St. Patrick’s Day: The Irish on Dublin Street

Image: Bird’s Eye Map of Cambridge, 1877. Franklin View Co.

Did you know that Sherman Street in North Cambridge was once called Dublin Street? And that a small housing development off Dublin (Bolton St) was once known as New Ireland? In fact, in the 1840s before the street had been officially laid out, the whole area around Sherman St was referred to as “Dublin” (in quotes) or Dublin Village (without quotes).  

Why were so many Irish living in that neighborhood? Clay pits and cattle. The cattle market at Porter Square had been functioning since the early 1800s and was a big employer. (For more on the cattle market, see our post from National Cow Appreciation Day). Since Dublin Street ran through so many clay pits and brick yards, this post focuses on the influence of that industry.

New England Brick Company (NEBCO) kiln, date unknown. CHC collections.

The growth of Boston in the mid-19th century created high demand for bricks as a fireproof construction material – which meant high demand for clay. Retreating glaciers left vast beds of clay in parts of eastern Massachusetts. The beds in North Cambridge were particularly accessible because of the railroad built through the area in 1842, and so were among the first to be exploited. You can see two of these clay pits in the 1854 Walling map below, to the left of the Catholic Cemetery.

The brick business in North Cambridge began in the mid-1840s when ice dealer Nathaniel Jarvis Wyeth (1802-1856), who lived near Fresh Pond, began selling his land in the area.  The extension of the Charlestown Branch railroad through North Cambridge in 1842 had given a big boost to brick production by providing an economical way of shipping bricks. In 1847, Wyeth opened his own brick business. 

Dublin Street was laid out in 1847 from what was then Kidder’s Lane (next named Spruce St, and now Rindge Ave) south to the railroad tracks. It was subsequently extended to Walden St in 1851, to Garden St. in 1861,; and renamed Sherman Street, in honor of William Tecumseh Sherman, in 1895.

Detail: Map of the city of Cambridge, Middlesex County, Massachusetts by Henry Francis Walling (1854) showing Dublin Street in red

According to one source, “in 1858, around 187,000 bricks were produced each day in North Cambridge.”[i] More production meant more jobs.  More jobs meant more immigrant laborers, and they needed housing. 

Local farmer Solomon Sargent (1801- 1864) stepped in to fill the need. With a keen eye toward what the railroad would do to land values, in 1847 he surveyed 49 lots between the railroad tracks and Kidder’s Lane. In 1851, Sargent created the second subdivision off Dublin St. just south of the railroad tracks, which became “New Ireland.” It now includes Bellis Circle and Bolton Streets.  

Detail: Map of Cambridge, Mass prepared by W.A. Mason & C.D. Elliot as is appeared in the 1872 Cambridge directory, showing Bolton St and the area of what later would be Bellis Cir

The diagram below shows the development of the brickyards south of Spruce St.  in 1873.[ii] Dublin St is in green, Spruce St in red, and Concord Ave in purple.

North Cambridge brickyards in 1873, figure 35 from Survey of Architectural History in Cambridge: Northwest Cambridge by Cambridge Historical Commission (1977)

Life on Dublin Street

In early Cambridge city directories, before street numbers were used, Dublin St was often referred to as a general identifier of where someone lived. For example, a person’s address might be listed as “h. n Dublin” meaning house near Dublin. In 1856, there were 40 people listed on Dublin Street and an additional 18 listed as “h. n Dublin.”

In 1875, novelist and Atlantic Monthly editor William Dean Howells (1837-1920), described a stroll through the area:

“… I take my way up through the brickyards towards Dublin, the Irish settlement on the north, passing under the long sheds that shelter the kilns. The ashes lie cold about the mouths of most, and the bricks are burnt to the proper complexion….. As I moved down the street, luminous on either hand with crimsoning and yellowing maples, I was so filled with the tender serenity of the scene, as not to be troubled by the spectacle of small Irish houses standing miserably about on the flats ankle deep, as it were, in little pools of the tide, or to be aware at first, of a sluggish movement of men through the streets, and a flying of children through the broken fences of the neighborhood, and across the vacant lots on which the insulted sign-boards forbade them to trespass. Here and there abandoned hoopskirts defied decay and near the half-finished wooden houses, empty mortar beds and bits of lath and slate were strewn over the scarred and mutilated ground, adding their interest to the scene.”

