Online Encyclopedia

ROXBURY

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V23, Page 791 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ROXBURY  , formerly a

city of Norfolk county, Massachusetts, U.S.A., situated between Boston and Dorchester, but since 1868 a
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part of Boston . It is primarily a residential
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district . Among its institutions are the Roxbury Latin School, established in 1645,1 the Fellowes
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Athenaeum (a part of the Roxbury branch of the Boston Public Library), with about 26,000 volumes in 1909, and the New England Hospital for
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Women and Children (1863), the New England Baptist Hospital (1893), the Woman's Charity Club Hospital (189o), the Roxbury Homoeopathic Dispensary (1886), the Roxbury Home for Children and Aged Women (1856), a Home for Aged Couples (1884) and the Massachusetts Home for Intemperate Women (1879) . On Mount Bellevue, in West Roxbury (set apart from Roxbury in 1851 and annexed to Boston in 1873), there is an
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observatory (erected in 1869 by the city of Boston as a stand-
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pipe for the high service
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water supply) . Among the manufactures of the district are cotton and woollen goods, cordage, carpets, shoes and foundry products . The
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town of Roxbury (at first usually spelled Rocksbury) was founded in 163o by some of the Puritan immigrants who came with Governor John Winthrop; the settlers were led by William Pynchon, who in 1636 led a party from here and founded
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Springfield, Mass . At the home of Rev Thomas Welde (d . 1662), the first minister, Anne Hutchinson (q.v.) was held in custody during the winter of 1637–38 . Associated as teacher with Welde and his successors,
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Samuel Danforth and Nehemiah Walter, was John Eliot, the apostle to the Indians, who removed to Roxbury in 1632 and died here in 1690 . Roxbury was the home also of Thomas Dudley, of his son Joseph and of his grandson Paul; of Robert Calef (d . 1719), the leader of the opposition to the
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witchcraft craze; of General Joseph Warren, and of William Eustis (1753-1825), who was U.S. secretary of war (1809–12), minister to the
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Netherlands (1814–18), and governor of Massachusetts (r823–25); and from 1837 to 1845 Theodore Parker was the pastor of the Unitarian Church of West Roxbury . Of
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special
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interest in the old Roxbury
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burial-ground is the " Ministers' Tomb," containing the remains of John Eliot, and the tomb of the Dudleys .

West Roxbury was the

scene of the
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Brook
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Farm experiment (see BROOK FARM) . Roxbury was chartered as a city in 1846 . See F . S . Drake, The Town of Roxbury, its Memorable Persons and Places (Boston, 1878 and 1905) .

End of Article: ROXBURY
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