shop in the North End
Arts The North End Music and Performing Arts Center (NEMPAC) and the
Improv Asylum Theater are located on Hanover Street. All Saints Way, a private art project located on Battery Street, is occasionally open to the public. It consists of framed portraits of Roman Catholic saints hung on a brick wall, some of which are visible from the street.
Cuisine At the end of the 19th century the North End was filled with small restaurants that served inexpensive meals. In 1909, there were 12 active Italian restaurants, and by the 1930s a few of these restaurants were renowned. Today, the North End's streets are lined with cafes, small grocery stores, and Italian restaurants. These restaurants are a popular destination for both locals and tourists. Sicilian immigrants also started food companies specializing in their native cuisine, which after successful expansion moved out of the neighborhood. The Pastene company began as a family pushcart in the North End in 1848. The North End is also home to the
North Bennet Street School, a trade and craftmanship school that was founded in 1885.
Public art The North End is home to six of Boston's publicly accessible artworks. The Boston Art Commission has care and custody of all public art located on city property. • North End Library Mosaics (2009) - located at 25 Parmenter Street. • Paul Revere sculpture (1940) - located at the Paul Revere Mall, between Hanover Street and Salem Street. • Merchant Marine Memorial - located near the Andrew P. Puopolo Junior Athletic Field, on Commercial Street. • Benjamin Franklin Tablet (1946) - located on the corner of
Union Street and Hanover Street. • Christopher Columbus sculpture (1979) - located in the Christopher Columbus Waterfront Park, near Atlantic Avenue. • Massachusetts Beirut Memorial (1992) - located in the Christopher Columbus Waterfront Park.
Summer festivals Every summer, the remaining Italian residents of the North End hold festivals (feasts) to honor the patron saints of different regions in Italy from where their families immigrated. Statues of these saints are paraded down the streets of the neighborhood while well-wishers attach dollar bills to the statues as a donation and show of support. The feasts also include marching bands, food and other vendors, and live music.
Architecture The North End has a mixture of architecture from all periods of American history, including early structures such as the
Old North Church (1723), the
Paul Revere House (1680), the
Pierce-Hichborn House (1711), and the Clough House (1712). However, the bulk of the architecture seen in the area today dates from the late 19th to early 20th centuries, when
tenement architecture replaced mansions and other buildings to accommodate the influx of immigrants. By the time of the
Great Depression, the North End's reputation as a city slum resulted in
lending discrimination; the area's residents could not obtain mortgages for construction or rehabilitation. Instead, residents, many of whom were carpenters, electricians, plumbers, and masons, lent their labor to each other and succeeded at rehabilitating the North End's buildings at low cost. Starting in the mid-1970s, the abandoned industrial area along the North End's waterfront was rebuilt and converted into a luxury housing and business district. After the 1970s and continuing to present day, developers converted tenements into larger apartments and condominiums. New development is regulated in this historic district under city zoning regulations.
Historic sites North End has
twelve sites on the
National Register of Historic Places. File:Copp's Hill Burying Ground.jpg|
Copp's Hill Burying Ground File:Copp's Hill Terrace.jpg|
Copp's Hill Terrace File:Commercial St Boston.jpg|
Fulton-Commercial Streets District File:Ozias Goodwin House Boston MA.jpg|
Ozias Goodwin House File:Mariner's House Boston MA.jpg|
Mariners House File:Boston MA North Terminal Garage.jpg|
North Terminal Garage File:OldNorthChurchSteeple.JPG|
Old North Church File:Pierce-Hichborn House, Boston, Massachusetts (front view).jpg|
Pierce-Hichborn House File:Paul Revere House Boston MA.jpg|
Paul Revere House File:St Stephen's Boston.jpg|
St. Stephen's Church File:Union Wharf Boston MA.jpg|
Union Wharf File:Vermont Building Boston MA.jpg|
Vermont Building Other notable sites include: •
Copp's Hill •
Equestrian statue of Paul Revere •
Freedom Trail •
Hanover Street •
Langone Park •
North End Parks •
North Street •
North Square •
Skinny House ==Government services==