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iBoston.org is your site for Boston history and architecture. In addition, you can find
information on Boston's public places, art, historic people and events. iBoston also
has a research area where you can learn how Boston grew physically as well as in
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This Day in Boston History

July 12th, 1895

Techno-Visionary Poet

On this day, Buckminster Fuller was born in Milton, Massachusetts. He was the great nephew of Cambridge-born transcendentalist writer and civil rights advocate Margaret Fuller.

He attended Harvard, but was expelled for lack on interest. He worked in a number of trade and factory jobs, experimenting and inventing technical mechanisms. By age 22, he was married, penniless, and on the verge of suicide. Then he had a vision, to give his abilities to humanity; he spent the remainder of his life working to solving the world's problems.

He created economic plans for developing countries, invented the geodesic dome and thousands of low cost homes based on it. He was one of the first to propose computerizing the US stock market. Fuller held 25 patents, received 47 honorary doctorates and the highest awards in the field of architecture. He circled the globe 57 times on speaking tours. In 1962 he accepted a professorship of poetry at the same Harvard which had expelled him as a young man.


 


England's Prime Minister never expected this tea tax to cause an outcry, let alone revolution. In 1767, England reduced its property taxes at home. To balance the national budget they needed to find a mechanism for the American colonies to pay for the expense of stationing officials in them. The officials would generate their own revenue by collecting taxes on all imported goods, and once paid affixing stamps on them. This Stamp Tax generated more in the way of protests and smuggling than added revenue.

Religion. Politics. Rebellion. Boston’s pedigree was forged back in England in the midst of religious dissension, where Puritans and Pilgrims sought religious reform, and Cavaliers and Roundheads vied for political power. The question isn't where did Boston get its name – but how.


Requiem for a Short Visit

Visiting Boston, but only have a short time?
Check out our
Itinerary for a Short Visit.


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