Boston Firsts is about everything (well, almost!) that happened first in Boston and changed life from the first lighthouse and public library to the first madam and ready-made suit. Boston-based journalist and essayist Lynda Morgenroth has written forty original essays on the city's long history of innovation, from the colonial era to the present. These lively takes on Boston's innovative history range from the first use of ether in publicly performed surgery to the first school desegregation court case to the one—and only—automatic bargain basement.
Consider Ice cut from Boston ponds and shipped to hot climates became a worldwide industry. A controversial kidney transplant between twin brothers marked the start of organ transplantation. The glorious Massachusetts 54th Regiment was the first black army regiment in U.S. history. First newspaper, novel, subway, telephone, gay marriage—the beat goes on!
Ranging from advances in science and engineering—the smallpox inoculation and the Boston Harbor cleanup—to innovations in culture and society—Fannie Farmer's cookbook and the YMCA—the collection investigates, celebrates, and integrates America's workshop of ideas.
Very useful book if you are spending time in Boston. Did you know that Jamaica Pond (http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid...) was used as a source of pure ice water for an international ice trade as far away as India? Did you know that closed captioning was invented in Boston? Gillette razor blades? The significance of the Dudley Street Neighbourhood Initiative? I was fascinated by these things and much more.
This is a fun history of Boston through a series of things they did first (although sometimes "first" kind of. stretching it). It's a fun book with stories like the first person to sell ice to other locations, even shipping to India, and the first American dog breed, the Boston Terrier. Then there are stories about the history that you know about and the things you probably don't, like how Boston desegregated their schools in the 1850s! The courier case at that time in Boston was later was as precedent in Brown v. the Board of Education. If you're traveling to Boston this is a fun read to learn more about the city.