Description: OLD VISUALS, INDIANS, HAY TRUCK, MARKET, BLACKSMITH, HORSES, CHURCH, KIDS, HOUSE, CURRIER AND IVES
Collection: Ten O'Clock News
Date Created: 08/01/1983
Description: Carmen Fields reports on the restoration of the African Meeting House on Beacon Hill. The Meeting House is the oldest African American church in the nation and it was gutted by fire in 1973. Interview with Philip Hart (Board of Directors, African Meeting House) and Ruth Batson (Director, African Meeting House). Hart talks about the significance of the Meeting House. Batson talks about plans for music, scholarly debate, and religious services at the Meeting House. Fields notes that a series of rededication programs will begin soon. Footage of construction workers and staff at the Meeting House and photographs documenting the history of African Americans in Boston.
1:00:01: Visual: Footage of woodworkers and construction workers doing restoration work at the African Meeting House on Beacon Hill. Carmen Fields reports that the African Meeting House is being restored; that the African Meeting House is the oldest African American church in the nation. V: Shots of the exterior of the Meeting House; of a commemorative stone reading, "A gift to Cato Gardner. First promoter of this building, 1806." Footage of Fields interviewing Philip Hart (Board of Directors, African Meeting House). Hart says that Frederick Douglass (abolitionist) spoke at the Meeting House; that the Meeting House was important to the Underground Railroad. Hart talks about the history of the Meeting House. Hart says that the Meeting House hosted notable figures and the average citizens. Shots black and white images of Douglass and William Lloyd Garrison (abolitionist). Fields reports that the Meeting House was gutted by fire in 1973; that a series of rededication programs begin on Sunday. V: Shots of the interior of the Meeting House with scaffolding; of white and African American workers involved in the rededication programs. Shots of Ruth Batson (Director, African Meeting House); of a black and white image of the Meeting House; of a 19th century photograph of a group of African Americans. Footage of Batson saying that she would like to have music, scholarly debate, and special religious services in the Meeting House. Batson says that the building will serve multiple purposes; that she hopes it will unite the people of Boston. Shots of photographs by Hamilton Smith, documenting the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth century African American community. Fields notes that photographs by Hamilton Smith will be part of a permanent exhibit at the Meeting House. Field adds that the nineteenth-century African American community was centered on the north slope of Beacon Hill. V: Shot of a black and white photo of three African American women; of a black and white image of the Meeting House. Footage of Batson saying that the African American community began on Beacon Hill; that the African American community must celebrate their heritage. Footage of Hart saying that the building is a reminder of the role of the African American community in the history of Boston. Shots of black and white images of African Americans in the nineteenth century. Shot of the exterior of the Meeting House. Footage of Batson saying that she can hear the voices of past generations when she stands in the building.
Collection: Ten O'Clock News
Date Created: 10/09/1987
Description: Anti-Semitic graffiti is scrawled on windows of Marblehead synagogue. Comments from rabbi and congregants. Swastikas.
Collection: Ten O'Clock News
Date Created: 07/27/1989
Description: Ray Flynn, Michael Dukakis, Cardinal Bernard Law, other clergy and politicians address Eliot Church audience on rampant violence in Boston. They pledge to improve crime situation. Ambulance, guns, night scene with police.
Collection: Ten O'Clock News
Date Created: 04/11/1990
Description: Story on church and clergy involvement in the Vietnam War protest movement. Report on a panel discussion held at Arlington Street Church, which supports the role the church and clergy have been taking. Interviews with three panelists: Rudolph Tuck, President of Unitarian Fellowship Conference; Truman Nelson, novelist; and Johnny Frazer, graduate student at Crane Theological Seminary at Tufts and member of the Unitarian Black Caucus Steering Committee.
Collection: WHDH
Date Created: 01/22/1968
Description: People flood into Ash Wednesday Mass at Arch Street Chapel downtown. Priests apply ash to foreheads and explain ritual of purification in advance of Lent.
Collection: Ten O'Clock News
Date Created: 02/08/1989
Description: Boston College students rally in very light snow for student rights and fair tuition. Rep. Tom Gallagher speaks. Crowd claps, cheers, whistles. Gary Hart for President signs. Ornate tower of St. Ignatius Church.
Collection: Ten O'Clock News
Date Created: 02/09/1984
Description: ARCHBISHOP BERNARD LAW BEING INSTALLED AND OFFICIATING MASS AT BOSTON CATHEDRAL (of the Holy Cross?)
Collection: Ten O'Clock News
Date Created: 03/23/1984
Description: INSTALLATION OF ARCHBISHOP BERNARD LAW AT CATHEDRAL OF THE HOLY CROSS. CHOIR BOYS, MASS, CLERGY, STAINED GLASS. RAY FLYNN, MICHAEL DUKAKIS AND EDWARD KENNEDY IN PEWS.
Collection: Ten O'Clock News
Date Created: 03/23/1984
Description: TRACT HOUSING IN BURLINGTON, PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
Collection: Ten O'Clock News
Date Created: 08/29/1985