W. D. Howells, Suburban Sketches, 1875

As can still be seen today, (and in some of the photos below) many workers’ cottages were built on high, brick foundations. This may have been to avoid digging a cellar in the marshy land, or, because bricks were so readily available, it was just easier to build up rather than dig down. A good example of this is #132 Sherman Street, demolished in 1972 and pictured below.

132 Sherman Street, built 1852 and demolished 1972. Photograph by Robert R. Rettig, ca. 1967.

In other instances, two family houses were created by jacking up a wood frame house to create a more livable space in what had been the brick basement. [iii].

In the 1870s, the local grocer on Dublin St was Jeremiah Murphy (b. Ireland, 1820) whose store was adjacent to his home at #187 Dublin St. Neighbors might have enjoyed buying Smoked Neat’s Tongue for 20 cents/lb., oysters (then cheap source of protein) at the astonishing rate of only 40 cents/qt., eggs at 28 cents/doz., or the all-important potato from 50 cents to $1.50 per bushel. Or, perhaps you wanted to pick up some “Irish Moss,” which was advertised in many grocery stores in Cambridge. “Irish Moss” is a nutrient-rich red seaweed long harvested in Ireland, dried, and used as a sort of gelatin. Here is recipe for “Irish Moss Blanc Mange” from 1897:

Cambridge Chronicle December 18, 1897

Jeremiah Murphy’s house today:

#187 Sherman St. today (left side) adjacent to the historic Abraham Watson House at 181-183 Sherman St., just out of the picture to the left. Photograph by author, 2023.

If you were a man, in 1876 you might have joined the meeting advertised below to organize an Independent Workingman’s Club. This is the only reference to “Murphy Hall” on Dublin St found to date. It is unknown which of the four Murphys living on Dublin St at that time may have owned a separate structure known as “Murphy Hall.”

Cambridge Chronicle October 28, 1876

The People

Many are familiar with the big picture when it comes to how the potato famine in mid-19th century led to a surge in Irish emigration to the United States. Soon, there were four distinct Irish enclaves in Cambridge: East Cambridge, Cambridgeport, “The Upper Marsh,” (West Cambridge between Mt. Auburn and Foster St) and in “Dublin” in North Cambridge.

To celebrate this St. Patrick’s Day, we set out to find some particular stories about the particular Irish people living on Dublin Street back around 1872. The year was chosen because the City Directory for that year is the closest to the census of 1870, which was used to confirm people’s birth and birth dates. But finding out the personal stories of individual people was harder than anticipated. This is for several reasons: for one, many Irish in Cambridge shared the same names. Secondly, the young laborer population was very fluid and their listings in the City Directory inconsistent. Some, known to have been living on Dublin St from the Directory, did not show up at all in the 1870 census. This made figuring out who was who in newspaper articles difficult.

Take the example of Jeremiah Murphy mentioned above. He was initially listed as a laborer and subsequently as a grocer. The 1876 Directory lists 120 adults named Murphy in Cambridge, of whom 11 were named “Jeremiah.” Is our grocer the same Jeremiah Murphy noted in the newspapers as arrested for “assault and battery” in 1855? Or the Chief Marshall of a St. Patrick’s Day parade in 1873?  Or a member from Ward 5 of the City Democratic Committee? Obituaries reveal many with the same name as those living on Dublin St owned real estate, were deeply involved in ward politics, and had successful businesses. But even obituaries are not always enough to confirm the deceased actually lived on Dublin St.

The clay pits provided work, but they were also a hazard. Newspapers were full of accounts of children drowning, workers being crushed by sliding banks, horses going over the edge, or boys crashing through the ice while ice skating. By 1892, “the clay pit nuisance” was being discussed in the papers, with a suggestion to “include the pits as ponds in parks”[iv]  It took another 98 years for that idea to become a reality.

