Liberty Tree Block // 1850
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The Liberty Tree Block is located at one of Bostons oldest and most important intersections, Boylston and Essex streets. It is said that near this site, the Liberty Tree stood, and where in 1765,Patriotsin Boston staged the first act of defiance against the British government under its branches, The Stamp Act protests. The tree became a rallying point for the growing resistance to the rule of Britain over theAmerican colonies. The Liberty Tree was cut down by British Loyalists in 1775, but the trees symbolism lives on in the building constructed on the site 75 years later. Nineteenth-century real estate developer David Sears had this commercial block built in 1850, which housed stores at the street with ballrooms on the upper floors. The Liberty Tree Block is best-known and named so due to the wooden relief plaque of the Liberty Tree on the Washington Street elevation. The motif stands 8 high and 5 wide and was carved by ship carvers. The bas relief is inscribed with Liberty1765 across the top, Law and Order at its roots, and at the bottom, Sons of Liberty, 1765. Independence of their Country, 1776. The building (and its carving) are protected Landmarks in Boston.
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