On three stages
in the history of an exemplary American beach.
On July 12th,
1896, Revere Beach greeted nearly 50,000
visitors on its opening day
as America’s first public beach. The site and occasion represented the
confluence of multiple turn of the century trends: the completion of an urban
railroad line that allowed those numerous visitors to reach the beach; the City
Beautiful movement that heavily influenced landscape architect Charles Eliot,
who designed Revere Beach; the increased possibility of free
time for leisure and entertainment (thanks in large part to the successes
of the labor movement), which led to the popularity of sites like Coney
Island and Revere Beach; and the recent waves of immigration, since many of
those public
visitors to Revere Beach were immigrant families. For all those reasons and
more, Revere Beach was more than just the nation’s first public beach—it was a
hugely iconic symbol of turn of the 20th century American society.
By the second
half of the century, however, Revere Beach had become a very different and far
more contested kind of symbol. A number of 1960s and 70s factors and narratives
contributed to increasingly negative images of the beach and, ultimately, its
near-abandonment: demographic shifts that brought more African American
visitors to the beach, during the same era as the
Boston busing riots which demonstrated just how contentious race remained
in the region (particularly between African Americans and working class white
ethnics, the two communities who came to comprise Revere Beach’s principal
clienteles); deterioration of the beach’s surrounding neighborhoods, leading to a substantial
increase in crime within a short period of time (there were 500
arrests near the beach in 1969 and 2700 in 1974); and the historic Blizzard of 1978, which destroyed or
drove out most of the amusements, businesses, and landmarks that had not
already succumbed. Whether fairly or unfairly, by the early 1980s Revere Beach
was best known for the
image of hypodermic needles littering the sand.
As the recent
article at that last link illustrates, many of those negative images remain in
the Bostonian consciousness into the early 21st century. But there’s
no question that Revere Beach has also entered a new stage, one marked by the
debates over development
and gentrification on the one hand and tradition
and preservation
on the other that have informed so much of America’s urban landscape over the
last few decades. As always, it’s not necessarily either-or—Revere’s waterfront
can be developed (and to a degree must be if it is to survive) without the
history being lost, and the history can be preserved (and to my mind must be if
we are to remember our past) without sacrificing future growth. And as always,
what’s most needed is an awareness of the past that does not elide the darkest
times but preserves the ideals; so that whatever Revere Beach becomes in the
future, the site can remain emblematic of its status as America’s first public beach.
Next beach
context tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you
think?
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