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Readville's pretty far south, but it's not that far south, is it?
By adamg on Fri, 04/22/2016 - 1:29pm
Head south towards the Sprague Street bridge and, at West Milton Street, just before the bridge, there's this mile marker that seems to indicate it's less than 20 miles (or 38 km) to Providence. But that can't be right, can it? And how many old granite mile markers give the distance in kilometers first (or at all)?
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That's a new marker
I saw that a few months ago while driving around. There's no way that was there before the intersection was rebuilt.
EDIT- dperry gave us a great history. I will double down and say that 2008 is still "new," especially considering how old it actually is.
Ha.
Update: And I stand corrected. How exciting to find out that it is indeed old.
This is a curious thing. This is actually a "new" marker designed to look like mileage markers of yore. I think it says "32" Km which is, as you correctly state, almost 20 miles. Now, from my house to Providence, RI is about 37 miles as the crow flies (which is about 1/4 mile from the marker) so I stand in puzzlement with you.
This thread talks about a
This thread talks about a similar marker:
http://www.railroad.net/forums/viewtopic.php?f=65&t=161029
Yay! Somebody read my post
Yay! Somebody read my post and remembered it!
And now, for the rest of the story...
I can't speak specifically to this marker or where it is, but there are a bunch of them around.
The posts date to the 1830's, and were placed during the original construction of the Boston and Providence Railroad.
Why Km and not miles? Harry Chase speculates about this in his history of the railroad:
http://doddcenter.uconn.edu/asc/findaids/Chase/uconn_asc_2003-0037_007.pdf
MIXED TRAIN TO PROVIDENCE: A HISTORY OF THE BOSTON AND PROVIDENCE RAIL ROAD, THE TAUNTON BRANCH RAIL ROAD, AND CONNECTING LINES, WITH EMPHASIS ON MANSFIELD, MASSACHUSETTS
HARRY B. CHASE, JR.
MANSFIELD, MASSACHUSETTS
2006
from page 77:
"We learn from a secondary source[38] that when Captain William Gibbs McNeill built the railroad he set the kilometer-posts along the way. If we assume, despite some circumstantial evidence to the contrary, that this was so, we must ask “Why?” It‟s possible that through his West Point education or his visit abroad, McNeill became quite properly enamored of the un-American but more practical kilometers instead of miles. The metric system was not entirely foreign to the United States. The U. S. Coast Survey in the early 1800s used meters and kilograms, and Presidents Jefferson and John Quincy Adams favored adoption of the system. It was unquestionably the way to go, and it's a pity succeeding generations didn't follow the lead of whoever introduced kilometer posts on the Boston and Providence. The story is that pressure
brought to bear by the conservative public or the railroad‟s board of directors unfortunately forced the newfangled and unacceptably foreign kilometer markers to be uprooted and replaced by mileposts. But not all were uprooted!
One kilometer post still existed in 1982 in Readville on the Dedham Branch. It read:
B.
48
Km
29.82
M.
This marker and its location were first reported by Jim Zwicker.[39] It appears to be in the wrong place: the mileage from Boston ("B") suggests that it was moved from the main line somewhere just north of Attleborough, perhaps by a history-conscious employe who recognized it as an artifact worth saving, maybe after it had been uprooted by a track gang."
oh, wow...thank you!
I always wondered if it as truly an old marker. Now I will look upon it, as I run by, with a lot more reverence. :)
I wonder if the reverse side
I wonder if the reverse side has a distance to Boston we could use to triangulate where the marker originally stood? Of perhaps it came from nearby, and the distance given was to a train yard slightly north of Providence proper?
Didn't get a close look, but didn't seem to
Looked like just unchiseled granite.
town markers
Whenever I think of markers like this, I'm reminded of this Newton/Waltham border marker near us, that's right in front of someone's driveway.
https://goo.gl/maps/GpHWzHeiUUt
You can bet that the marker
You can bet that the marker was there before the driveway!
I blame Adam's "Perambulating the Bounds" posts for sparking my interest in these markers. One of my favorites:
I remember that post
I remember that post.
What are "M", "C" and "BD" here?
Milton, Boston, Dedham, and
Milton, Boston, Dedham, and Canton.
Cambridge/Somerville boundary markers
One of the Cambridge/Somerville boundary markers is in the middle of someone's driveway, on private property.
Luckily for the property owner, it's flush in the ground, surrounded by the driveway pavement.
Number 16 Chester Street, near Davis Square.
The post in question has been there since ~2008
From page 706 of the aforementioned book:
And keep reading pages 706-708 for an interesting discussion / speculation about the origin of the Km posts.
Original route to Providence was different
I haven't had time to read the Chase book yet, but the original rail route to Providence was not the one used today. From Attleboro -- at a junction still known as "Boston Switch" -- the tracks continued straight into Seekonk, and the line ended on the east side of the Seekonk River in what's now the city of East Providence RI. This is why the distance to Providence would have been significantly less than the current rail distance to Providence Union Station. (And of course the Providence station stop was also moved again about 30 years ago.)
It's The Exact Distance To Providence County (As The Crow Flies)
I was going to ask if some of
I was going to ask if some of the RI border towns didn't exist as independent names back then (or only as villages but not territories) and if that were the case - perhaps it would be viewed as being part of Providence.
Except the current route of
Except the current route of the tracks crosses the RI border in Pawtucket, so there's only a few miles difference, at most. Worse, given the supposed timing of the stone markers, is that what is now eastern Pawtucket, RI, was, until 1862, Pawtucket, MA before the state boundary shifted to give Providence County more land.
Thereis another one near Fairview St
...on the ex-Dedham Branch railroad bed, according to a post on railroad.net (http://www.railroad.net/forums/viewtopic.php?f=65&t=161029).
It asserts that "when Captain William Gibbs McNeill built the
railroad he set the kilometer-posts along the way", and notes that the post near Fairview Street has clearly been moved from its original location, which must have been near Attleboro. It's reasonable to suppose that the West Milton Street marker is another one of Captain McNeill's, also moved from its original location along the railroad.
The "Km" stands for King's miles
And since a king's mile is not an actual measurable distance, it's precisely the unit of measurement a contractor convinced the state to etch into our distance markers. Some things never change.
Another Town Divider Marker
Since you're listing all the markers showing dividing lines of towns, another exists on Cedar Street on the edge of St. Mary's Cemetery showing the Wellesley and Needham border!
My favorite town boundary marker
Is at the old Hyde Park/Boston line.
I like this Boston/Hyde Park
I like this Boston/Hyde Park marker off the trail in the Stony Brook.
It's protected now
I don't know if you've been down there ately, but they put poles on either side of your favorite marker.
Myself, I prefer the Grove Street marker on the Dedham line.