Recent discussion concerning a section of the City of Boston known as
Roxbury brings to mind the fact that this area existed as its own
political unit from its founding in 1630 until its inhabitants voted
for incorporation with Boston in 1868.
Five monuments remain in the early Roxbury town limits (including West
Roxbury and Jamaica Plain until 1851), untouched for the most part by
politics, urban redevelopment, and other forms of change and still
performing their original function (if one knows how to read them).
There is another five such monuments that can be found in Brookline,
Brighton, and Dorchester. They are milestones showing the distance to
the Boston Town House (now the Old State House).
Pictured at right: Marker #5 located by the monument at Centre and
South Streets in Jamaica Plain. Photograph by Frank O. Branzetti in
1940. Library of Congress.
All these milestones have a common name associated with them. Dudley, a
family that lived in the town of Roxbury in colonial times and which
served prominently in the colony's politics and acted generously toward
the town's Latin school and the local college, Harvard. The name Dudley
remains in the heart of old Roxbury (if only to some readers as an MBTA
stop).
Paul Dudley (1673-1750) was born in Roxbury and educated at Roxbury
Latin (Class of 1686) and later at Harvard (Class of 1690). He studied
law in London, and he returned home to become a successful attorney
general of his colony. Dudley was appointed Justice of the Supreme
Court and elected Chief Justice in 1745.
He left a permanent legacy by erecting milestones. From 1729 onwards
Dudley erected several granite milestones showing the distance to the
Boston Town House (now the Old State House) with the judge's initials
usually added. All distances assume a route along Washington Street to
Eliot Square in the heart of Roxbury, where, as a crowning touch in
1744, Dudley had a Parting Stone carved. The stone still remains and
can be seen at the junction of Centre and Roxbury Streets.
Pictured at right: Marker #4 at 366 Centre Street in Jamaica Plain.
Photograph by Frank O. Branzetti in 1940. Library of Congress.
The road to the left of the Parting Stone which leads to the south is
dotted with these informative milestones: stone #3 built in a retaining
wall diagonally opposite the junction of Centre and Gardner Streets,
stone #5 by the Civil War monument in Jamaica Plain (the chattiest of
all the Dudley stones), and stone #6 set in a retaining wall of the
Arnold Arboretum opposite Allandale Road.
If one takes the right-hand road at the Parting Stone, as did William
Dawes, Paul Revere's fellow rider of April 18 and 19, 1775, one meets
another series of Dudley milestones on the original route to Cambridge.
Stone #4 still serves on Huntington Avenue, nicely built into the
western end of a brick wall that now encloses Mission Park. Stone #5 is
on the grounds of the United Parish Church on Harvard Street near
Coolidge Corner, while stone #7 stands in a cement block before 240
North Harvard Street in Brighton.
Dudley continued marking the roadways through Roxbury and Dorchester
and on out toward Milton. Thus an action early in the 18th century set
in motion a chain of events that evolved into the mile signs we take
for granted while driving. It is truly amazing that so many of the
Dudley stones have survived.
Originally published in the Jamaica Plain Citizen on December 11, 1986.
Milestones, not signs, marked the way
By Walter H. Marx
En route to a recent meeting this chronicler was on the southern end of
Blue Hill Avenue. On the outbound side, a rectangular granite marker
almost four feet high, eight inches thick and nearly two feet wide was
revealed. It had to be an early milestone in the tradition of the Judge
Paul Dudley milestones (seen in finest form at the Civil War Monument
here in JP).
In the early 1950's, two investigators, C. Howard and H.
Hannaway, checked out the old milestones leading form Boston and
produced two maps with pictures of the stones they found and brief
descriptions of each. Their 1950 map featured several chains of
milestones (as these inscribed stones are) south out of Boston, while
their 1952 map featured two western chains that broke off from the
southerly ones by the Dudley Street Station.
The two westerly chains, one following Centre Street out to
Dedham and the other swinging through Brookline and Brighton to
Cambridge, were the work in 1730 of Judge Paul Dudley, whose
descendents still live in the area. The hard-to-follow Cambridge route
is ridden by a modern William Dawes on horseback every Patriots Day.
For the first milestones chain to Dedham a Jamaica Plain driver
watching his odometer (preferably on Sunday) starts at Eliot Square in
Roxbury and ends at the Faulkner Hospital. He will easily spot stone
#3, #5 and #6, and possibly #4.
Marking miles (1,000 paces, named by those master road builders of
antiquity, the Romans) is hardly new. Many inscribed Roman milestones
have survived with modern terminology: destination, distance, sponsor
and date. Boston milestones may be the earliest. Boston judge and
diarist Samuel Sewall noted in 1707 that he had set two milestones on
the road over the Boston Neck to Roxbury.
The Romans erected their Golden Milestone in the Forum at Rome to mark
the point from which all distances in their empire were measured;
Sewall made his origin the Old State House. The custom was continued as
the chains of milestones increased, but today distances in the
Commonwealth are measured from the center of the dome of the (New)
State House. Sewall placed his stones along Washington Street, since it
was the only land route out of the then peninsular Town of Boston.
The Upper Road from Boston, which breaks with Washington at Warren
Street, was marked by Judge Dudley, who erected another of his familiar
stones at Blue Hill Avenue and Warren Street (Grove Hall) at the
Roxbury/Dorchester boundary to the Neponset River at Lower Mills. Here
the Upper Road met Lower Road into Adams Street. The Blake House at
Everett Square preserves stones #4 and #6 with #7 by Dorchester Park.
The road beyond the river through Milton Village and up the hill
continues the chain of stones; past the panoramic Hutchinson's Field,
the home of the next to last colonial governor (1769-74), Governor
Belcher (1730-41), and on out to Braintree. This was the coast or Bay
Road to Plymouth and the Cape, which had a rebirth when it was marked
with granite rectangular markers with the Old Colony seal during the
Pilgrim Tercentenary in 1920. These are seen from Dorchester Lower
Mills to Provincetown.
Sewall's tradition was carried on in 1823 by J. McLean (1761-1823). The
Boston merchant who gave Massachusetts General Hospital the psychiatric
hospital that was named after him and still continues.
McLean simply continued with six stones from the 1735 Paul Dudley stone
at Grove Hall. The road today continues its service as Rt. 138 to the
Blue Hills and beyond. Boston's other milestones have a tale to tell of
survival despite change all around them. They were the markers until
the task of signing roads between municipalities was taken up by the
state.
Sources: "Connecticut's Milestones," Boston Herald, August 2,
1987; "Old Milestones from Boston," Mass. Historical Society, 1909;
"Milestones In and Near Boston," Brookline Historical Society, 1909.
Reprinted with permission from the November 20, 1992 Jamaica Plain Gazette. Copyright, Gazette Publications, Inc.