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For $10 75m, Boston home believed to be Underground Railroad stop

Megan Johnson Globe correspondent March 4, 2021 5:00 am An expansive Federal-style Beacon Hill home believed to have served as a stop on the Underground Railroad has hit the market for $10,750,000. Listed for the first time in nearly 20 years, 28 Chestnut St. holds a lot of history in its five stories. Built in 1823, the property was designed by Jesse Shaw. His uncle, Robert Gould Shaw, rose to fame as the Union commanding officer who led the first all-Black regiment in the Civil War, the 54th Massachusetts Infantry. The Shaws were a prominent abolitionist family, and Robert Gould Shaw kept his horses in stables behind the property as he assembled his regiment in 1863. (His story was told in the 1989 film

Historic $10 75M Home in Boston Was a Stop on the Underground Railroad

Historic $10.75M Home in Boston Was a Stop on the Underground Railroad Historic $10.75M Home in Boston Was a Stop on the Underground Railroad This historic home in Boston, with ties to Robert Gould Shaw, the Civil War figure portrayed in the film Glory, was a stop on the Underground Railroad. Claudine Zap, provided by FacebookTwitterEmail The property, built in 1827, was designed by the architect Jesse Shaw, a relative of Robert Gould Shaw, the commanding officer of the first all-black regiment to fight for the Union during the Civil War. It is also said to have been a stop on the Underground Railroad, the network of secret routes and safehouses used by escapees from the Southern states fleeing northward. It s believed to have an underground bunker that was used as a hiding place, accessible through the full basement.

Boston Home Atop Underground Railroad Hits The Market For $10 7M

“Beautiful and classic, exactly what Beacon Hill embodies,” is how the listing describes an impeccably preserved Federal-style home in Boston’s Beacon Hill neighborhood that’s just hit the market for $10.75 million. The 1827-constructed property at 28 Chestnut Street was built by a “housewright” (what we now call an architect) named Jesse Shaw, who was reportedly a relative of Colonel Robert Gould Shaw, the Union army officer who led the first all-Black regiment in the Civil War, the 54th Massachusetts Infantry. The Shaw family was known in Boston as a prominent abolitionist family, and one of the listing’s features makes testament to this fact: a bunker, accessed through the property’s full basement, that was a stop on the Underground Railroad.

Peeps at our Past December 12

Peeps at our Past December 12
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Stow craftsman invents a revolutionary way to play chess

Stow craftsman invents a revolutionary way to play chess Cindy Cantrell © Jesse Shaw Jesse Shaw, owner of JShaw Furniture Design in Stow, has launched the free Revolution Chess app on iOS and Android to offer chess players another way to play the game using the same 32 pieces and 64-square board. With sales figures surging during the coronavirus pandemic, it can be as competitive to track down and purchase some board games as it is to actually play them. Fortunately for chess devotees, Jamaica Plain resident Jesse Shaw has launched a free app teaching a new way to play the game using the same 32 pieces and 64-square board.

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