Merchants’ Hall

Northeast corner of Congress Street and Water Street, Downtown Boston

Merchants’ Hall housed the original office of The Liberator, the famed anti-slavery newspaper co-founded and produced by radical abolitionist William Lloyd Garrison. Launched on January 1, 1831, the weekly publication remained in the building for almost four years.

Merchants’ Hall, artist unknown. Public domain image. Source: Grimke (1890) by way of Wikimedia Commons.

Oliver Johnson, a fellow abolitionist and close ally of Garrison, described the newspaper’s office on an upper floor of the building as follows: “The dingy walls, the small windows bespattered with printers’ ink, the press standing in one corner, the composing stands opposite, the long editorial and mailing tables covered with newspapers, the bed of the editor and publisher.” Someone working for Harrison Gray Otis sent out by the then-mayor of Boston to learn about The Liberator, had this to say: “His [Garrison’s] office was an obscure hole, his only visible auxiliary a negro boy, and his supporters a very few insignificant persons of all colors.”

The October 4, 1834, edition was the last one produced in Merchants’ Hall. In its October 18, 1834, edition, the newspaper announced: “The office of the Liberator is removed from Merchants’ Hall to No. 31, Cornhill, 3d story, over the Bookstore of Mr. Benjamin B. Mizzy.

It is not clear when Merchants’ Hall first opened, but the demise of the four-story, brick structure is well established. It was one of the 776 buildings destroyed by the Great Boston Fire of November 9-11, 1872. At least 30 people, including 12 firefighters, lost their lives in the massive blaze that began in the basement of a warehouse at the corner of Summer and Kingston streets.

Economically, the fire was extremely costly. Garrison described the aftermath of the almost 65-acre burned zone in the heart of the city as follows: “All the street lines were completely obliterated by the debris, and many a merchant found it impossible to determine precisely where he had been doing business.” According to author Stephanie Schorow, the destruction constituted “10 to 11 percent of the total assessed value of all Boston real estate and personal property.”

Map (1872) of the burnt area of the Great Boston Fire. Source: Norman B. Leventhal Map and Education Center at the Boston Public Library. Click on the image to go to the full-size, online map.

By the time of the fire, The Liberator no longer existed, having published its last issue on December 29, 1865. After leaving Merchants’ Hall, the newspaper spent almost all of its subsequent years at various addresses (numbers 21, 25, and 31) on Cornhill*, a street that was home to some of the city’s most important booksellers and publishers, and a meeting place for leading intellectuals in the 19th century. (A few of the 19th -century Cornhill buildings still exist—most of them were torn down during the razing of Scollay Square in the 1960s—on the southern edge of City Hill Plaza.) In May 1860, the newspaper moved its office from Cornhill to a nearby site, what was then numbered as 221 Washington Street, where it remained until its final issue.

Today, there is a historical marker on the northeast corner of the intersection of Congress Street and Water Street that commemorates the founding of The Liberator and its existence on the site. Erected by the Bostonian Society, the marker speaks of a building, but does not name Merchants’ Hall.

Getting there:

Red Line or Orange Line to Downtown Crossing (0.3 miles, about a 7-minute walk). Blue Line or Orange Line to State (300 feet, a one-minute walk). Green Line or Blue Line to Government Center (0.2. miles, a 6-minute walk).

Related sites:

Rockledge, Garrison’s home from 1864 to the time of his death is 1879, 125 Highland Street, Roxbury.

William Lloyd Garrison birthplace and family home, 3-5 School Street, Newburyport. (We explore the site in A People’s Guide to Greater Boston.)

 To learn more:

Archibald H. Grimke, “Anti-Slavery Boston,” The New England Magazine, Vol. 3, No 4, December 1890: 441-459.

Henry Mayer, All on Fire: William Lloyd Garrison and the Abolition of Slavery, New York: St. Martin’s Griffin, 1998.

Stephanie Schorow, The Great Boston Fire: The Inferno That Nearly Incinerated the City, Guilford, Connecticut: Globe Pequot, 2024.

*Regarding Cornhill, see our entry on John P. Jewett and Company in the Downtown Boston section of A People’s Guide to Great Boston.

Harmony Grove

156 and 166 Franklin Street, Framingham

Established in 1846, Harmony Grove was a commercial pleasure park. It had a lawn area for games, a dancing pavilion, and, as it sat on the edge of Farm Pond, a boathouse. It also had an amphitheater of sorts, in a natural depression, with benches that sat about a thousand people and a platform below.

Undated illustration of Harmony Grove. Source: Historic Framingham blog.

