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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

December 3rd, 1842

Ellen Swallow Richards - Intellectual Pioneer


Born Ellen Henrietta Swallow in Dunstable, Massachusetts, she would be the first woman to earn a science degree in America. It would take her twenty six years to be admitted to Vassar, and two to finish. Admitted to MIT as "an experiment" she would discover Samarskite (a rare ore) and isolate the element Vanadium.

She earned an international reputation studying pollutants in water, and founded the study of ecology. Then applying scientific principles to domestic life, she began a testing laboratory which established the study of "home economics" or as she preferred to call it, "human ecology".

She accurately described two future crises, air pollution and the energy crisis. Shortly before her death she spoke at MIT's convocation and advised: The quality of life depends on the ability of society to teach its members how to live in harmony with their environment - defined first as the family, then with the community, then with the world and its resources.


 


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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