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STATISTICAL REPORTS Commissioner of Correction
Public Document No. 115 Styr Olommonutfaltlf of fflasBarljuarîta STATISTICAL REPORTS OF THE Commissioner of Correction For The Y ear Ending December 31, 1967 P ublication of t h is D ocu m ent A pproved by A lfred C. H olland. State P urchasing A gent. 900-6 -69-949774 $.667 (Eommomuraltlj of HJaBHarljuBpttH DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTION 100 C ambridge Str eet, Boston, Mass. 02202 STATISTICAL REPORT OF THF COMMISSIONER OF CORRECTION FOR, THE YEAR ENDING DECEMBER 31, 1967 DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTION JOHN A. GAVIN Commissioner Robert J. Moore, Deputy Commissioner for Institutional Services John J. Fitzpatrick, Deputy Commissioner for Classification and Treatment John A. Chmielinski, Deputy Commissioner for Personnel and Training Parole Board Joseph F. McCormack, Chairman Cornelius J. Twomey, Member John T. Lane, Member Mary P. Kirkpatrick, Member Tillie A. Z elesky, Member (Before June, 1967) L. Warren DeSaulnier, Member (Since June, 1967) 115 M /VC. P.D. 115 1 STATE CORRECTIONAL INSTITUTIONS INSTITUTION LOCATION Mass. Corr. Inst. Walpole........ South Walpole. Palmer Scafati, Superintendent Mass. Corr. Inst. Norfolk......... Norfolk........ Philip J. Picard, Superintendent Mass. Corr. Inst. Concord........ West Concord . James L. O'Shea, Superintendent Mass. Corr. Inst. Framingham . Framingham . Betty Cole Smith, Superintendent Mass. Corr. Inst. Bridgewater. South Bridgewater Charles W. Gaughan, Superintendent Mass. Corr. Inst. Plymouth . South Carver . James F. Mahoney, Jr. Mass. Corr. Inst. Monroe ......... Monroe ........ Director of Prison Camps Mass. Corr. Inst. Warwick........ Warwick........ 100 Cambridge Street, Boston, Mass. COUNTY JAILS AND HOUSES OF CORRECTION NOTE: Places marked with * are Jails only; those marked with a # are Houses of Correction only. COUNTY LOCATION Barnstable Barnstable................ -
Annual Report of the Massachusetts Commission on Mental Diseases Of
TH** •O0«-»iA Public Document No. 117 SECOND ANNUAL EEPOET Massachusetts Commission on Mental Diseases THE COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS Year ending November 30, 1917. BOSTON: WRIGHT & POTTER PRINTING CO., STATE PRINTERS, 32 DERNE street. 1918. Publication of this Document approved by the Supervisor of Administration. TABLE OF CONTENTS. * PAGE Members of the Commission and List of Officers, 5 Letter of Transmission to Governor and Council, 7 Duties of the Commission, ..... 9,10 Activities of the Commission, ..... 10-15 Review of the Year: — All Classes under Care, ..... 16,17 The Insane, ....... 17-23 The Feeble-minded, . 23,24 The Epileptic, ....... 24,25 Report of the Pathologist, ..... 25-54 Reports of Committees on Nursing Service, . 54-61 Out-patient Departments, ..... 61-71 Commitments for Observation and Temporary Care, 71-73 Stability of Service, ...... 74,75 Capacity for Patients, ..... 76-78 Institutions : — Public 79-127 Private, . 127-130 Unlicensed Homes, . 131 Family Care of the Insane, .... 131-134 The Commission: — Proceedings of, . 135 Plans and Specifications, ..... 135 Estimates of State Expenses for 1918: — The Commission, 135, 136 Maintenance Appropriations, 136-138 Special Appropriations, .... 139-142 Financial Statement of Commission, 143, 144 Support Department, ..... 145-148 Deportations, ....... 148, 149 Transfers, ....... 150 Financial Department, . 150 General Matters : — New Legislation, ...... 151-160 Nineteen-year Statement as to Special Appropriations, 160-162 Financial Statistics, ....... 163-201 General Statistics, ....... 203-265 Directors^ of Institutions, ...... 266-278 Index, ......... 279-286 Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2010 with funding from Boston Library Consortium IVIember Libraries http://www.archive.org/details/annualreportofma1917mass2 Members of the Massachusetts Commission on Mental Diseases. -
Annual Report of the Trustees of The
