Union Boat Club Building // 1910

The three-story, masonry Union Boat Club facing Storrow Drive and the Charles River, was constructed in 1910 to replace a wood-frame boathouse the club had built in 1870. The western edge of Beacon Hill changed drastically when in 1910, the Charles River Dam regulated the water along the Charles River, removing its tidal nature. In the years before this, the Charles River Embankment was laid out as parkland along the riverfront, which in turn, made it so the original Union Boat Club site was no longer on the water’s edge. The original boathouse was moved to the Esplanade and this new clubhouse, with its high-fired brick exterior and cast stone trim, was designed in the Classical Revival style by the firm of Parker, Thomas & Rice on the original boat house site. The organization expanded its offerings, adding handball and squash to its members in the new, 1910 building. In 1928, a boxy rooftop addition was constructed adding two more squash courts which was later raised in height and covered in metal in 1996.

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