African AmericansNeighborhood LifeNew BostonUrban Renewal Photograph of a man wearing glasses and sweater sitting in a chair and gesturing with his hands.

Richie Nedd

Richie Nedd was one of the historic West End’s Black residents and a board member of The West End Museum before his passing in 2011. Nedd’s article for the June 1998 issue of The West Ender, “A Black Man’s View of the West End,” features he and other Black residents coming together in reunions of hundreds of West Enders after urban renewal.

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Immigrant NeighborhoodWar Image from a website of the City of the Boston titled Hero Squares for Veterans.

West End Hero Squares, Part 1

The tradition of dedicating city squares to service members lost in war began in 1898. Known as Hero Squares, the City of Boston has placed over 1200 memorials of this type throughout its neighborhoods. Easily overlooked as one navigates busy urban streets, an alert pedestrian walking through the West End will notice its share of these memorials to those who sacrificed their lives in duty.

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African AmericansCity PlanningNew BostonUrban Renewal Image from a newspaper articles showing a man with short hair and a beard wearing a jacket. He is standing in a wooded area with a two-story wooden house in the background.

John Moore’s North Slope Story

John Moore understood himself to be a West Ender when he grew up on Grove Street on the north slope of present-day Beacon Hill. The demolition of fifty acres of the historic West End and the preservation of the Beacon Hill Architectural District were simultaneous, influencing popular perceptions of the boundaries not just of Boston’s contemporary neighborhoods, but its historic ones as well.

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