Soon after Harmony Grove’s opening, the Massachusetts Anti-Slavery Society began to hold an annual Fourth of July rally at the roughly 4-acre venue. It was a time of greatly heightened tensions surrounding the question of slavery and growing opposition, particularly in states such as Massachusetts, to what South Carolina politician John C. Calhoun first referred to as “the peculiar institution.” The year 1850 saw the passage of the Fugitive Slave Act, for example; in 1852, John P. Jewett & Company*, a publisher in Downtown Boston, released Harriet Beecher Stowe’s Uncle Tom’s Cabin; and, in 1854, Congress passed the Kansas-Nebraska Act.

Poster for the July 4, 1954 gathering. Source: Massachusetts Historical Society.

In this charged context, the Massachusetts Anti-Slavery Society held its most well-known and controversial gathering at Harmony Grove on July 4, 1854. Hundreds of abolitionists—one newspaper estimated the crowd at 2,000—gathered at the site. Decorating the platform was an upside-down U.S. flag bordered in black, a banner that showed Massachusetts chained to Virginia, and anti-slavery slogans. Speakers included Lucy Stone, a not-yet-famous Henry David Thoreau (Walden came out the next month), and Sojourner Truth, who warned the crowd that God “would yet execute his judgments upon the white people for their oppression and cruelty.”

William Lloyd Garrison, editor of The Liberator newspaper, opened the event. He called the U.S. Constitution “the source and parent of all the other atrocities—a covenant with death, and an agreement with hell.” He ended his speech by burning a copy of the 1850 Fugitive Slave Law as well as one of the Constitution, leading to many cheers but some boos as well from those in attendance.

Political gatherings continued at Harmony Grove for a decade following the end of the Civil War, but with a growing focus on women’s suffrage and temperance. In the 1870s, with the spread of railroads to new destinations, the popularity of Harmony Grove declined, leading to its closure in 1875. By the 1890s, the land was sub-divided into dozens of housing lots.

Plaque at 156 Franklin Street. Source: Historic Framingham blog.

Today, the area that was once Harmony Grove is populated by houses and commercial buildings. At 156 Franklin Street, at the corner with Henry Street, there is a small marker with a plaque, placed there by the Framingham Historical Society in 1913, commemorating Harmony Grove. On the other side of Henry Street, at 166 Franklin, there is a Harmony Grove Welcome Arch. Dedicated on September 6, 2020, the arch sits on the front lawn of a private home. The result of a collaboration between Downtown Framingham Inc. and student organizations at Framingham High School and Framingham State University, the arch, which visitors are welcome to approach, contains sketches of historical scenes and of the landscape associated with Harmony Grove.

Getting there:

Commuter Rail from South Station to Framingham. 0.5 mile (nine-minute) walk.

To learn more:

“Downtown Framingham Inc. Plans to Install Harmony Grove Welcome Arch,” Framingham SOURCE, February 22, 2020.

Framingham History Center, “A Brief History of Framingham’s Harmony Grove,” August 27, 2021.

Stephen W. Herring, Framingham: An American Town, Framingham: The Framingham Historical Society and the Framingham Tercentennial Commission, 2000.

Massachusetts Historical Society, “’A Covenant with Death and an Agreement with Hell,’” July 2005        .

*Regarding John P. Jewett & Company, see the site entry in A People’s Guide to Greater Boston.

Brown Square

Pleasant Street (between Green St. and Titcomb St.), Newburyport

Postcard of Brown Square, 1913. Public domain. Source: Wikimedia Commons.

On May 31, 1836, the Essex County Antislavery Society held its first meeting at Brown Square. Among the speakers was the famed poet and abolitionist John Greenleaf Whittier. Established in 1802, the square was named after Moses Brown (1742-1827), the land’s donor, and, at the time, Newburyport’s second wealthiest individual and largest property owner.

Brown Square features an imposing statue of Newburyport’s most famous son: William Lloyd Garrison. On the base of the statue, which was erected in 1893, are engraved some of his most famous, hard-hitting words. The monument is located very close to what was the North Church, whose pastor, in 1830, invited Garrison to deliver a lecture about slavery. Many in the audience so disliked what the firebrand abolitionist had to say that he was uninvited to speak on a second night.

That the house of worship (the Central Congregational Church now occupies the site) at the western end of Brown Square treated Garrison poorly is related in some ways to the square’s namesake. Moses Brown was a merchant and shipbuilder, and an investor in the sugar, rum, and molasses trade. As such, like many in Newburyport, his wellbeing was tied to slavery. As an informational panel on the green notes, “Brown became wealthy and helped the development of Newburyport based on his profits from the ‘Triangle Trade,’ the economic engine that drove much of the slave trade in the 18th and 19th centuries.”

In addition to Newburyport’s City Hall, various commercial establishments sit along the perimeter of Brown Square, including the Garrison Inn, a small hotel. Originally known as the Brown Square House, it was built (or commissioned) by Moses Brown.

