Rainbow Swash
The Rainbow Swash is a work by Corita Kent in the Dorchester neighborhood of Boston, Massachusetts. The rainbow design painted on a 140-foot (43 m) tall LNG storage tank is the largest copyrighted work of art in the world.
Wakefield is a town in Middlesex County, Massachusetts in the Greater Boston metropolitan area, incorporated in 1812 and located about 12.5 mi (20.1 km) north-northwest of Downtown Boston.
Population: 24,932
Latitude: 42° 30' 23.33" N
Longitude: -71° 04' 22.19" W
The Rainbow Swash is a work by Corita Kent in the Dorchester neighborhood of Boston, Massachusetts. The rainbow design painted on a 140-foot (43 m) tall LNG storage tank is the largest copyrighted work of art in the world.
Oak Grove is a rapid transit station on the MBTA Orange Line, located in the northern part of Malden, Massachusetts near the intersection of Winter Street and Washington Street. The northern terminus of the Orange Line, Oak Grove has a 788-space par…
Newtonville is a village of Newton, Massachusetts. Located in Newtonville is Newton North High School, one of the city's two high schools.
Needham High School is a public high school in Needham, Massachusetts, USA, educating grades 9 through 12. Its former principal, Dr. Johnathan Pizzi, who was previously the Assistant Academic Superintendent in the Boston Public Schools System, resig…
Holworthy Hall is one of the dormitories housing first-year students at Harvard College. Housing 85 students, it is located in Harvard Yard and borders Kirkland Street. It is the closest dorm to the Harvard Science Center and the second-closest dorm…
The Boston Music Hall was a concert hall located on Winter Street in Boston, Massachusetts, with an additional entrance on Hamilton Place.
West Newton is a village of the City of Newton, Massachusetts and is one of the oldest of the thirteen Newton villages.
South Bay Tower, also known as the Gateway Center, is a proposed skyscraper planned for Boston, Massachusetts. If completed, South Bay Tower would stand as the tallest building in Boston, Massachusetts, and New England, surpassing the 60-story John …
One Financial Center is a modern skyscraper adjacent to Dewey Square in the Financial District of Boston, Massachusetts. Built in 1983, it is Boston's 7th-tallest building, standing 590 feet (180 meters) tall, and housing 46 floors. An unusual 90 ft…
Marian Court College is a four-year college in Swampscott on the North Shore region of Massachusetts.
The Hotel Vendome fire was the worst firefighting tragedy in Boston history.
First Church in Boston is a Unitarian Universalist Church (originally Congregational Church) founded in 1630 by John Winthrop's original Puritan settlement in Boston, Massachusetts.
Essex Agricultural and Technical High School was an agricultural and technical high school located in Hathorne section of Danvers, Massachusetts.
The E. Howard & Co. was a clock and watch company formed by Edward Howard (1813–1904) and Charles Rice in 1858 after the demise of the Boston Watch Company. The pair acquired some of the material and watches in progress, based upon a lien against th…
Coolidge Corner is a neighborhood of Brookline, Massachusetts, centered on the intersection of Beacon Street and Harvard Street. The neighborhood takes its name from the Coolidge brothers' general store that opened in 1857 at that intersection at th…
The Boston University Bridge (originally the Cottage Farm Bridge.) and commonly referred to as the BU Bridge, is a steel truss through arch bridge with a suspended deck carrying Route 2 over the Charles River, connecting Boston to Cambridge, Massach…
The Boston Neck or Roxbury Neck was an isthmus, a narrow strip of land connecting the then-peninsular city of Boston to the mainland city of Roxbury (now a neighborhood of Boston). The surrounding area was gradually filled in as the city of Boston e…
The Boston College School of Theology and Ministry in Brighton, Massachusetts, United States is the graduate divinity school of Boston College and an ecclesiastical faculty of theology that trains men and women, both lay and religious, for service, …