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558 Massachusetts Avenue

558 Massachusetts Avenue was built in 1858 and is one of the only intact single-family townhouses in the South End. It has been the headquarters of the League of Women for Community Service, a Black women's civic organization, since 1920.

The City Archaeology team will begin a new archaeological dig at the headquarters of the League of Women for Community Service located at 558 Massachusetts Avenue in the South End.  This will be the first archaeological dig in the neighborhood.

 

A 3-story brick townhouse with ornate decoration and a scaffolding partially obscuring half of the building
558 Massachusetts Avenue, headquarters of the League of Women for Community Service

The Landmark designated townhome was built in 1858 for William and Martha Carnes and their three children on former marsh land in the newly-filled neighborhood. The stately home was the showcase of William’s fine wood importation and furniture making business and retains nearly all of its original interior including some of the original furniture.

It has been reported that the Carneses were dedicated abolitionists and oral history suggests that the house was a stop on the Underground Railroad. In 1868, Nathaniel and Eliza Farwell bought the home. Nathaniel was the mayor of Lewiston, Maine and a cotton mill owner, and his daughter, Evelyn, married into the Ayer textile family.  They were complicit in the cotton industry and benefited greatly from enslaved and later indentured labor in southern cotton plantations.

In 1920, the League of Women for Community Service purchased the building. The League is a group of Black Bostonians who created the organization in 1918 in response to the lack of support for Black veterans returning from World War I.  The League supported Black artistic and intellectual community through concerts, lectures, and exhibits in the house.  

The South End became a growth area for Boston’s Black and immigrant communities in the early 20th century, becoming the most densely populated neighborhood by the end of the 1940s. The League helped any neighbor in need through a soup kitchen, lunch program for children, and clothing swaps.

In the 1950s and 60s, the building provided housing for Black students who could not live in local college dorms due to segregation. Coretta Scott rented a room in the building while a student at the New England Conservatory, and met Martin Luther King, Jr. while living there. The League building has remained a gathering place for Boston’s Black community and repository of cultural items for over a century.

Today, the house retains a remarkable amount of its original interior elements, and the League is in the process of fundraising for a large-scale restoration. The City Archaeology Program has teamed up with the League to explore the yard space behind the building with League members and community members in order to document what may be there before landscape work begins.

The dig aims to find out more about the lives and activities of the two families who lived at the home and the early League history. The archaeologists will also be looking for any evidence in support of potential Underground Railroad history.

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