This Month in History: National Banking’s Foundations Laid
The brainchild of Indiana baker Hugh McCullogh, the National Banking Act created a uniform currency and offered “a means to assure the future greatness and permanence of the United States.”
The brainchild of Indiana baker Hugh McCullogh, the National Banking Act created a uniform currency and offered “a means to assure the future greatness and permanence of the United States.”
Landmark bands of the 1980s like The Cars, the Go-Go’s and The B-52s might have been nothing more than local curiosities if it hadn’t been for The Channel nightclub, which opened in Boston’s Fort Point neighborhood 42 years ago this month.
David Wluka has been in the real estate business longer than many Realtors today have been alive. As a residential and commercial real estate agent for nearly half a century, the Sharon resident has played key roles in real estate development south of Boston.
The $20 million Boston Landing station opened on the MBTA commuter rail’s Framingham/Worcester line five years ago this month as a wave of transit-oriented development crested in Greater Boston.
After 29 years at Cape Cod 5, Dorothy Savarese still gets chills when customers tell her on a personal level how the bank has affected their lives. The CEO plans to step down next month.
The 2022 equivalent of $3.52 million was all Boston Red Sox owner Charles Taylor needed to buy the land that became the storied ballpark over the course of 1911 and 1912.
Boston printer Clarence DeMar still holds the record for the most Boston Marathon wins, 100 years after he first beat all comers running the course.
Boston’s tallest building: when it finished in 1965, the Prudential Center was a towering symbol of the city’s hopes for rebirth after residents, jobs and retailers spent decades fleeing to suburbia.
April is a historic month for Massachusetts credit unions. Not only were they legalized April 15, 1909, the first such institution in the U.S. was established just days before in New Hampshire.
One of America’s first rail disasters to be covered nation-wide killed 38 people but sparked significant homebuyer interest in what was then bucolic countryside.
Boston only has the world-class waterfront it does today thanks to Vivien Li and her decades of work marshaling support from developers and elected officials to clean up the harbor.
Following the decline of the textile mill industry in the mid-20th century, the city of Lowell turned to urban renewal to revive its economy.
While the Western Massachusetts town of Monson had a commercial bank in the mid-19th century, a group of business leaders wanted to establish a savings bank that would accept small deposits from the workers at the town’s mills, quarries, manufacturers and other industries.
The Rouse Co. of Maryland was chosen as tentative redeveloper of Quincy Market 49 years ago this month, with plans to transform the food wholesalers’ hub into an urban marketplace and tourist magnet.
HarborOne’s James Blake decided early in his career that he wanted to be a bank president. Once he got there, he led what was once a credit union through a period of remarkable growth.
Some time between Feb. 21 and Feb. 23, 1901, an unknown coppersmith sealed an issue of Banker & Tradesman into a box placed inside the head of the Old State House’s rooftop lion sculpture as part of renovations to the building.
The Provident Institution for Savings began accepting deposits in an office on Boston’s Court Street in February 1817, with founder James Savage making the initial deposit of $10.
One of the most destructive financial crises in American history hove into the public eye on Feb. 26, 1893, when a vital railroad went bankrupt and set off a four-year depression.
A Boston Globe reporter marveled at the ease of travel on the new highway compared with the congestion of the “Storrow sorrow” commute.
As we reflect on the last 55 years of our existence, Madison Park Development Corp. has been on a journey that has led to the transformation of Nubian Square in indelible ways.