Creator (cre)">West Roxbury (Boston, Mass.). Treasurer.</corpname>
      </origination>
      <origination label="creator">
        <corpname source="local" role="Creator (cre)">West Roxbury (Boston, Mass.). Town Clerk.</corpname>
      </origination>
    </did>
    <!--<relatedmaterial id="ref3"><head>Related Archival Materials note</head><p>A complimentary portion of the Town of West Roxbury records are available at the Boston Public Library Rare Books Division.  These records include . . .</p></relatedmaterial>-->
    <bioghist id="ref1">
      <head>Biographical/Historical note</head>
      <p>Pre-1630: Area is inhabited by the Wampanoag Indian Tribe.</p>
      <p>1630: The first Puritan settlers arrive in Roxbury, led by William Pynchon (1589-
1661), three weeks after the founding of Boston. The town is originally called
Rockberry. It includes what is now West Roxbury as well as what are now several
other neighborhoods and towns. The town is named after the unique rock
outcroppings later called Roxbury puddingstone. All the other Roxburys in the United
States from the town of Roxbury in New Hampshire to Roxbury Drive in Beverly Hills
have their origin in Roxbury, Massachusetts. What is now West Roxbury is first called
the Spring Street neighborhood of the town of Roxbury.</p>
      <p>1632: The first meetinghouse and burial ground are constructed in what is now the
John Eliot Square (Roxbury Highlands) section of the town. All parishioners travel to
the meetinghouse for church including those who live in what will become theWest Roxbury section of the town. Reverend John Eliot (1604-1691) is the minister. Eliot is known as "The Apostle of the Indians" for his efforts to Christianize the Native American population.</p>
      <p>1635: Reverend Eliot founds the Roxbury Latin School. It moves to what is now West Roxbury in 1922.</p>
      <p>1643: Joseph Weld, one of the first settlers of what would become West Roxbury, is granted a large tract of land by the Massachusetts Bay Company stretching from Forest Hills to Brookline as a reward for negotiating a treaty with the Pequot Indians.</p>
      <p>1652: Approximately 120 houses are in the area that would become the town. Most dwellings are in John Eliot Square, named after the preacher who wrote the first bible in the Algonkian Language that was instrumental in converting many Native Americans to Christianity.</p>
      <p>1662: Centre Street is laid out as the main route between Boston and Hartford,
Connecticut.</p>
      <p>1683: The Westerly Burial Ground is located on Centre Street, in the area of the
original Roxbury settlement.</p>
      <p>1706: Approximately 45 families settled around Jamaica Pond form the independent
town of Jamaica Plain although they don't receive official recognition from the colony.</p>
      <p>1710: The area from Jamaica Plain to Dedham is known as Jamaica End or Spring
Street.</p>
      <p>1711: Residents build The Second Church of Christ on Walter Street to
avoid having to travel to the meetinghouse in John Eliot Square, Roxbury. They also
establish the Walter Street Burial Ground. Today the site of this defunct house is
located in the Arnold Arboretum.</p>
      <p>1733: The congregation moves to a building on Centre Street. Today it is the
Theodore Parker Unitarian Church.</p>
      <p>1767: Jeremiah Richards donates money to build the first school in town.</p>
      <p>1776: General George Washington (1732-1799) uses Weld Hill for rallies. Residents
attempt to establish themselves as a separate town called "Washington" after the
General but their petition is denied by the colonial government.</p>
      <p>1805: Washington Street is laid out. Originally called Dedham Turnpike, it is later
renamed for General George Washington and is the main route connecting Dedham
to Boston.</p>
      <p>1835: The Old South Evangelical Church is built on Mount Vernon and Centre
Streets. Reverend Christopher Marsh is the first pastor. The church is later replaced
by the West Roxbury Congregational Church (1891) and now is a branch of the
Boston Public Library.</p>
      <p>1837-1846: Reverend Theodore Parker is minister of the Second Church of Roxbury.
He is a staunch abolitionist.</p>
      <p>1841: The pastor of Purchase Street Unitarian Church, George Ripley, comes to
Roxbury with his wife Sophia. They establish Brook Farm, a utopian community
organized under the tenets of Transcendentalism on the dairy farm of Charles Ellis.