Time went by. Many Irish moved to other neighborhoods while French Canadians replaced those workers working in the brickyards. Eventually, all but one of the hazardous clay pits were filled in. Jerry’s Pond (formerly known as Jerry’s Pit) survives on Rindge Avenue. In 1951, those owned by the New England Brick Co. were sold to the City of Cambridge, and this area became the town dump. The dump closed in the early 1970s. Finally, in 1990, the idea for a park first mentioned in 1892 came to fruition. Danehy Park is named after former Mayor Thomas W. Danehy whose paternal great-grandfather and maternal grandfather had been born in Ireland. The Danehy family had grown up in the neighborhood, on Sargent and Yerxa streets.

City dump in September 1952. Photograph by Edward F. Carney.

The 1872 Directory listed 86 adults on Dublin Street. The Irish birthplace of 50 of those is listed in the 1870 census. Of the remaining 36 residents, nearly all have Irish names, but their birthplace cannot be definitively confirmed in the census. Below are images illustrating what some of their homes look like as photographed by the author in 2023:

124 Sherman St: home of Johanna Callahan 1868-1875.
163 Sherman St: home the Nelligan family 1872-1885.
169 Sherman St: home of Patrick & Hannah Lawler and family from at least 1868-1902.
194 Sherman St: home to Murphys, Rourkes, Kelley’s, Hurleys and others from at least 1868 to around 1885.

Finally, we can’t forget that symbol of the Irish culture of the neighborhood, Paddy’s Lunch at 260 Walden Street which opened for business 86 years ago in 1934.

Image: Wicked Local

Today’s post was written by CHC volunteer, Kathleen M. Fox.


SOURCES

https://brickcollecting.com/NEB.htm

Survey of Architectural History in Cambridge: Northwest Cambridge, Cambridge Historical Commission

History Cambridge.org: https://historycambridge.org/articles/changing-tides-in-cambridge-industry/

Beth Folsom

https://www.irishcentral.com/roots/history/scituate-irish-moss-history

http://cambridgeconsidered.blogspot.com/2011/02/city-built-of-bricks.html

https://atlascope.leventhalmap.org/

Federal and Massachusetts Census forms

Cambridge Public Library newspapers on line

Cambridge Historical Commission


[i] Beth Folsom: History Cambridge.org: https://historycambridge.org/articles/changing-tides-in-cambridge-industry/

[ii] Survey of Architectural History in Cambridge: Northwest Cambridge. Cambridge Historical Commission

[iii] Survey of Architectural History in Cambridge: Northwest Cambridge. Cambridge Historical Commission

[iv] Cambridge Chronicle September 24th 1892.

Updated Collection Alert: McCarthy Family Collection

This month we finished re-processing and writing an updated finding aid for the McCarthy Family Collection. You can now read the new finding aid here! To get an overview of what is available, read on!

sportsgame-005
Lowell Police vs. Cambridge Police baseball club game at Lake View, Lowell. Aug 13, 1895. Cambridge won 12 to 8

This collection documents a longstanding and active family in Cambridge and various local organizations spanning a period of nearly 150 years. The members of the McCarthy family were longtime residents of Cambridge, Massachusetts. The first generation to live in Cambridge was Maurice McCarthy. An Irish immigrant born in County Cork, Ireland, Maurice became a U.S. citizen in 1860. A year later, in 1861 he purchased land in East Cambridge at 6 Lechmere Place.  He and his wife, Mary Hurley McCarthy, had two children, Ellen McCarthy and Jeremiah H. McCarthy.

invitation-003
Invitation to Jeremiah and Julia’s 25th anniversary celebration. 1934.

Jeremiah was born in 1857 and married Julia Theresa Lane on November 24, 1900. Julia was also an Irish immigrant, but she moved to 29 Warren Street in East Cambridge when she was just 8 months old. As a child, Julia attended the Thorndike Grammar School where she learned the Duntonian System of penmanship created by Alvin R. Dunton, an overseer of penmanship studies in Boston schools. Many of her penmanship books are available for viewing in this collection. There are also many of her personal papers, including correspondence, memorabilia, and vital records, as well as photographs.

penmanship
Julia Theresa Lane’s penmanship book. She graduated from the Thorndike Grammar School at the age of 13 in 1880.

