Women's City Club of Boston explained

Women's City Club of Boston
Formation:1913
Dissolved:1992
Headquarters:39 & 40 Beacon Street[1]
Location:Boston, Massachusetts
Membership:5000 (maximum)

The Women's City Club of Boston was a social and civic organization founded in 1913 and known for relief efforts following urban fires and other disasters.[2]

The Club supported charitable causes, mutual aid efforts, and public education.[2] When the USA entered World War I, the Women's City Club of Boston requested permission and turned part of Boston Common into gardens to produce food.[3] From 1914 until 1992, the Club was located in the pair of townhouses known as the Appleton-Parker House. The Club promoted charities, maintained a library, and sponsored lectures and other educational activities. During the 1960s, membership began to decline. In 1991 the Club filed for bankruptcy. In 1992 the headquarters building was sold, and the two townhouses are now subdivided into privately owned condominiums.[2]

This building is currently a pending Boston Landmark by the Boston Landmarks Commission.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Women's City Club, 39-40 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass., unidentified room, mid-1960s. Historic New England.
  2. Web site: Appleton-Parker House and Women's City Club of Boston 1913–1992. 19 March 2018. theclio.com.
  3. Book: Gdula, Steven. The warmest room in the house: How the kitchen became the heart of the twentieth-century American home. Bloomsbury Publishing USA. 2008. 28. 9781596917873 .