O fons Banusiæ, splendior vitro"
-Horace, Odes III, 13
The well-publicized activity surrounding the Big Dig and the Third
Harbor Tunnel had its 19th Century counterpart in the Big Fill. From
1858 to 1898 the cities of Roxbury and Boston, the Commonwealth and a
power company participated in the well-known filling in of the Back Bay
from Massachusetts Avenue to Charles Street. The project increased
Boston's land area by 70 percent and cost the taxpayers nothing, since
the land created was sold for lots in a fashionable section.
Five-hundred-fifty acres of tidal marshland were covered to an average
depth of fifteen feet.
![](http://www.jphs.org/layout/images/articles/backbay.jpg)
The
constant land filling began in 1858 with the contracting firm of Goss
& Munson. Drawing on sand and gravel left by the Ice Age in Needham
just west of the Charles River, the contractors very easily brought the
material in on side-dump railroad cars and added spurs to already
existing lines as needed. Thirty-five-car trains made 25 trips each day
and night, six days a week arriving every 45 minutes to dump their
loads quickly. A total of only 80 men worked on the Big Fill, including
loading, transportation, and dumping.
Making loading extremely easy were two 25-horsepower steam
shovels built by John Souther (1816-1911) at the Globe Locomotive Works
in South Boston, as they moved on a track parallel with the gravel
mounds and the railroad cars. "Souther's monsters" would also be
responsible for leveling 89-foot Fort Hill from 1866 to 1872.
In 1884 Souther's son Charles moved with his family to Jamaica Plain
into a house called "Allandale" on the Moss Hill road named after the
house. He had bought the spacious house from his wife Maria's cousins,
the Wellingtons, and it was duly registered in her name.
Though Henry W. Wellington was a dry goods merchant in Boston, he was
also an entrepreneur. He owned 88 acres of the land where currently the
old Boston State Hospital stands unused on the Jamaica Plain/Dorchester
boundary. Nearby Wellington Hill, now crowned by the Lewenberg School,
is named after him.
Wellington's Jamaica Plain estate consisted of high ground,
meadowland and marshes immediately south of Allandale Road. He bottled
and sold the water of the well-known spring on his land, thus showing
that today's Poland Spring bottled waters are nothing new. The
springhouse still survives and is to be the centerpiece of the
retirement village being developed on the site currently by another
Jamaica Plain institution, the Mt. Pleasant Home, founded in 1901.
Wellington had bought his 20-acre estate from the Allen
family, who had it from the vast area holders, the ancient Williams
farming family with their pre-Revolutionary farmhouse were Our Lady of
Annunciation Church now stands at the start of the VFW Parkway. The
Allens built the house and named it by linking their name with the
rural setting. Already in 1851 a dirt road known as Franklin Avenue
connected Centre Street with the spring and, in an improved state, took
its name from the house in 1863. The house stood on a high plateau
overlooking the meadow and the highest rocks in what is today called
the Allandale Woods.
Allandale partially burned in July 1888, and the Southers tore
it down and built the two-and-a-half story house on fond memory at 14
Allandale in 1889-90, now marked only by the entrance posts at the
start of the long circular drive. Sitting on a curving terrace of
Roxbury puddingstone, the new Allandale overlooked a 60-foot long
greenhouse, terraced gardens on the south, and meadow, through which a
stream meandered to Elephant Pond on the south corner of the estate.
The estate stayed intact into modern memory because daughter
Marguerite P. Souther (1882-1975) lived most of her 93 years there. No
recluse, Miss Souther is still mentioned in hallowed tones in our area.
Plunging into community activities, she joined the Tuesday Club of
Jamaica Plain and in 1924 put up the collateral for the Club's mortgage
on the Loring-Greenough House, the last remaining pre-Revolutionary
mansion still in Jamaica Plain, thereby preventing its demolition for
storefronts and house lots-the fate of all such prior houses along
Centre Street.
Most memorable were the dancing classes Miss Souther ran at
Eliot Hall, home of the Footlight Club, from the '20's to the '60's of
rigorous but graceful instruction," as the Boston 200 Plaque on Eliot
Hall still attests. When Miss Souther moved to a nursing home in 1968,
the estate was quickly sold to Faulkner Hospital.
The hospital quickly razed Allandale and leveled the ground in
hope of building on it. Denied permits amid cries by the Jamaica Hill
Association, the hospital dumped earth and rubble into Allandale's
foundations, and an ugly landfill is what the once beautiful Souther
Estate, a byproduct of "Souther's monsters," looks like today. A
happier future awaits it as Mt. Pleasant's Springhouse community takes
shape.
Sources: W. Holton "What's So Big About the Big Dig?" W.M.
Whitehill, Topographical History of Boston; Ballou's Pictorial, October
1858 and May 1859; R. Heath, Allandale Woods; The History of the
Loring-Greenough House; Mr. David Mittell.
Written
By Walter H. Marx. Reprinted with permission from the March 12, 1993 Jamaica Plain
Gazette. Copyright © Gazette Publications, Inc.