A Park Grows in Dorchester, Again
This is the first of a continuing series of Profiles that paint a picture of who we are and the public lands and resources we have cared for every day and have for generations.
A Park Grows in Dorchester, Again
By Patricia Bergeron
At the intersection of Adams and Bowdoin streets in Dorchester’s Meetinghouse Hill neighborhood is a small kidney-shaped area of unkempt grass, a few trees, and a disconnected three-tier fountain dwarfed by the large basin in which it sits. The basin is the sole remnant of the Lyman Fountain, once a Victorian tourist attraction, later damaged and replaced by the smaller fountain, which was ultimately disconnected in the early 1970’s for lack of funding and, to be frank, lack of interest to keep it operating. Welcome to Coppens Square Park.
Like many neglected urban parks, Coppens Square is not much to look at. But the story of the park and its stakeholders is one of persistence. It is a story about the...