Old State House, Boston, Massachusetts, ca 1950s
This is an unused souvenir postcard featuring the Old State House in Boston, Massachusetts. The card has the identifier P926 at the top margin on the reverse. At the upper left corner is a blurb: “The Old State House at Washington and State Streets where John Hancock was inaugurated fist governor of Massachusetts and in front of which the Boston Massacre took place is now the home of the Bostonian society. It is labeled as a Gift-O-Rama card with Plasstichrome by Colourpicture Publishers, Inc., Boston 15, Mass, U.S.A” Note: the 15. This helps to date the card to before postal zip codes were introduced in 1963. Souvenir Corp. of America, Boston, Mass. Is printed along the left margin on the reverse.
Old State House was built in 1713 as a replacement for Boston’s First Town House built in 1658. It was the seat of the Massachusetts General Court until 1798 and is one of the oldest existing public buildings in the United States. A fire damaged the interior in 1747 and was rebuilt the following year using the 1713 plans. The exterior brick walls survived the fire but a gable roof replaced the gambrel roof and the polygonal cupola was replaced by a central tower. Other significant modifications were made between 1750 and 1830.
The Boston Massacre in 1770 was a confrontation between American colonists and nine British soldiers. A crowd of an undetermined number, perhaps 50 to 200, began verbally harassing, swinging clubs and throwing stones and snowballs at the soldiers, who eventually fired upon the crowd. Five colonists were killed as a result. Several American Patriots, including Paul Revere and Samuel Adams, described it as “a massacre.” It is a landmark on Boston’s Freedom Trail. It is the place where the Declaration of Independence was read to the people of Boston. These events were part of what started the American Revolution movement. When a proposal was made in 1881 to move the Old State House, “brick by brick” to Chicago, Illinois, the non-profit Bostonian Society was organized primarily to prevent the building from being moved. In 2020 the Society merged with the Old South Association in Boston to form Revolutionary Spaces. Today the building also includes a museum.
The building was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1960 and a Boston Landmark in 1994. Over the years there have many necessary restorations and repairs.
For additional information, see:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_State_House_(Boston)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Bostonian_Society
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boston_Massacre









































