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The
Suffolk County Court House was never the largest building
in Boston, either when it was completed in 1893 or when it
was added to in 1910. Unfortunately for the building, it was
constructed at a time of great creativity and energy in Boston's
architectural landscape. The chosen location almost completely
hid the edifice from the general population behind the other
buildings of Pemberton Square.[1]
Walter Muir Whitehill talks of the building being unceremoniously
"plumped down" in Pemberton Square. Although the
Old Suffolk County Court House was probably the most massive
and densely built structure in the city, Boston already boasted
larger, taller, and, in the opinions of many, far more elegant
buildings.
If the original plan of architect George Clough had been completed
with its large dome, the building would probably have rivaled
the other grand buildings of the period like South Station,
the Boston Public Library, the Ames Building on Court Street
(the city's first skyscraper), Symphony Hall, and Trinity
Church.
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| Boston
Public Library, 1888-1895. Copley Square, Boston.
Courtesy
of A Digital Archive of American Architecture, Prof. Jeffrey
Howe, Boston College. Used with permission. |
South
Station when it was completed in 1899 was the largest and
busiest railroad station in the country. The Boston Public
Library, built almost at the same time as the Court House,
from 1888 to 1894, was designed by Charles McKim of McKim,
Mead & White, the nation's foremost architectural firm,
and boasted a collection of artwork unsurpassed in the city.
Among the international artists who contributed to the Library
were Bela Pratt, John Singer Sargent, Daniel Chester French,
Augustus St. Gaudens, Pierre Puvis de Chavannes and Edwin
Austin Abbey. [2]
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| Custom
House Tower, Boston, 1913-1915, 1888-1895. Copley Square,
Boston. Courtesy
of A Digital Archive of American Architecture, Prof. Jeffrey
Howe, Boston College. Used with permission. |
The
addition of the "New" Suffolk County Court House
in 1937-1939, sometimes called the "Tower," to the
older Court House was also an instance where the building
has never made an impression because of a number of factors.
While some newspapers prophesied that the designs for the
New Court House structure would literally overshadow the nearby
State House, the final Art Deco design proved simple and unassuming.The
location on what was left of old Pemberton Hill gives the
illusion of the building being far taller than it is, but
it was never the tallest. The Custom House Tower of 1915,
an aesthetic Beaux Arts favorite, dominated the Boston skyline
as the tallest building until that honor was claimed by the
old John Hancock Building on Berkeley Street in 1949. [3]
Footnotes:
[1]
WALTER MUIR WHITEHILL, BOSTON: A TOPOGRAPHICAL HISTORY 110
(3rd ed., 2001).
[2] GEORGE M. CUSHING, GREAT BUILDINGS OF BOSTON 67 (1982).
[3] Id, at 63.
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