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Old Corner Bookstore

Old Corner Bookstore
OldCornerBookstore08.JPG
The Old Corner Bookstore in 2008, then occupied by Ultra Diamonds.
Old Corner Bookstore is located in Boston
Old Corner Bookstore
Old Corner Bookstore is located in Massachusetts
Old Corner Bookstore
Old Corner Bookstore is located in the US
Old Corner Bookstore
Location Boston, Massachusetts
Coordinates 42°21′27″N 71°3′32″W / 42.35750°N 71.05889°W / 42.35750; -71.05889Coordinates: 42°21′27″N 71°3′32″W / 42.35750°N 71.05889°W / 42.35750; -71.05889
Built 1712
NRHP Reference # 73000322
Added to NRHP April 11, 1973

The Old Corner Bookstore is a historic commercial building in the center of Boston, Massachusetts. It is at the corner of Washington and School Streets, along the Freedom Trail of revolutionary and early American historic sites.

The site was formerly the home of Anne Hutchinson, who was expelled from Massachusetts in 1638 for heresy. Thomas Crease purchased the home in 1708, though it burned down in the Great Boston Fire on October 2, 1711. Crease constructed a new building on the site in 1712 as a residence and apothecary shop. For generations, various pharmacists used the site for the same purpose: the first floor was for commercial use and the upper floors were residential. In 1817, Dr. Samuel Clarke, father of future minister James Freeman Clarke, bought the building.

The building's first use as a bookstore dates to 1828, when Timothy Harrington Carter leased the space from a man named George Brimmer. Carter spent $7,000 renovating the building's commercial space, including the addition of projecting, small-paned windows on the ground floor.

From 1832 to 1865, it was home to Ticknor and Fields, a publishing company founded by William Ticknor, later renamed when he partnered with James Thomas Fields. For part of the 19th century, the firm was one of the most important publishing companies in the United States, and the Old Corner Bookstore became a meeting-place for such authors as Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Charles Dickens, and Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr. Ticknor and Fields rented out the whole building, using only the corner for a retail space. Other section of the building, particularly upstairs rooms and storefronts facing School Street, were in turn sublet to other businesses. After the death of Ticknor, Fields wanted to focus on publishing rather than the retail store. On November 12, 1864, he sold the Old Corner Bookstore to E. P. Dutton; Ticknor and Fields moved to Tremont Street. A succession of other publishing houses and booksellers followed Ticknor and Fields in the building.


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