More Than Just Tea (episode 290)

I had originally planned to release an interview with an expert this week where we debunked some of the most common myths about the destruction of the tea.  Events conspired against me, however.  Luckily, the rest of Boston has the 250th anniversary of the Tea Party covered.  There are commemorative events taking place around the city and throughout December, so we’ll look at a different detail. In all the hoopla about the tea, it’s easy to forget that the tea ships also carried other cargoes. In this week’s episode, we’ll revisit two classic stories about other cartoes that the tea ships brought to Boston.  First, we’ll hear about Phillis Wheatley’s book of poetry, which was on the Dartmouth, through the story of enslaved artist Scipio Moorhead.  After that, we’ll learn about Boston’s first street lamps, which were on the forgotten fourth tea ship, the William.


Continue reading More Than Just Tea (episode 290)

They Burnt Tolerable Well: In Search of Boston’s First Street Lamps (episode 266)

How can something as simple as streetlights transform a city?  What can the Boston Massacre teach us about how dark the streets and alleyways of Boston were in the years before streetlights?  How did the town decide to buy English oil lamps for the streets but fuel them with American whale oil?  How did Boston’s very first street lamps survive a shipwreck and the Boston Tea Party, and who decided where they would be installed and how they would be maintained?  In the era of climate change, what does the future hold for Boston’s quaint remaining gas street lamps?  Let’s find out!


Continue reading They Burnt Tolerable Well: In Search of Boston’s First Street Lamps (episode 266)

Love Behind Enemy Lines (episode 131)

We’re trying something new this week by bringing in a guest for our upcoming historical event segment.  Clara Silverstein from Historic Newton tells us about their “Crossing Borders” series.  Sticking with the theme, our show this week recounts a romance between young lovers that crossed enemy lines and political allegiances, uniting patriot Billy Tudor and loyalist Delia Jarvis.  Even as the Revolutionary War began and Boston was besieged, Billy risked everything and swam across the harbor to visit Delia.  As the war continued and they were separated by many miles, Billy would address his letters to Delia to “my fair loyalist,” and then sign them from “your ever faithful rebel.”


Continue reading Love Behind Enemy Lines (episode 131)