Blackstone
The Blackstone neighborhood is located in the
northeast corner of Providence's East Side. Most of its development
occurred during the early and mid 20th century. The houses, mostly
medium to large single-family dwellings, were architecturally
and functionally similar to those built in College Hill during
the 18th and 19th centuries. Blackstone is one of only a few neighborhoods
in the city where considerable development occurred during the
20th century.
Blackstone sits within a shallow part of the north-south
valley between the eastern ridge of the Moshassuck River Valley
and the western bank of the Seekonk River. Because of the uninviting
geography and marshy land, the area did not inspire early colonial
settlement. The earliest road, Cat Swamp Lane (1684), followed
high ground and is the original path of today's Olney Street;
Cole, Morris, and Rochambeau Avenues; and Sessions Street.
Several farms were established during the 18th
century. These included Reverend Arthur Browne's glebe (an area
belonging to a church parish or parsonage) on Sessions Street,
Richard Browne's farm at the eastern end of Rochambeau Avenue,
and Moses Brown's Cole Farm Court near the intersection of Wayland
and Humboldt Avenue. Today, at the intersection of Eames Street
and Morris Avenue, four of the farms still remain.
During the middle years of the 19th century, Blackstone
began to develop as a middle and upper income residential neighborhood,
though the area's isolation from the rest of the city precluded
substantial growth. Before the 1880s, residents traveled between
the Blackstone area and the rest of Providence, either by carriage
or public horse car along a circuitous route from Downtown through
Fox Point to Butler Avenue. In 1884, a second line along Waterman
and Angell Streets was completed, which allowed a more direct
route downtown.
The most significant improvement that stimulated
residential development in Blackstone was the collaboration between
the proprietors of Swan Point Cemetery and the city of Providence
to construct a landscaped boulevard, 200 feet wide, connecting
the Waterman and Angell Street corridor on the south with Hope
Street on the north at the Pawtucket city line. By 1894, Blackstone
Boulevard was completed and landscaped. Today, it remains one
of the city's greatest examples of planning and landscape architecture.
Between 1890 and 1923, land values along the boulevard
tripled and the Blackstone area began to fill in with single-family
homes that were architecturally distinctive. During this period,
Blackstone became one of the most desirable and fashionable addresses
in the city.
The scenic beauty created by the bluffs overlooking
the Seekonk River was inviting and conducive to institutional
establishment. Butler Hospital, one of the nation's oldest psychiatric
institutions, was built in 1847 on the Richard Browne Farm at
the end of Rochambeau Avenue. Its gothic structure was landscaped
in a rural setting as part of a plan to remove patients from the
stresses of the everyday world.
Swan Point Cemetery was established adjacent to
the hospital grounds in 1847 as part of the nation's rural cemetery
movement of the 1830s and 1840s. The grave of H.P. Lovecraft,
the horror and science fiction writer, is located there with an
epitaph reading "I Am Providence." Together, the cemetery,
the hospital, and Blackstone Boulevard provide substantial open
space in the northeastern corner of the city.
By the 20th century, institutional growth became
more neighborhood oriented. Some of the notable religious institutions
include the Central Baptist Church on Lloyd Avenue, Temple Emanuel
on Taft Avenue, and St. Sebastian's Roman Catholic Church on Cole
Avenue. Today, the Blackstone neighborhood remains primarily residential
and is one of the city's most affluent neighborhoods.
According to the 2000 census, 7,358 persons reside
in Blackstone, an increase of about 1.5 percent from 1990 when
7,250 residents lived in the neighborhood. The neighborhood is
predominantly white; 2.1 percent of the population is Hispanic,
1.5 percent African American, and 3.8 percent Asian. In 2000,
nearly all residents (97%) age 25 or older were high school graduates and almost half (48%) obtained graduate or professional degrees, up 28% from 1990.
Three quarters of the employed residents in the Blackstone neighborhood
are employed in management, professional services, and related occupations. The unemployment
rate in 2000 was only 1.7 percent, substantially below the citywide
figure of 9.3 percent.
The median family income in Blackstone in 1999
was $117,522, up 13% from 1989 and nearly four times the city's median family income
of $32,058. Less than 5 percent of the population in Blackstone
was living below poverty in 2000; the poverty rates for families
and children were each less than one percent.
With 65.7% of housing units
occupied by their owners in 2000, Blackstone has the highest rate
of home ownership of any neighborhood in the city. As of 2000,
more than half (53%) of all housing units in Blackstone are
single-family, detached homes, and almost 9 out of 10 housing
units were constructed more than 40 years ago. The median sales price in 2004 was $446,000, which is two times greater than the citywide median sales price of $220,000. Median
rents were 63 percent higher than the citywide rate. According
to the 2000 Census, 36 percent of Blackstone homeowners moved into
their present housing unit more than 10 years ago and just over half of all residents have lived in Blackstone for at least the last five years.
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Sources: Blackstone: Neighborhood Analysis,
Department of Planning and Urban Development (City of Providence,
1977) and Providence: A Citywide Survey of Historic Resources,
edited by William McKenzie Woodward and Edward F. Sanderson (Rhode
Island Historical Preservation Commission, 1986).