Public Document No. 24 FIFTY-NINTH ANNUAL EEPOET THE TRUSTEES The State Farm BRIDGEWATER, INCLUDING THE REPORTS OF THE SUPERINTENDENT AND OF THE MEDICAL DIRECTOR, Yeab e:ndixg November 30, 1912. BOSTON: WEIGHT & POTTEE FEINTING CO., STATE PEINTEES, 18 Post Office Square. 1913. Approved by The State Board of Publication. CONTENTS. PAGE Trustees' Report, 7 Superintendent's Report, 11 Treasurer's Report, 14 Statistics, 20 Valuation, 26 Hospital Report (Prison and Almshouse), 27 Hospital Statistics (Prison and Almshouse), . .31 Hospital Report (Insane), 39 Hospital Statistics (Insane), 47 STATE FARM, BRIDGEWATER. TRUSTEES. JOHN B. TIVNAN, Chairman, Salem. PAYSON W. LYMAN, Secretary, Fall River. LEONARD HUNTRESS, M.D., Lowell. Mrs. HELEN R. SMITH, Newton. GALEN L. STONE, Brookline. JOHN W. COUGHLIN, M.D., Fall River. Mrs. NELLIE E. TALBOT, . Brookline. RESIDENT OFFICERS. HOLLIS M. BLACKSTONE, . Superintendent. HENRY J. STRANN, . Assistant Superintendent and Treasurer. J. ARTHUR TAYLOR, . Master. WALTER E. TEMPLE, . Deputy Master. ERNEST B. EMERSON, M.D., Resident Physician. BENJAMIN B. KASSON, M.D., Assistant Physician. MINOT W. GALE, M.D., Assistant Physician. ERNEST E. BACON, Farmer. WILLIAM J. TURNBULL, . Engineer. CONSULTING PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS TO THE HOSPITAL DEPARTMENT. CALVIN PRATT, M.D., Bridgewater. SAMUEL J. MIXTER, M.D., Boston. HENRY EHRLICH, M.D., Boston. WILLIAM F. KNOWLES, M.D., Boston. DANIEL FISKE JONES, M.D., Boston. ®l)e Commnntuealtl] of illa^sadjusettB. TRUSTEES' REPORT. To His Excellency the Governor and the Honorable Council. Obedient to statutory requirement, the trustees of the State Infirmary and the State Farm submit their fifty-ninth annual report as to the operation of the State Farm for the year ending Nov. -
Boston a Guide Book to the City and Vicinity
1928 Tufts College Library GIFT OF ALUMNI BOSTON A GUIDE BOOK TO THE CITY AND VICINITY BY EDWIN M. BACON REVISED BY LeROY PHILLIPS GINN AND COMPANY BOSTON • NEW YORK • CHICAGO • LONDON ATLANTA • DALLAS • COLUMBUS • SAN FRANCISCO COPYRIGHT, 1928, BY GINN AND COMPANY ALL RIGHTS RESERVED PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA 328.1 (Cfte gtftengum ^regg GINN AND COMPANY • PRO- PRIETORS . BOSTON • U.S.A. CONTENTS PAGE PAGE Introductory vii Brookline, Newton, and The Way about Town ... vii Wellesley 122 Watertown and Waltham . "123 1. Modern Boston i Milton, the Blue Hills, Historical Sketch i Quincy, and Dedham . 124 Boston Proper 2 Winthrop and Revere . 127 1. The Central District . 4 Chelsea and Everett ... 127 2. The North End .... 57 Somerville, Medford, and 3. The Charlestown District 68 Winchester 128 4. The West End 71 5. The Back Bay District . 78 III. Public Parks 130 6. The Park Square District Metropolitan System . 130 and the South End . loi Boston City System ... 132 7. The Outlying Districts . 103 IV. Day Trips from Boston . 134 East Boston 103 Lexington and Concord . 134 South Boston .... 103 Boston Harbor and Massa- Roxbury District ... 105 chusetts Bay 139 West Roxbury District 105 The North Shore 141 Dorchester District . 107 The South Shore 143 Brighton District. 107 Park District . Hyde 107 Motor Sight-Seeing Trips . 146 n. The Metropolitan Region 108 Important Points of Interest 147 Cambridge and Harvard . 108 Index 153 MAPS PAGE PAGE Back Bay District, Showing Copley Square and Vicinity . 86 Connections with Down-Town Cambridge in the Vicinity of Boston vii Harvard University ... -
Healthsource Page 2 Family Healthsource Page 3 the Device Clinic Is Located on the Second Floor of the Hospital Blood Clots
Newton-Wellesley Hospital’s HeaHealthSolthSoururcece Winter 2016 Spine Surgery Success Cardiovascular Center Mammography Q&A Women’s Health Center “Lynn was having quite debilitating radiating leg pain from the nerve com- pression, as well as back pain,” explains Dr. Aidlen. “After a long course of trying nonsurgical treatment options, which is recommended first, she opted for surgery due to persistent pain.” Lynn’s surgery entailed a laminectomy (removing bone and part of a ligament to relieve nerve compression) and a fusion with instrumentation (screws Spine Center and rods) to stabilize the arthritic portion of the spine. at Newton-Wellesley Hospital Last October, she underwent the procedure and hasn’t looked back since! “Dr. Aidlen got me in right away to minimize my waiting time for the surgery,” The Spine Center provides multi-disciplinary says Lynn. “After my procedure, I was home in exactly 48 hours with clear care for spinal conditions. Their team is com- instructions and ample pain medications