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Orange Line Time Machine: The Don Bosco signs at Tufts

Wayfinding sign pointing Orange Line riders to Don Bosco Technical High School

Signs at the Tufts Medical Center Orange Line stop still direct people to Don Bosco Technical High School, some 26 years after the school closed and got turned into a DoubleTree hotel.

Founded in East Boston by the Salesian Order of Don Bosco in 1945, the school eventually moved across the harbor to a larger building between Warrenton and Tremont streets in Chinatown.

1956 photo from the Boston City Archives:

Don Bosco in 1956

With enrollment declining, the school closed in 1998. Last year, alumni and and former teachers gathered at the DoubleTree for the unveiling of a plaque honoring the school.

In 2010, the MBTA replaced almost all all the signs in the station that read New England Medical Center after Tufts changed its hospital's name to Tufts Medical Center - and after Tufts paid $150,000 for the work. But they left the Don Bosco pointers up.

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Comments

It’s a small thing, but life is made up of small things. Not bothering to have signs reflect reality sends such a loud “we don’t give a shit” message

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I still call the amphitheater in Mansfield "Great Woods" which must reflect my personal "don't give a shit" attitude in your book.

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What somebody personally choses to call something, and signage posted by the T for the benefit and information of the general public are two completely different things. Nobody particularly cares about the first. But it is not too much to expect accuracy from the latter.

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But since you are also someone who has "anon" as their sign on a public forum for the benefit and information of the general public I'm going to have to firmly disagree with you.

If the school doesn't even exist, there or anywhere else, I don't think the sign's likely to cause anyone trouble.

It's not as if there are people looking for the school. Having the T announce "Amtrak" at Porter Sq is the sort of confusing little things that are a big problem. (I'm assuming that's fixed now.)

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well, presumably it would be, you know, helpful to guide out of town folks to a hotel that they might be staying at

The T never puts subway signage to private things like "Doubletree hotel". (Or even just "hotel".)

If they did, not only would they need to change the signs every year, there would be arguments about what businesses get the plug.

You could argue they should just put another sign with the street name.

total lack of vision here. other systems do it. why not do so, and charge the businesses for the privilege? bingo bongo win win for everyone

also, that's just completely untrue. off the top of my head there's signs at various stations pointing to fenway park, the garden, the cambridgeside galleria, and, you know, an entire station called Aquarium - to say nothing of Northeastern, BU, Harvard, MIT, etc

I still think of that building as the old Don Bosco.
Bosco was some kind of chocolate drink and assumed it was made there. I thought Don was some guy’s first name till I worked with a kid who had gone there.

If you were to ask me what it is now, I could tell you it’s a hotel but not the name.

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If you exit through the outbound side of Symphony on the E line, there is a reference to Falmouth Street, which was eliminated when the Christian Science Center (Mother Church) was built in the early 1970's. I'm estimating that other streets were eliminated, but I don't know which ones.

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It's an interesting blog contribution but, as a complaint, it's more suited for those who want to impose their OCD on the rest of us. Nothing wrong with a little nostalgia.

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Speaking of outdated and inaccurate signage, this makes me think of the ancient, large tile "Scollay Square" signs that were unearthed when Government Center was being renovated and are now left there as some sort of historic artifact for all to see. I am all for commemorating history, but subway signs are not the place for it. I have seen confused tourists get off the train at Government Center and then jump back on after seeing the Scollay sign, which then lands them at Bowdoin, where they did not want to be.

as a quest in Fallout 4: Boston

https://fallout.wiki/wiki/D.B._Technical_High_School

My husband was playing that game and had a hard time with that quest due to oblique references of monsters he couldn't identify. I was like, "Oh OK that's supposed to be the Don Bosco High School, where the hotel and the YMCA are now. There's a pool in the basement. Go to the basement and see if there's a sea monster down there."

And I'll be damned, there was a pool in the basement with an enormous sea monster boss to fight.

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And a fine Boston/T historical marker it is.

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You see similar examples all over the world, in all cities. NYC, for example, is full of them.

I attended Don Bosco. It's amusing knowing it's a Double-Tree Hotel. As a teen I would sometimes stay late in school for various reasons. When I left the doors were always still unlocked, even after dark in Fall, Winter. I'd walk down the street cut, cut through the "Combat Zone" hop on the Orange Line @ Essex (Chinatown). Yes, it was a wild time. Violent random crime was bad in the 70s, 80s.

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it's because signs should be accurate and helpful. you should see what metro systems in, say, tokyo and hong kong do in terms of signage. it keeps people moving and prevents folks from getting lost. no idea why you would be opposed to such a thing

That sign looks amazing for how old it is

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Had a Grandfather clock built by a Don Bosco student in shop class...lol

It was a great way to raise funds,

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from the Haymarket, or do you have to cross on Hanover?

Was due to the students being robbed and beaten in daily brawls at the station.