
Object Results

Photo Credit: photo: T. Rodriguez
Bookmark (persistent url): https://dac-collection.wesleyan.edu/objects-1/info/6632
St. Botolph’s, Boston
1924-192520th century
Frederick Landseer Maur Griggs, British (English), (1876–1938)
Object Type:
print
Medium and Support:
Etching
Bibliography:
Alexander 32; reproduced in Print Collector’s Quarterly, vol. 20 (1933), p. 327.
Credit Line:
Gift of George W. Davison (BA Wesleyan 1892), 1937
Accession Number:
1937.D1.40
Keywords
Click a term to view the records with the same keyword
This object has the following keywords:
architecture*,
Boston*,
Christianity,
churches,
Massachusetts*,
New England*,
Northeastern United States*,
religions,
religious buildings
- architecture - Art or science of designing and building structures, especially habitable structures, in accordance with principles determined by aesthetic and practical or material considerations. Refers also to the structures created. [November 1994 related term added. October 1990 alternate term added.]
- Boston - TGN 7013445
- Christianity
- churches
- Massachusetts - TGN 7007517
- New England - TGN 7014203 (general region): Refers to several states settled by English colonists, including Connecticut, Maine, Massaschusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island and Vermont. The coastline has many harbors. It is on a broad continental shelf, with forested hills inland. It was inhabited by the 9th mill. BCE; the Algonquians were here when the Europeans settled in early 17th century.
- Northeastern United States - TGN 4011496 (general region): The term typically refers to New England and the northern Atlantic seaboard, including Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, Rhode Island, Pennsylvania, New York and New Jersey.
- religions
- religious buildings
DAC Downloadable Open Access Image
No open access image available
Credit Caption
Frederick Landseer Maur Griggs, British (English), (1876–1938) . St. Botolph’s, Boston, 1924-1925. Etching. : mm (in.). DAC accession number 1937.D1.40. Gift of George W. Davison (BA Wesleyan 1892), 1937. (photo: T. Rodriguez) .