to keep me comfortable. I was prised of leading radiologists, orthopaedic immediately better than I had been before the surgery. My pain level was surgeons, neurosurgeons, physiatrists very tolerable that first week and the nerve pain was completely gone when (rehabilitation doctors), physical therapists, I woke up in the PACU.” anesthesiologists and other specialists. Dr. Aidlen was also very pleased with the results of Lynn’s surgery. “Her leg pain was better pretty immediately after surgery, and she was up and walking The programs and services provided by the right away,” says Dr. Aidlen. “She progressed well with physical therapy after Center are appropriate for anyone who suffers surgery and is now fully healed and back to horseback riding, her most from back- and neck-related pain that inter- beloved activity. -
Book Talk & Signing: Charles Street Jail by Joseph Mcmaster
150 STANIFORD STREET, SUITE 7, BOSTON, MA 02114 Book Talk & Signing: Charles Street Jail by Joseph McMaster An Infamous History Revealed through Vintage Images FOR RELEASE: January 7, 2016 Boston, MA—On January 20 at 6:30 p.m., The West End Museum will host an evening with Joseph McMaster, author of Charles Street Jail, the newest addition to Arcadia Publishing’s popular “Images of America” series. McMaster will lead a discussion as well as read from and sign copies of his book, which will be available for purchase. The event is free and open to the public. Pre-register here. Told in pictures, Charles Street Jail features 200 stunning vintage images that reveal the institution’s infamous history. Always a paragon of architecture, the facility has been transformed into the luxurious and vibrant Liberty Hotel, which opened in 2007. It supplanted the Leverett Street Jail (1822-1851) and was replaced by the Nashua Street Jail (1990-present). McMaster is donating his proceeds from the book to The West End Museum. “I hope readers will appreciate the building’s rich and complex past,” said McMaster. “Long underappreciated, the Charles Street Jail was a fascinating crossroads of all kind of colorful characters and ideas of local and national importance. Just as the building has undergone a stunning historic preservation, I hope this book will help preserve some of the images and tales of this institution.” In nearly 150 years of continuous use, the Charles Street Jail in Boston’s West End had its share of notorious inmates, including Whitey Bulger, Malcolm X, Sacco and Venzetti, a captured German U-boat captain and then future Boston Mayor James Michael Curley. -
Curtis Penney, DO
Curtis W. Penney, D.O. Diplomate, American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology (Neurology) 4285 Coventry Drive South Fargo, North Dakota 58104 Telephone: 701-205-0390 Cell: 701-446-7691 Curriculum Vitae Education Academic Preparation: Doctor of Osteopathy (D.O.) University of New England College of Osteopathic Medicine Hills Beach Road Biddeford, Maine 04005 (Programme: 1989-1993) Doctor of Ministry (D.Min.) Department of Psychology Andover Newton Theological School 210 Herrick Road Newton Centre, Massachusetts 02159 (Programme: 1980-1982) Doctoral Degree awarded in Psychology and Clinical Studies Doctoral Dissertation entitled: “The Role of Language from a Psychological and Theological Perspective: Understanding the Pastoral Counselor as Psychologist and Theologian” Master of Divinity (M.Div.) Andover Newton Theological School 210 Herrick Road Newton Centre, Massachusetts 02159 (Programme: 1974-1978; concentration in Psychology Bachelor of Arts (B.A.) Eastern Nazarene College 21 E. Elm Avenue Wollaston, Massachusetts 02170 (Programme: 1969-1973; major in Psychology) Post-graduate Medical Training: Internship: Internal Medicine (Preliminary Year) Department of Medicine Carney Hospital 2100 Dorchester Avenue Boston, Massachusetts 02124 (PGY I: 1993-1994) Dr. Curtis W. Penney Page 2 Residency in Neurology: Neurological Unit Boston City Hospital 818 Harrison Avenue 02118 (PGY II, III and IV; Chief Resident in Neurology: 1996-1997) Residency completed in Association with: Department of Neurology St. Elizabeth’s Medical Center Boston, Massachusetts -
BOSTON Planner’S Guide
