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So
far as can be found, there was no elaborate ceremony to celebrate
the opening of the Suffolk County Court House in Pemberton Square.
An article on the front page of the Monday morning Boston Herald
for January 15, 1894, stated that "with the exception of the
registry of deeds, all the officials and courts for whom it [the
Court House] is intended are now safely ensconced within its four
walls." From this article, it can be assumed that the courts
and the Social Law Library were moved into the building at the end
of 1893. A letter in the archives of the Social Law Library states
that the Library would be closing on August 1 of that year, but
whether this is for a summer holiday or to facilitate the move into
the new Court House is unclear.
This
lack of ceremony seems to have been a pattern with the new Court
House. According to a note in the Boston Public Library's Boston
Architecture Reference File, the corner stone was to be laid on
Wednesday, July 9, 1887 at 9 o'clock in the morning, with no ceremonies.
If this is true, it would have been highly unusual. The Bench and
Bar in the 1890s, like the rest of Boston and the country, enjoyed
special occasions. Every sort of ceremony was duly staged, with
speakers and exercises. Addresses of the more noted speakers were
almost always published. The lack of any published account, or even
any mention, of a dedicatory ceremony or occasion, could mean that
there were never any dedicatory exercises held for the Pemberton
Square Court House.
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"New
Court House," engraving from Elias Nason and George J.
Varney, A Gazetteer of the State of Massachusetts,
1890.
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The
only official statement attached to the opening of the Suffolk County
Court House was the formal decree by the Commission established
to construct the building. On October 22, 1894, they officially
turned over the building to the care of the Supreme Judicial Court.
"To
the Honorable Justices of the SJC
Oct. 22, 1894
Gentlemen-We beg to notify you that the Suffolk County Court House,
erected in pursuance of chapter 377 of the Acts of the year 1885,
is completed; and whereas, by chapter 453 of the Acts of 1894,
we
respectfully request that you take such action as shall relieve
us of any further duties as commissioners.
We have the honor to be
Your obedient servants,
Solomon
Stebbins, Thomas Whidden, Godfrey Morse"[1]
Footnotes:
[1] PROCEEDINGS OF THE BOARD OF ALDERMEN. City
of Boston, Oct. 22, 1894. City Doc. 175. 22nd and Final Report of
Commissioners for the Erection of a New Court House for Suffolk
County 916-917 (City of Boston, 1894).
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