Ron Newman ([personal profile] ron_newman) wrote in [community profile] davis_square2012-10-02 11:59 pm

Old stone Somerville boundary posts

A century or more ago, Somerville and Medford installed stone pillars at various locations to mark the boundary between the two cities. While planning the Somerville Bicycle Committee's upcoming Edge of the City Tour on October 13, I looked around for these markers -- both on the Web and on foot around the Tufts University campus.

So far, I've found seven of them, which I've plotted on a Google map. The map includes links to a photo of each marker -- one by Georgy Cohen ([livejournal.com profile] georgy), two by David Maze ([livejournal.com profile] dzm), one by Elizabeth Bolton, and three by me. Typically, the markers have S etched on one side, M on another side, and the marker number on a third side (or sometimes the same side as S or M). ETA 10/5/12: Thanks to your comments here, the map now has 10 markers, with more coming soon.

If you've seen one that isn't on my map, please comment here so that I can add it! I'd especially like to know if any markers remain for the Somerville-Cambridge or Somerville-Boston (Charlestown) borders.

Here's my photo of one on the west side of Packard Avenue, next to the Tufts tennis courts. (Click on the photo to see a larger version.)

[identity profile] josephineave.livejournal.com 2012-10-04 01:33 am (UTC)(link)
The "split by the border" problem is pretty common. I looked at a house on Beacon with the driveway in Cambridge. I think the Globe did an article about these places with a special emphasis on school districts. Where the kids actually slept determined what school they could go to.

There are also some houses on Boston Ave in Medford that have Somerville mailing addresses, but they are 100% in Medford. And they have 781 area codes as well.

[identity profile] josephineave.livejournal.com 2012-10-04 10:11 am (UTC)(link)
I have a good memory, but I don't think the article was 14 years ago. I'm thinking in the last 3 to 4 years.