BOSTON Planner’s Guide Prepared by the Massachusetts Chapter of the American Planning Association for the APA National Planning Conference Boston, Massachusetts April 9-12, 2011 WELCOME TO BOSTON THE HOMETOWN OF PLANNING Bostonwasfoundedin60ontheShawmutPeninsula,juttingoutintothe BostonHarborandconnectedtothemainlandbytoday’sWashingtonStreet. OnbehalfoftheBostonLocalHostCommitteewewouldliketowelcomeyoutothe Throughplannedfillingand“wharfing-in”,thepeninsulaevolvedtoitspresent 0AmericanPlanningAssociationNationalPlanningConference. shape.In878,thefillingofmarshesintheBackBaybegan(todaytheBackBay neighborhood).Underaplanbyfamedlandscapearchitect,FrederickLawOlmsted, Boston’sapproachtoplanning&developmentistopreserveitshistoriccharacter today’s“EmeraldNecklace”alsowasformed.Theseearlyactionssetthestagefor whileembracingthefuture.Frombeingthefirstcitytorequiredevelopmentsto themodernpublicworksthatcontinuetoshapeBoston. followLEEDstandardstotheestablishmentofanInnovationDistrictforcreative jobs,Bostonisbuildingonboththestrengthofitshistoryanditsyoungand Inthelate800s,thefirstsubwayinthenationwasbuiltunderTremontand educatedworkforce.Over80areacollegesanduniversitieseducatemorethan BoylstonStreets(nowpartoftheMBTAGreenLine).Largehighwayprojects 0,000studentseveryyear.Diversityenrichesthiscitywhereminoritiesnow alsohadimpacts.Inthe950s,theelevatedCentralArterywasbuiltbythe makeuphalfoftheCity’spopulation. MassachusettsDepartmentofPublicWorks(MDPW).Inthe980stoearly000s, MDPW’s(nowMassDOT)massiveCentralArtery/TunnelProject(knownastheBig BostonisoneofAmerica’sgreatwalkingcitiesandyouarelocatedinanexemplary -
Institutional Master Plan 2021-2031 Boston Medical Center
Institutional Master Plan 2021-2031 Boston Medical Center May 3, 2021 SUBMITTED TO: Boston Planning and Development Agency One City Hall Square Boston, MA 02201 Submitted pursuant to Article 80D of the Boston Zoning Code SUBMITTED BY: Boston Medical Center Corporation One Boston Medical Center Place Boston, MA 02118 PREPARED BY: Stantec 226 Causeway Street, 6th Floor Boston, MA 02114 617.654.6057 IN ASSOCIATION WITH: Tsoi-Kobus Design VHB DLA Piper Contents 1.0 OVERVIEW ................................................................................................................. 1-1 1.1 INTRODUCTION ......................................................................................................... 1-1 1.2 INSTITUTIONAL MASTER PLAN HISTORY ............................................................... 1-1 1.3 PROGRESS ON APPROVED 2010-2020 IMP PROJECTS ........................................ 1-2 1.4 GOALS AND OBJECTIVES FOR THE 2021-2031 IMP ............................................... 1-3 1.5 A MEASURED APPROACH TO CAMPUS GROWTH AND SUSTAINABILITY ........... 1-4 1.6 PUBLIC REVIEW PROCESS ...................................................................................... 1-5 1.7 SUMMARY OF IMP PUBLIC AND COMMUNITY BENEFITS ...................................... 1-6 1.8 PROJECT TEAM ......................................................................................................... 1-9 2.0 MISSION AND OBJECTIVES ..................................................................................... 2-1 2.1 OBJECTIVES -
'I Want to Go to Jail': the Woman's Party
102 Historical Journal of Massachusetts • Winter 2017 Women against Wilson A National Woman’s Party demonstration against President Woodrow Wilson takes to the streets in Chicago in 1916 ahead of his upcoming visit during the presidential campaign. Amid the signs bluntly saying Wilson was “against women” is one that asks, “President Wilson How Long Do You Advise Us to Wait” for the right to vote. Source: Library of Congress. 103 “I Want to Go to Jail”: The Woman’s Party Reception for President Wilson in Boston, 1919 JAMES J. KENNEALLY Abstract: Agitation by the National Woman’s Party (NWP) was but one of several factors leading to the successful passage of the Nineteenth Amendment and woman suffrage. By turning to direct action, concentrating on a federal amendment, and courting jail sentences (unlike the more restrained National American Woman Suffrage Association), they obtained maximum publicity for their cause even when, as in Boston, their demonstration had little direct bearing on enfranchisement. Although historians have amply documented the NWP’s vigils and arrests before the White House, the history of the Massachusetts chapter of the NWP and the