January 1, 1897 |
January 6, 1976 - Fire at St. Paul’s Church
January 5, 2002 - Helicopter accident at Parsons Field
January 1, 1897 Opening of the Brookline Public Bath House The Brookline Public Bath House on Tappan Street (seen above) was described as “the first municipal, all-the-year-round bathing establishment in the United States.” (American Journal of Sociology, January 1900). Designed by architect F. Joseph Untersee, it featured a 24’ by 80’ pool with heated water and heated floors around the edges. Other spaces were soon added, including a hair-drying room for women. (Separate times were set for use of the pool by men and by women.)
The Public Bath building was torn down in the 1950s and replaced by a new pool building, now known as the Evelyn Kirrane Aquatics Center. A remnant of the original building, with the motto, “The Health of the People - The Beginning of Happiness” is embedded in the brick wall of the building.
Read more at Brookline Public Bath: Reports of the Building Committee and of the Committee on Care and Management (1897)
January 4, 1925 Dedication of Temple Kehillath Israel
Kehillath Israel, Brookline’s oldest Jewish congregation, first met informally in 1910 and incorporated in 1917. The congregation met in various homes of members for several years.
Plans for a the KI synagogue were announced in 1922. The cornerstone of the new building, on Harvard Street just north of Coolidge Corner, was laid in 1923.
Boston Globe sketch, June 4, 1922 |
January 6, 1976 Fire at St. Paul’s Church
Boston Herald photo by Ray Lusier, January 7, 1976 |
The Gothic Revival St. Paul’s Episcopal Church, built in 1852, is the oldest still-standing church building in Brookline. The interior of the sanctuary was devastated by a fire in 1976, leaving only the exterior walls.
The congregation, as described on the church’s website, could have given up what had been lost and move on to other churches, but decided to rebuild the interior.
January 5, 2002
Helicopter accident at Parsons Field
Two U.S. military helicopters were practicing landing at Parsons Field on Kent Street, used by Northeastern University, in preparation for the planned arrival of President George W. Bush three days later. Wind generated by the propellors of one of the Chinook helicopters knocked over a baseball dugout on the field seriously injuring four Brookline firefighters.
Headlines about helicopter accident |
Two of the firefighters retired due to fractures and other injuries suffered in the accident. Two others missed several months of work. The planned landing by the president — coming to Boston for a speech — was moved elsewhere.
Five years later, the four firefighters were awarded a total of $3 million in a settlement reached with the Federal government. The town received an additional $800,000 to cover payroll, medical fees, and other costs that resulted from the accident.
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