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Neptune Road

Neptune Road
Neptune Road from Lovell Street, February 2016.JPG
The remaining stub of Neptune Road viewed from Lowell Street in February 2016
Location East Boston, Massachusetts
Postal code 02128
Coordinates 42°22′43″N 71°0′24″W / 42.37861°N 71.00667°W / 42.37861; -71.00667

Neptune Road is located in the East Boston neighborhood of Boston, Massachusetts. The road is fragmented, bisected by the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority's Blue Line which surfaces from the subway southwest of the road. Much of the portion southeast of the train tracks is encompassed within Logan International Airport.

Neptune Road once was a residential street that also served as the entrance to Frederick Law Olmsted's Wood Island Park, a 47-acre waterfront park designed by Olmsted in the 19th Century. An elegant tree-lined road with center islands, The Boston Globe referred to the street as a “miniature Commonwealth Avenue”.

The expansion of Logan Airport in the late 1960s and early 1970s displaced families along Neptune Road, which is now used for warehouses and rental car property. As the airport expanded, planes flew in low over the residential blocks and conflicts with airport officials escalated. Wood Island Park was leveled early one morning in 1967. On April 23, 1969, 35 workmen with 35 chain saws toppled 35 elms along the road. The Massachusetts Port Authority, under the reign of then-director and later Governor of Massachusetts Edward J. King, seized by eminent domain some 720 feet of the street, and evicted families with the help of US Marshalls.

The airport has since implemented four "airport edge buffers," which include parks and greenery. Some of Boston’s last surviving elm trees are still located on Neptune Road, resisting the Dutch elm disease that have felled most of the Boston-area elms in the 20th Century.

An American Airlines DC-10 comes in for landing at Logan International Airport over Neptune Road in East Boston in May, 1973.


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