1875
- A study is launched to research Boston’s pollution and water contamination problems believed to be causing the city’s high death rates.
1875
- Boston Mayor Henry L. Pierce appoints a commission of experts to engineer a plan for Boston’s sewage. One of these experts was Ellis S. Chesbrough, Boston’s first city engineer (1851-1855) who later went on to gain prestige as the engineer behind Chicago’s industrious sewage system.
1877
- Construction of Boston Main Drainage System begins.
1879
- Overseen by architect, George Albert Clough, landfilling and construction for pumping station begins on Calf Pasture peninsula.
- Docks constructed for coal ships to off load at the end of the original Calf Pasture. The dock was dredged, stone seawalls constructed, wharf built in front of one seawall; long pier built out to protect and support sewer running out from pumping station.
- Tornado causes $1,000 worth of damage to construction site (1)
1883
- Calf Pasture Pumping Station completed
1884
- Station officially begins pumping on New Year’s Day
1889
- Metropolitan Sewerage System (MSS) formed to address parts of Boston lying outside of the service area of BMDS
1880s-1930s
- Filling in area of Calf Pasture – created Columbus Park; Day Boulevard; Morrissey Boulevard, between Calf Pasture and Savin Hill; across mouth of Savin Hall Bay (maps)
1919
- Metropolitan District Commission (MDC) created to oversee the MSS (now DCR); Boston Main Drainage System still owned by the city
1940
- Leavitt and Worthington pumps in Calf Pasture Pumping Station dismantled and removed (due to a crack in one of them) à System changed from steam to electric power
1946
- Coal room roof collapses, section is demolished because it is no longer needed (no coal was being stored anymore due to the switch to electricity).
1953
- Columbia Point housing project built as one of nation’s first public housing projects
1952
- Nut Island Wastewater Treatment Plant opens
1968
- Deer Island Treatment Plant opens
- Calf Pasture Pumping Station closes – maintained as a backup for the Deer Island Plant during wet weather
1971
- Construction of University of Massachusetts Boston begins
1975
- “The Pumphouse: A Proposal to Recycle the Calf Pasture Pumping Station at Columbia Point as a Community/University Center” is published
1977
- Ownership and operating responsibility for sewer system transferred from the City of Boston to the Boston Water and Sewer Commission (BWSC)
1979
- The John F. Kennedy Library is formally dedicated
1985
- Possession, control and operation of MDC Water and Sewage Divisions granted to Massachusetts Water Resources Authority (MWRA)
1986
- Massachusetts Archive building constructed on Columbia Point
1990
- Calf Pasture Pumping Station building receives National Register of Historic Places designation
1995
- Dorchester residents create a tourism brochure to educate visitors of interesting local spots, includes the Calf Pasture Pumping Station
2007
- Historic Boston Inc. tells the Boston Globe that the organization is preparing a “reuse feasibility study” on the building
2011
- UMass Boston acquires Calf Pasture Pumping Station – in exchange for $2.1 million in scholarships for Boston Public School students
- Obsolete electrical transformers were removed from the building, new fencing installed, and debris, trees, and shrubs taken out
Sources Consulted:
1. Clark, Eliot C. Main Drainage Works of the City of Boston. Boston: Rockwell and Churchill, 1885.
2. Kennison, Karl R. “Sewage Works Development in the Massachusetts Metropolitan District.” Sewage and Industrial Wastes 22.4 (1950): 477-89. JSTOR. Web. 06 Mar. 2013.
3. Marwell, Stuart. Calf Pasture Pumping Station. N.p.: n.p.
4. National Register of Historic Places, Calf Pasture Pumping Station Complex.
5. Roessner, Jane. A Decent Place to Live: From Columbia Point to Harbor Point: A Community History. Boston: Northeastern UP, 2000.
6. Taylor, Earl. “Calf Pasture Pumping Station.” Dorchester Atheneum.
Footnotes:
1. “Sudden Destruction: A Terrible Tornado Along the Whole Atlantic Coast.” The Washington Post, 08/20/1879.