1934
Ephemera-Advertising-Transportation-Folder 2
GUSN-380839
Printed, folded, 13 x 20 leaflet announcing the sale of the assets of the Nantasket Beach Steamboat Company by the Samuel T. Freeman & Co. Auctioneers. The leaflet notes the sale included steamships, wharves, land, cottages, furnishings, equipment, and supplies. The leaflet outlines sale items, including black-and-white photographs of steamships, and the names and addresses of trustees, attorneys, and the auction company.
advertising
fliers (printed matter)
auction catalogs
black-and-white photography
leaflets (printed works)
1 folded leaflet ; 13 x 20.5 inches
EP001
Ephemera collection
EP001.01.117.01.02.034
Printed leaflet announcing the sale of the assets of the Nantasket Beach Steamboat Company by the Samuel T. Freeman & Co. Auctioneers. The leaflet notes the sale included steamships, wharves, land, cottages, furnishings, equipment, and supplies. The leaflet outlines sale items and the names and addresses of trustees and the auction company.
Gift
April 4, 1934
Nantasket Beach (Plymouth County, Massachusetts)
Boston (Suffolk county, Massachusetts)
Hull (Plymouth County, Massachusetts)
auction catalogs
black-and-white photography
leaflets (printed works)
Ferries
Steamship
Travel
Tourism
Court
The leaflet has tears and some losses on the first page and some pencil marks. There is wear on the folds and care should be taken when handling.
Item
Ephemera-Advertising-Transportation-Folder 2
Day trips between Boston and the far famed Nantasket Beach and historic Plymouth, Nantasket Beach Steamboat Company, Rowe's Wharf, 340 Atlantic Avenue, junction of Broad and High Streets, office, 7 Rowe's Wharf, Boston, Mass.
Nantasket Beach and Plymouth, Nantasket Beach Steamboat Co., Boston, Mass., 1916
Photographs of steamships and docks from the Nantasket Beach Steamboat Co., undated
Beginning in the early 20th century, Hull Massachusetts became famous for Nantasket Beach and Paragon Park, which attracted summer vacationers from all over Greater Boston. The Nantasket Beach Steamboat Company grew a successful business by bringing passengers from Boston and Hingham via ferry across Boston Harbor.
The steamers of the Nantasket Beach Steamboat Company provided quick and easy transportation between Boston Harbor and Hull. The company also had routes to the Massachusetts South Shore and Plymouth.
On Thanksgiving Day in 1929, six of the company's steamers were docked for the winter at Nantasket's Steamboat Wharf when a large fire broke out and destroyed 5 of the steamers -- the Nantasket, Mary Chilton, Old Colony, Rose Standish and Betty Alden. Only the Mayflower was pulled to safety and survived the fire.
The company eventually went out of business and the steamship routes were taken over by other operators. The assets of the company were sold in bankruptcy proceedings in April, 1934.
Today, in 2025, the MBTA runs year-round ferry service to Hull as part of the Hingham-Hull-Logan commuter route.
Clancy, Dave. (2001). Hunting New England Shipwrecks, Mayflower. Wreckhunter.net
Norman B. Leventhal Map and Education Center at Boston Public Library. (2025, July 25). Historic Currents: Charting the Evolution of Bostons Ferry Routes. leventhalmap.org/articles/highlights-from-the-vault--historic-currents-charting-the-evolution-of-bostons-ferry-routes/
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