story of their demonstrations in Boston in 1919 has been mostly overlooked. This article gives these pioneering suffragists their recognition. Nationally, the only women to serve jail sentences on behalf of suffrage were the 168 activists arrested in the District of Columbia and the sixteen women arrested in Boston. Dr. James J. Kenneally, a Professor Emeritus and former Director of Historical Journal of Massachusetts, Vol. 45 (1), Winter 2017 © Institute for Massachusetts Studies, Westfield State University 104 Historical Journal of Massachusetts • Winter 2017 the Martin Institute at Stonehill College, has written extensively on women’s history.1 * * * * * * * Alice Paul (1885–1977) and Lucy Burns (1879–1966) met in jail in 1909 in England. -
The Winslows of Boston
Winslow Family Memorial, Volume IV FAMILY MEMORIAL The Winslows of Boston Isaac Winslow Margaret Catherine Winslow IN FIVE VOLUMES VOLUME IV Boston, Massachusetts 1837?-1873? TRANSCRIBED AND EDITED BY ROBERT NEWSOM UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, IRVINE 2009-10 Not to be reproduced without permission of the Massachusetts Historical Society, Boston, Massachusetts Winslow Family Memorial, Volume IV Editorial material Copyright © 2010 Robert Walker Newsom ___________________________________ All rights reserved. Except for brief quotations in a review, this work, or parts thereof, may not be reproduced without permission from the Massachusetts Historical Society, Boston, Massachusetts. Not to be reproduced without permission of the Massachusetts Historical Society, Boston, Massachusetts Winslow Family Memorial, Volume IV A NOTE ON MARGARET’S PORTION OF THE MANUSCRIPT AND ITS TRANSCRIPTION AS PREVIOUSLY NOTED (ABOVE, III, 72 n.) MARGARET began her own journal prior to her father’s death and her decision to continue his Memorial. So there is some overlap between their portions. And her first entries in her journal are sparse, interrupted by a period of four years’ invalidism, and somewhat uncertain in their purpose or direction. There is also in these opening pages a great deal of material already treated by her father. But after her father’s death, and presumably after she had not only completed the twenty-four blank leaves that were left in it at his death, she also wrote an additional twenty pages before moving over to the present bound volumes, which I shall refer to as volumes four and five.* She does not paginate her own pages. I have supplied page numbers on the manuscript itself and entered these in outlined text boxes at the tops of the transcribed pages. -
The American Journal of Pathology
THE AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PATHOLOGY VOLK IDC, SUPPLEMENT I933 WHOLE No. 54 FRANK BURR MALLORY AND THE PATHOLOGICAL DEPART- MENT OF THE BOSTON CITY HOSPITAL * TIxOMY IYm, M.D. The history of a successful institution is often the history of a man. This is particularly true of the pathological department of the Boston City Hospital. The hospital was dedicated and opened in i864 for the treatment of acute and chronic diseases. Dr. Charles E. Swan is referred to as pathologist in connection with the dedicatory exercses, but is not mentioned in the annual report for I864. Like many of his succes- sors Dr. Swan evidently used the position as a stepping-stone to appointment on the clinical staff, becoming physian to outpatients in i868. Dr. S. G. Webber was appointed pathologist in I870 and Dr. William P. Bowles in i873. The dead house and autopsy room were located on the east side of Albany Street in a part of the boiler house, near the location of the new Mallory Institute. Complaint was made in I870, "now that Albany Street has become so great and important a thorough- fare," that the carrying of bodies across the street, not at first ob- jectionable, had become so. In I871 improvements were made in the boiler house and a morgue was established, not only for those dying in the hospital, but also "for the reception and identification of the unknown dead found elsewhere." Record is especially made in i878 of the appointment of Dr. E. G. Cutler as pathologist. In i88o it is interesting to read that "through the liberality of the City Government the Superintendent's office at the hospital has been connected by telephone with police headquarters." In i88i Dr.