Between 1900 and 1905 Jeremiah and Julia moved into a house at 134 Otis Street, where the McCarthy family resided until 1993.  Jeremiah, sometimes known as “Jerry,” worked for 39 years as a patrolman out of the East Cambridge police station and he retired a year before his death in 1926. Julia lived until 1963 and she was noted for being the oldest East Cambridge resident and oldest graduate of the Thorndike School.

julia-007
Julia Theresa (Lane) McCarthy, 1928. Likely in her yard at 134 Otis Street.

The couple had three sons, Gerald F., John L., and Justin H. McCarthy. They and their children were active members in the Catholic community in Cambridge. This collection has many of their papers relating to the East Cambridge Catholic Club and the Sacred Heart Church.

Justin McCarthy scrapbook page #30
Page 30 from Justin McCarthy’s photo album containing a clipping about Gerald “Jerry” becoming a Cambridge cop. Ca. 1930s

Gerald F. McCarthy was born on January 25, 1902 and sometimes referred to as “Jerry” like his father. He worked for the Cambridge Police Department, the Metropolitan Police Department, and finally for the Massachusetts State Police as a lieutenant. He also served in WWII from October 30, 1942 to May 10, 1946. Content accumulated about the Cambridge Police force offer some insight into what he and his family deemed important about that subject.

elm-004
Front page of The Elm¸ a publication of Cambridge Council, Knights of Columbus. 1933.

John Lane McCarthy was born on February 15, 1904 and attended Harvard Dental School.  He had an office in Central Square and was also employed as one of Cambridge’s school system dentists. In 1934 he married Margaret Loretta Roche in Woburn. He then served in WWII as a lieutenant in the Naval Reserve in 1939 and he began his active duty as a lieutenant commander of the Dental Corps in June 1943. He was also affiliated with the Bainbridge Naval Hospital Training Center in Maryland and the U.S.S. War Hawk that participated in the Pacific Theater. John was also a member of the Cambridge Elks Lodge, the Knights of Columbus, the Guild of St. Apollonia, and the Agnes Holy Name Society. Our collection has printed materials and other records relating to these groups and other subject matter.

photoalbum
Front cover and page 25 from Justin McCarthy’s photo album. Shown: 134 Otis Street, Justin, Jeremiah, John Lane, Gerald, and Julia McCarthy. Ca. 1920s

Justin H. McCarthy was born in 1906 and worked as a marine electrician at the Boston Navy Yard as well as Western Electric. While serving for the Navy, he embarked on trips to Bermuda. There are many photographs taken during his trips to Bermuda as well as his experiences in the Navy. He retained many of his holiday cards, which provide additional information about his extended family and friends. He also compiled a photo album that we digitized for preservation purposes. It is available for viewing on our Flickr page, here:

Beyond these central family members, the collection includes nearly 300 photographs of McCarthy family members and friends (1890s-1980s), over 250 photographs of unidentified people and places, 10 tintypes, and 1 drawing.

Updated Finding Aids and New Collections Now Available

We have recently added three new collection finding aids and five old but newly updated finding aids to our website. Check out the list below, and  email us at chcarchives@cambridgema.gov to research any of these collections.

New!

Scully Family Collection

This collection relates to two generations of the Scully family, beginning with Daniel Scully, a Cambridge cooper who emigrated from Ireland in 1872. He married another Irish immigrant in Cambridge, Mary Tackney, who worked as a waitress. They had 8 children and the collection heavily focuses on two of their sons, James and George. Topics include service in WWII, the St. Mary Church of Annunciation in Cambridgeport, Irish heritage, U.S. citizenship, and Norumbega Park in Auburndale, Mass. The records in the collection were created between 1872-1970 and consist of official documents, commemorative pins, photographic materials, a newspaper, and large objects.

