Historical Profile: Massachusetts State House
Boston, MA.- Built in 1798 the Massachusetts State House is one of the oldest
State Capitol buildings in the United States.
The original building was designed by Charles Bulfinch – an American
architect. The State House is the oldest building in the Beacon Hill section of
Boston. Charles Bulfinch also designed
the original State House in Hartford, Connecticut and the State Capitol in
Augusta, Maine.
The building has numerous works of art, monuments, memorials,
mosaic floors, stained glass work, and portraits of the past Governors of the
state of Massachusetts. The Governor of
the Commonwealth, executive level government officials, and the state
Representatives and state Senators have offices in the building.
The front lawn of the State House has statues of Anne Hutchinson,
Daniel Webster, General Joseph Hooker, Henry Cabot Lodge, Mary Dyer, John F.
Kennedy, Jr., and Horace Mann. The
second floor of the building has five ceremonial halls and function areas.
In 1895, the Brigham Addition of the State House was completed and
in 1917 the East and West Wings were added to the State House.
The Massachusetts State House in Boston. |
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