Getting there:

Commuter Rail from North Station to Newburyport. Brown Square is 1.3 miles away (about a 26-minute walk). You can traverse most of the distance via the Clipper City Rail Trail, which connects the Commuter Rail station to Newburyport’s Harborwalk, along the city’s waterfront.

To learn more:

Susan M. Harvey, Slavery in Massachusetts: A descendent of early settlers investigates the connections in Newburyport, Massachusetts, Master’s Thesis, Department of History, Fitchburg State University, June 2011.

Dyke Hendrickson, “The Economics of Slavery,” Daily News (Newburyport), April 14, 2014.

John Greenleaf Whittier Birthplace

305 Whittier Road, Haverhill

A vibrant and complex cluster of abolitionists emerged out of Haverhill in the 1800s. They included Sydney Howard Gay, future editor of the National Anti-Slavery Standard and partisan of the Underground Railroad. Perhaps the best known was John Greenleaf Whittier, who gained national prominence as the author of Snow-Bound, a bestselling poem. Published in book form in 1866, the poem celebrated the disappearing New England family farm.

Whittier, born in 1807, was educated at a local Quaker school led by an influential abolitionist minister, Joshua Coffin. It was in a newspaper edited by William Lloyd Garrison (see our entry on Rockledge), the Newburyport Free Press, in which Whittier’s first published poem appeared, in 1826.

John Greenleaf Whittier birthplace, 2016. Photo by Suren Moodliar.

Whittier was ambivalent about his hometown’s best-known contribution to abolitionism, the famous Haverhill petition. In 1841, John Quincy Adams, the former president and member of the U.S. House of Representatives, presented the petition to Congress. It called for the dissolution of the United States, in effect Northern secession, claiming that taxpayers in the North were footing the bill for the defense of slavery in the South. Whittier was quite troubled by this tactic, fearing that if it were to succeed, slavery would remain intact. Despite this difference, Whittier remained a strong advocate of using formal political institutions to challenge slavery.

Built in 1688, Whittier’s birthplace still stands; today, it is a museum dedicated to the poet. The Whittier family homestead is open to the public from May until October via guided tours. The neighboring properties retain much of the bucolic character of Whittier’s time.

Plaque attached to the house where John Greenleaf Whittier was born. Photo by Midnightdreary, 2008. Creative Commons.

Getting there:

The home is 4.2 miles from the Haverhill Commuter Rail Station.

To learn more:

Christopher Klein, “Touring John Greenleaf Whittier’s birthplace and home,” The Boston Globe, October 6, 2011.

Whittier Birthplace website.

Rockledge (Home of William Lloyd Garrison)

125 Highland Street, Roxbury

William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879. Source: Library of Congress (public domain).

In 1864, William Lloyd Garrison, the famed abolitionist and publisher of the Boston-based, anti-slavery newspaper The Liberator, moved to the “Boston Highlands” of Roxbury with his family.

Rockledge was the name given to the half-acre estate. Due to the declining health and limited mobility of Garrison’s wife, Helen—an active abolitionist as well—it was thought best to move to what was then a relatively bucolic suburb. (The City of Boston did not annex Roxbury until 1868.) The Garrison family held onto the property until the deaths of both Helen (1876) and William (1879).

Rockledge, circa 1898. Source: Boston Public Library, Arts Department, via Digital Commonwealth.

In an area today known as both Highland Park and Fort Hill, the original building, altered somewhat over the decades, and a later addition still stand. Beginning in 1904, Rockledge served as a nursing home, one run by the Episcopal Sisters of the Society of St. Margaret for low-income African-American women and children. Today, Rockledge, a National Historic Landmark, is part of Emmanuel College’s Notre Dame campus, where the 30 or so student residents dedicate themselves to community service and social justice.

Getting there:

Orange Line to Jackson Square Station. (0.6 mile, about a 14-minute walk.) The Emmanuel campus is accessed from Highland Avenue, a small street above and behind Rockledge.

Related site:

William Lloyd Garrison birthplace and family home, 3-5 School Street, Newburyport. (We explore this site in A People’s Guide to Greater Boston.)

Nearby:

Highland Park, former home of a Revolutionary War fort and the site of Fort Hill Tower, listed on the National Register of Historic Places. It affords a beautiful view of much of Boston. 

To learn more:

Mayer, Henry. All on Fire: William Lloyd Garrison and the Abolition of Slavery, New York: St. Martin’s Griffin, 1998.

National Park Service, National Registry of Historic Places nomination application, 1965.

Rocheleau, Matt. “Emmanuel College has lofty mission at quiet Roxbury site,” The Boston Globe, September 22, 2014.