Hey, there! Log in / Register

How Lagrange Street in Chinatown got its name

Aline Kaplan explains its link to the Marquis de Lafayette and takes a look at its later descent into a key part of the Combat Zone.

Neighborhoods: 
Topics: 
Free tagging: 


Ad:


Like the job UHub is doing? Consider a contribution. Thanks!

Comments

Shouldn't it be "A-how-how-how-how LaGrange Street got its name"?

up
Voting closed 0

A Lagrange point is a location in space where the combined gravitational forces of two large bodies, such as Earth and the sun or Earth and the moon, equal the centrifugal force felt by a much smaller third body. The interaction of the forces creates a point of equilibrium where a spacecraft may be "parked" to make observations.

These points are named after Joseph-Louis Lagrange, an 18th-century mathematician who wrote about them in a 1772 paper concerning what he called the "three-body problem."

up
Voting closed 0

And is it the same as how you pronounce it in West Roxbury? (I've never actually heard anyone say the name of either street out loud.)

up
Voting closed 0

Lah-GRAYNJ.

Suldog
http://jimsuldog.blogspot.com

up
Voting closed 0

in (boston) english you would say "la grange" with emphasis on the second syllable, soft second g, silent e, and pronounce the second "a" like you would in the word "and" ...in french it would be similar except you would pronounce the "r" more like a "w" and the second "a" like you would say "aw" as in "aw shucks"

up
Voting closed 0

I was born in and have lived in Boston for over 50 years ago and never did I hear "La Grange" pronounced with an "a" like "and", as in "grand". It is pronounced with a long "a" sound like range, as in "home on the range". Or like the color gray. La Gray-nge

up
Voting closed 0

But with a La instead of The.

As in "let's go to the dance over at the Grange Hall".

up
Voting closed 0

Interesting but highly condensed history of the Combat Zone. Counter-intuitively enough, the Combat Zone also had a certain facade of "respectability" about it. Circa 1976 Mayor Kevin White even had a ribbon cutting ceremony declaring it "Boston's official red light district". The 70s were like that, for better or for worse.

up
Voting closed 0

Good read. The only thing I would take issue with is that it says the Combat Zone was killed by the internet. It is much more complicated than that. Its demise started much earlier and the technology of that day was the VCR. Also a lot of credit should be given to the community

up
Voting closed 0

I am struggling to understand how the chateau could at the same time be "untouched since the death of la Fayette" and also contain walled off rooms with documents as recent as 1990

up
Voting closed 0

The murder of Harvard football player Andy Puopolo was the event that really galvanized City Hall into closing the Zone.

up
Voting closed 0