Category:Sears Building (Boston, Massachusetts)
Sears building (1869-1967), corner of Court St. and Washington St., Boston, Mass., USA
"The top three floors are an addition. The original, built in 1869, was only four stories tall, plus a sloping mansard at the top. After a fire in 1890, the mansard was removed and the new top added by Cummings and Sears, architects who also may have designed the original and who are best known for their New Old South Church, in Copley Square. The building was named for a different Sears, a merchant who made his fortune in the East India shipping trade. Standing on one of the town's best business corners, the Sears was wrapped with marble in the latest architectural style: the ornate Italian Gothic of pointed arches and patterned stonework, a style being promoted at the time by the English critic John Ruskin. In its early years, the Sears was home to bankers and lawyers; after the fire, it became for a time Young's Hotel. It was demolished in 1967." (--Robert Campbell and Peter Vanderwarker. One Boston Place. Boston Globe. Nov 8, 1998).
Media in category "Sears Building (Boston, Massachusetts)"
The following 8 files are in this category, out of 8 total.
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1873 Harding SearsBuilding BostonDirectory.png 286 × 234; 89 KB
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1896 PembertonSq Boston map byStadly BPL 12479 detail.png 1,066 × 743; 1.7 MB
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Sears Boston Bacon1892.png 391 × 542; 229 KB
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YoungsHotel ca1910 Boston.png 423 × 523; 211 KB
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Sears building, Boston, from Robert N. Dennis collection of stereoscopic views.jpg 2,737 × 1,442; 1.47 MB
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Sears building, Boston, from Robert N. Dennis collection of stereoscopic views.png 2,737 × 1,442; 4.74 MB
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Sears building, from Robert N. Dennis collection of stereoscopic views.jpg 2,737 × 1,422; 1.4 MB
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Sears building, from Robert N. Dennis collection of stereoscopic views.png 2,737 × 1,422; 4.57 MB