Nathaniel Hawthorne is briefly a member of the group that he writes about in “The
Blithedale Romance”. Other prominent visitors include: Horace Greeley, A. Bronson
Alcott, and Ralph Waldo Emerson. Brook Farm is later auctioned off (1849) and used
as a Civil War camping ground for the 54th Massachusetts Regiment, and the Martin
Luther Home German orphanage (1870). The farm also includes a section of Roxbury
Puddingstone (Drumlins or hills created by retreating glaciers) called "Pulpit Rock"
where John Eliot preached to the Native Americans in the seventeenth century.</p>
      <p>1848: The Boston and Providence Railroad creates stops at Central (Bellevue)
Street, West Roxbury Village, and Spring Street. Increased access to town causes the
area's population to expand and, in turn, urbanizes this previously rural farming
community. At this point in time the West Roxbury area has three sections: West Roxbury Village (Center Street), Mount Bellevue, and Germantown (Washington and Grove Streets) where Germans from East Dedham settle.</p>
      <p>1849: Park Street and La Grange Streets are laid out.</p>
      <p>1851: West Roxbury breaks away from Roxbury in an attempt to remain rural. West
Roxbury includes Roslindale and Jamaica Plain.</p>
      <p>1856: West Roxbury is connected to Roxbury by horse drawn streetcars.</p>
      <p>1863: Colonel Robert Gould Shaw is killed along with 255 of his troops after an
attack on Fort Wagner, South Carolina. A West Roxbury native, Shaw is the leader of
The 54th Massachusetts Regiment, the first all black company of soldiers in the Civil
War.</p>
      <p>1873: West Roxbury is annexed to Boston.</p>
      <p>Adapted from Serkiss, Sandi.  “The History of West Roxbury; 1627-1927.”  Available at: 
<extref href="http://www.wrhistory.org/Text/Articles//History_of_West_Roxbury_1630-1927.pdf">www.wrhistory.org </extref> (Last accessed on 11 August 2009)</p>
    </bioghist>
    <scopecontent id="ref2">
      <head>Scope and Contents note</head>
      <p>The records of the town of West Roxbury extend 4 cubic feet.  The records date from the inception of the in 1851 until its annexation by the City of Boston in 1874.  The majority of the records, 57 volumes, are financial records:  tax books, payroll and accounts.  Two folders of Deeds contain those for land taken for the Stony Brook Sewer as well as the only known example of the West Roxbury Town seal.  Also within this collection are 7 volumes of Official Reports of the Town of West Roxbury dating from 1865 – 1873, the Report on the Location and Erection of a Town House 1866, and the Annual Report of the School Committee 1854.</p>
    </scopecontent>
    <controlaccess>
      <geogname source="lcsh">West Roxbury (Boston, Mass.)</geogname>
    </controlaccess>
    <dsc>
      <c01 id="ref8" level="series">
        <did>
          <unittitle>Assessor</unittitle>
          <unitid>Series I</unitid>
        </did>
        <c02 id="ref21" level="file">
          <did>
            <unittitle>Abatements</unittitle>
            <container type="Box">1</container>
            <container type="Folder">1</container>
            <unitdate normal="1852/1866" type="inclusive">1852-1866</unitdate>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02 id="ref23" level="file">
          <did>
            <unittitle>Cash Taxes Paid</unittitle>
            <container type="Volume">2</container>
            <unitdate normal="1868/1870" type="inclusive">1868-1870</unitdate>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02 id="ref25" level="file">
          <did>
            <unittitle>Collector's Books</unittitle>
            <container type="Volumes">3-25</container>
            <physdesc>
              <extent>23 Volumes</extent>
            </physdesc>
            <unitdate normal="1855/1873" type="inclusive">1855-1873</unitdate>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02 id="ref26" level="file">
          <did>
            <unittitle>Tax Registers</unittitle>
            <container type="Volume">29-31</container>
            <physdesc>
              <extent>3 Volumes</extent>
            </physdesc>
            <unitdate normal="1852/1865" type="inclusive">1852, 1856-1857, 1865</unitdate>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02 id="ref27" level="file">
          <did>
            <unittitle>Town and County Tax Books</unittitle>
            <container type="Volume">26, 32-34, 36</container>
            <physdesc>
              <extent>5 Volumes</extent>
            </physdesc>
            <unitdate normal="1852/1864" type="inclusive">1852-1864</unitdate>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02 id="ref28" level="file">
          <did>
            <unittitle>Valuation Books</unittitle>
            <container type="Oversize">2</container>
            <container type="Volume">41-43</container>
            <container type="Oversize">3</container>
            <container type="Volume">44-46</container>
            <container type="Volumes">35, 37-40</container>
            <container type="Oversize">4</container>
            <container type="Volume">47-49</container>
            <physdesc>
              <extent>14 Volumes

Volume 35 1860-1863
Volume 37 1856-1859
Volume 38 1852-1855
Volume 39 1864-1866
Volume 40 1867-1869
