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See the sights of Boston: Take the El

Visit the Aquarium and the Franklin Park Zoo

Two of the many sights you can get to on the El.

Before the MBTA, before even Charlie got stuck on the MTA, there was the Boston Elevated Railway Co., the El, a private company formed out of streetcar, bus and, yes, underground subways in the Boston area.

The Boston Public Library has a collection of some of their advertising posters, which both advertised the places you could go on the El and the zippy modern trains and buses it ran.

One of the sites was the South Boston Aquarium, one of a series of Boston aquariums that started with the Boston Aquarial Gardens on Bromfield Street (which PT Barnum bought and then closed) and ended with today's New England Aquarium on Boston Harbor. Thanks to a bequest from George Parkman, the city built an aquarium in Marine Park, near the Farragut statue, in 1912, according to Jerry Ryan's the Forgotten Aquariums of Boston. Its funding kept getting cut during the Depression and World War II and Mayor Hynes ordered it closed in 1954. Today, the site is home to the Murphy skating rink.

The Franklin Park poster highlights the bear dens at the Franklin Park Zoo, which were one of the zoo's first exhibits when it opened in 1912, but which were closed in the late 1950s, a couple years before the entire zoo was shut. The zoo was later re-opened, and today the city is looking at preserving what's left of the bear dens, not for bears, though, but as part of Franklin Park.

As in the past: Take a more modern trolley on the El

The El itself disappeared as a company in 1947, when the state took it over and renamed it the Metropolitan Transit Authority - which itself was later reborn as the MBTA. Today, you can still see some glimmers of its past by looking down for B.E.Ry manhole covers (there's a string of them from the old B.E.Ry substation in Roslindale Square up Washington Street towards Forest Hills).

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Comments

Very cool.

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Voting closed 54

It's time for some UHub Merch!

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I don't want to see a depressed polar bear in a concrete jail cell, thank you . I'd rather the people who keep him there in a concrete jail cell together with other criminals

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Where it says the bear dens were closed in the 1950s - and that the Boston Elevated went out of business in 1947?

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Yes. But this restated image is distasteful.

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I've spotted them on South Street and Washington St. north of Forest Hills, as well.

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Where the dividing line was between the circuits run out of the Roslindale substation and the Egleston Square one.

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I love that old style signage. In those days even things like coffee cans and plywood packing crates had detailed and beautiful art on the labels.

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I never knew these existed. They remind me of the classic posters for the London Underground during the 1930s.

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in his poem For the Union Dead, which is also about the Shaw Memorial, and the digging up of Boston Common for an underground parking garage.

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…. when I was a child.

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Didn't a part of the ancient el go into Everett? I have yet to visit the casino because it's in Everett.

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It did not go very far into Everett, ending somewhere near where the casino entrance is now.

If you want to visit Encore, there are MBTA buses from Sullivan Square, and it's not that long a walk either. Encore also runs its own free buses and small ferry boats from various places.

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Love the waterfront shuttles. My advice is go on the weekends in the fall and even in the winter. They run year round unless the weather is really horrid and it's quite a pleasant trip on a random January Saturday afternoon.

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great to live in a day in which you can take a USB drive to a shop and have them printed out on as posters on paper or vinyl.

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Some of my earliest memories were of the elephants a Franklin Park. What they don't show on the poster is the huge iron shackle attached to one ankle with a short chain to a long stake embedded in the ground to keep them from rushing the fence. I think I remember a polar bear too but it was swimming in the pond in front of the cages not locked inside.

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