Also on the site, the Suffolk CountyCourthouse was erected in 1810 and converted to Boston's second city hall in 1841, being replaced by the current building twenty-four years later. Thirty-eight Boston mayors, including John F. Fitzgerald, Maurice J. Tobin, and James Michael Curley, served their terms of office on School Street at this site over a period of 128 years.
With the move to the current Boston City Hall in 1969, Old City Hall was converted over the next two years to serve other functions – an early and successful example of adaptive reuse. The Boston-based nonprofit developer Architectural Heritage Foundation, Inc. (now AHF Boston) and the architecture firm Anderson Notter Associates completed the adaptive use and renovation. AHF Boston subsequently managed the property for fifty years.
The granite exterior characterized by ornamented columns, the mansard roof, and the projecting central bay
The massive front doors, unusual in the use of different wood, as well as the inlay of the marble circle in each door
The murals in the building entrances on School Street and Court Square illustrating the history of both the building and the site
The marble plaque in the first floor lobby commemorating the laying of the cornerstone in 1862 by MayorJoseph Wightman and the dedication of the building in 1865 by Mayor Frederic W. Lincoln Jr.
The hopscotch in the School Street sidewalk recognizing this as the site of the Boston Latin School
The statues in the courtyard:
Benjamin Franklin, who attended school on this site. Scenes of Franklin's accomplishments appear in bas-relief on the square pedestal of the statue. The statue (1856) was the first portrait statue to be erected in Boston. Franklin is depicted as he would actually appear, rather than draped in toga, cloak, or classical attire. The statue was designed by Richard Saltonstall Greenough, as are two of the bas-reliefs.
A donkey, signifying the Democratic Party, with two bronze footprints in front of it labeled "stand in opposition" and a plaque explaining the origin of the donkey as the party's symbol.
Old City Hall today
In 2017, Synergy Investments purchased Old City Hall for $30.1 million from AHF Boston.[3] With more than 83,000 square feet (7,700 m2) of real estate, it now houses a number of businesses, organizations, and a Ruth's Chris Steak House, Welch & Forbes, Underscore VC, McLane Middleton, Kaymbu and many more, though its most famous tenant, the upscale French restaurant Maison Robert, closed in 2004.
^ ab"Old City Hall (Boston)". National Historic Landmark summary listing. National Park Service. Archived from the original on 2012-10-08. Retrieved 2008-07-06.