Noteworthy items include a water-front port pass, a cooper’s mallet, and a grappling hook that connect Daniel Scully to the Goepper Bros. Co. and the Revere Sugar Refinery, two companies with locations in Cambridge. There is also an encased tintype and photographs that display the family’s residence on Spring Street. Find out more about the collection and the background history of the family here.

Daniel Scully’s cooper’s mallet and grappling hook. Image from our Flickr album, photograph by John Dalterio.
Watson Funeral Home Collection

The Watson Funeral Home Collection consists of photographs, certificates, clippings and ephemera related to the Watson Funeral Home, a 20th century business in Cambridge that was once on Magazine Street. The funeral home was run by Charles Burnett Watson and the collection holds content about his conversion of the Greek Revival house into his business. Other items include his Old Farmer’s Almanac, newspaper clippings about the house, and matchbook advertisements. Click here to learn more about Watson’s biography and read the collection’s inventory.

Carter’s Ink Collection 

This collection contains ephemera relating to the Carter’s Ink Company that was collected by John Hinkel, a “labeled master inks” collector from Missouri. The Carter’s Ink Company was a nationally-prominent manufacturer of inks and office supplies. The bulk of this collection consists of advertisements, internal corporate documents, and external publications. The independently produced advertisements range from cardstock illustrations, postcards, bottle-shaped adverts, a calendar, and a dictionary. The corporate documents have information pertinent to general workers, including employee rules, as well as the official company newsletter.

To get a taste of what is present in this collection, some of the items have been digitized and uploaded to our Flickr. Click here to view the album.

Carter’s Inx Writing Fluid card
Carter’s Ink Advertisement Card. Image from our flickr.

Updated or Digitized Collections:

Alfred E. Vellucci Snapshot Collection: 

Vellucci was once mayor of Cambridge and this collection reflects a public relations project from 1976. Images are now digitized and available for viewing on our Flickr page here. Click here to read the original post highlighting this collection.

Rindge Technical School

We have uploaded two albums to our Flickr page concerning the school. The Rindge Technical School Collection album contains digitized images selected from Box 1 of the collection. This box holds sports photographs from 1912-1922. Click here to see players from the football, crew, hockey, track, swimming, and baseball teams. If you would like to learn more about the entire collection, click here.

The other album, Rindge Technical School Construction – 1932 includes a selection of large-print negatives that reflect the school demolition and construction project conducted in 1932-1933. The new building was designed by architect Ralph Harrington Doane and built by the George A. Fuller Company. These negatives and others have been printed and bound in “Rindge Technical School, started Feb. 2 1932, completed Jan. 12 1933” by George A. Fuller Co. The book is available for viewing in the CHC Library. Click here to view the album.

Cambridge Objects Collection – new objects and new photographs on Flickr

Additional images of objects from the Cambridge Objects Collection have been uploaded to the Flickr album. This is an artificial collection of objects relating to various aspects of Cambridge history. Click here to check them out and click here to read the finding aid!

An Ashton Valve Company pressure gauge, ca. 1923-1924
Rindge Technical School Bowl and Mug
Curtis Mellen Photograph Collection

This collection has recently been reorganized and an updated finding aid has been published here. The collection consists of photographs of the family as well as interior and exterior views of the family’s homes in Cambridge. The Mellens were a very prominent family in Cambridge, and their soap business, Curtis Davis & Co., became the American branch of Lever Brothers, the largest soap manufacturer in the world at the time. To see what is available in the collection, we uploaded select images to a Flickr album here.

Harry Havelock Hanson Collection

Recently, we created the Handsome Harry Hanson StoryMap. It tells the story of occasional Cambridge resident Harry Havelock Hanson in a walking tour format. This StoryMap allows you to follow an online map and images around Harvard Square as though you were actually there. Follow the tour to learn about the exciting exploits of Harry Havelock Hanson, as recorded in his calendar entries between 1891 and 1919. Click here to check it out!

This collection is primarily composed of the daily pocket diaries of Harry Havelock Hanson, occasional Cambridge resident and career railway man. It also contains some personal papers belonging to Hanson and his family. The finding aid for the collection is available here.