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     BOSTON, MA - Friday,
    August 20, 2021- Today, Mayor Janey and the Boston Landmarks Commission
    celebrate the designation of Roxbury’s Shirley-Eustis Place, 33 and 42-44
    Shirley Street and 24 Rockford Street as a Boston Landmark, under the
    provisions of Chapter 772 of the Acts of 1975, as amended. This designation follows a
    unanimous vote of approval by the Boston City Council.  
    With its
    well-known historical significance comes a hidden history that is often
    untold, unrecorded, and unrecognized. Ongoing research suggests that when
    Governor Shirley and Governor Eustis’ owned the property, the house and
    lands were maintained by enslaved persons of African descent. It further
    suggests that enslaved people may have occupied portions of 42–44 Shirley
    Street, which was then an outbuilding, likely a barn.  
    The Shirley-Eustis
    House, located on 33 Shirley Street in Roxbury, was built between 1746 and
    1749 as a summer estate for Massachusetts Colony Governor William Shirley
    (1694–1771). The house has further historical significance as the home of
    Massachusetts Governor William Eustis (1753–1825). It is one of the last
    remaining colonial governor’s mansions in the original Thirteen Colonies
    and was recognized as one of the nation’s first National Historic Landmarks
    in the 1960s.  
    Mayor Janey’s
    support for the designation of the Shirley-Eustis grounds as a historic
    landmark in Roxbury expands the City’s history that is often centered in
    Downtown Boston. The milestone comes
    after more than a year of combatting the COVID-19 pandemic, and a national
    reckoning with acts of violence against Black and other communities of
    color. 
    “As we face modern-day
    racial inequities, it is essential to acknowledge our past by encouraging
    opportunities for collective processing of grief and investing in
    healing,'' said Mayor Kim Janey. “I am grateful to all of our partners who
    helped us unearth this hidden history and for the Roxbury community who
    passed these stories down through generations.”  
    Mayor Janey grew
    up in Roxbury which is a hub, both past and present, for African Americans’
    grassroots activism and community organizing for housing, educational, and
    economic equity. It is home to organizations like the Freedom House,
    founded by Otto and Muriel Snowden; and the Organization for Afro-American
    Unity founded by Malcolm X, all engaged in the fight for justice, equality,
    and power. The location of the Shirley-Eustis House grounds in Roxbury
    brings even more significance to the importance of honoring its history. 
    “For generations,
    the history of Shirley-Eustis Place has been celebrated in Boston and
    nationally,” said Reverend Mariama White-Hammond, Chief of Environment,
    Energy and Open Space for the City of Boston. “Today and every day moving
    forward, we must lift up the unheralded layers of our city’s history and
    memorialize the enslaved people who are believed to have built and
    maintained these grounds. I am grateful for Mayor Janey’s support and for
    the Boston Landmarks Commission and the City Council’s unanimous vote to
    bring light to this hidden history.”   | 
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