Oversize Box 2 1861, 1865, 1866
Oversize Box 3 1867-1869
Oversize Box 4 1870, 1871, 1873</extent>
            </physdesc>
            <unitdate normal="1861/1873" type="inclusive">1861-1873</unitdate>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02 id="ref33" level="file">
          <did>
            <unittitle>Street Books</unittitle>
            <container type="Volumes">27, 28, 59</container>
            <physdesc>
              <extent>3 Volume</extent>
            </physdesc>
            <unitdate>1873</unitdate>
          </did>
        </c02>
      </c01>
      <c01 id="ref9" level="series">
        <did>
          <unittitle>Constable</unittitle>
          <unitid>Series II</unitid>
        </did>
        <c02 id="ref20" level="file">
          <did>
            <unittitle>Writs</unittitle>
            <container type="Box">1</container>
            <container type="Folder">3</container>
            <unitdate normal="1865/1866" type="inclusive">1865, 1866</unitdate>
          </did>
        </c02>
      </c01>
      <c01 id="ref10" level="series">
        <did>
          <unittitle>Town Clerk</unittitle>
          <unitid>Series III</unitid>
          <unitdate>1851-1874</unitdate>
        </did>
        <c02 id="ref16" level="subseries">
          <did>
            <unittitle>Deeds</unittitle>
            <unitdate normal="1851/1874" type="inclusive">1851-1874</unitdate>
          </did>
          <c03 id="ref17" level="file">
            <did>
              <unittitle>Takings for Stony Brook</unittitle>
              <container type="Box">1</container>
              <container type="Folder">4</container>
              <unitdate normal="1871/1874" type="inclusive">1871-1874</unitdate>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03 id="ref18" level="file">
            <did>
              <unittitle>General</unittitle>
              <container type="Box">1</container>
              <container type="Folder">5</container>
              <unitdate normal="1851/1871" type="inclusive">1851-1871</unitdate>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03 id="ref19" level="item">
            <did>
              <unittitle>Record of Deeds and Conveyances</unittitle>
              <container type="Volume">1</container>
              <unitdate normal="1859/1867" type="inclusive">1859-1867</unitdate>
            </did>
          </c03>
        </c02>
      </c01>
      <c01 id="ref11" level="series">
        <did>
          <unittitle>Treasurer</unittitle>
          <unitid>Series IV</unitid>
        </did>
        <c02 id="ref29" level="file">
          <did>
            <unittitle>Account Ledgers</unittitle>
            <container type="Volume">50-52</container>
            <physdesc>
              <extent>3 Volumes</extent>
            </physdesc>
            <unitdate normal="1851/1872" type="inclusive">1851-1866, 1866, 1868-1872</unitdate>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02 id="ref30" level="file">
          <did>
            <unittitle>Payment Ledgers</unittitle>
            <container type="Volume">53-54, 58</container>
            <physdesc>
              <extent>3 Volumes</extent>
            </physdesc>
            <unitdate normal="1851/1874" type="inclusive">1851-1866, 1866, 1872-1874</unitdate>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02 id="ref31" level="file">
          <did>
            <unittitle>Payroll</unittitle>
            <container type="Volume">55-56</container>
            <physdesc>
              <extent>2 Volumes</extent>
            </physdesc>
            <unitdate normal="1872/1873" type="inclusive">1872 April-1873 November, 1873 November-December</unitdate>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02 id="ref32" level="file">
          <did>
            <unittitle>Town Accounts</unittitle>
            <container type="Volume">57</container>
            <physdesc>
              <extent>1 Volume</extent>
            </physdesc>
            <unitdate normal="1851/1853" type="inclusive">1851 July-1853 October</unitdate>
          </did>
        </c02>
      </c01>
      <c01 id="ref12" level="series">
        <did>
          <unittitle>Publications</unittitle>
          <unitid>Series V</unitid>
        </did>
        <c02 id="ref13" level="file">
          <did>
            <unittitle>Report of the Committee on the Location and Erection of a Town House</unittitle>
            <container type="Box">1</container>
            <container type="Folder">26</container>
            <unitdate>1866</unitdate>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02 id="ref14" level="file">
          <did>
            <unittitle>Annual report of the School Committee</unittitle>
            <container type="Box">1</container>
            <container type="Folder">27</container>
            <unitdate>1854</unitdate>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02 id="ref15" level="file">
          <did>
            <unittitle>Official Report of the Town of West Roxbury</unittitle>
            <physdesc>
              <extent>7 Volumes</extent>
            </physdesc>
            <unitdate>1865-1869, 1871, 1872 </unitdate>
          </did>
        </c02>
      </c01>
    </dsc>
  </archdesc>
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