Filed Under Settlement

Market Square and the Market House

Witnessing History

As you stroll the streets of the East Side, pay attention to the street signs: many of the streets you pass bear witness to some of the significant people and structures that have come and gone, making and remaking the city. Power Street, for example, runs the property line of 17th-century original resident Nicholas Power. Meeting Street, once known as Gaol Lane, was the site of Providence’s early jail. And Transit and Planet Streets commemorate perhaps the first worldwide scientific collaboration: the 1769 observation of the transit of Venus, organized by Joseph Brown, one of the four prominent Brown brothers of Providence, and an early astronomer and architect.

Among these other scientific pursuits, Joseph Brown designed the Market House (1775), which he intended as a magnificent landmark to the wealth of the colonial city at the heart of the bustling waterfront. The ground-level arcades originally provided open stalls for fishmongers, butchers, and produce vendors, while the upper floor housed government functions. A Masonic Hall occupied the third floor, added in 1797. During the 19th century, Market House served as City Hall during a 30-year debate (1845-75) over the construction of a new City Hall. It has housed classrooms for RISD since the 1950s. Market Square, always a site for news, gossip, and shopping, was the site of a colonial tax protest against the British on March 2, 1775 when the people of Providence burned tea. On September 7, 1897, Emma Goldman, a noted anarchist and feminist, was arrested for unlawful “open air speaking” and charged with attracting a crowd in Market Square. Nowadays you are more likely to encounter a RISD student’s art installation.

Images

Market House 1850
Market House 1850 This photograph shows the varied opportunities available for entertainment and commerce in and around Market Square in 1850. Horse-drawn carts with produce and goods come and go from the Market House; “hats & caps” are for sale at W. H. Handy's clothing store on the north-east end of the Square; and a billboard beyond Handy's advertises a billiard room.
Market Square 1901
Market Square 1901 North of the Market House in this 1901 photograph of Market Square is the Central Hotel. In 1892, rooms could be had for $0.75 to $1.00 on the European plan (no meals provided) and $2.00 on the American plan (included breakfast, lunch, and dinner). Night owls were welcome at the Central: the hotel promised that “meals were served at all hours, day or night.”
The Great Gale
The Great Gale This engraving depicts the downtown Providence area, including  Market Square, during the Great Gale of 1815. The city was flooded with nearly 12 feet of water, and a plaque along the southern wall of the Market House demonstrates the water height during the storm. In the aftermath of the storm, a Providence druggist seized the opportunity to calm fears of contaminated water–-and increase his bottom line. His advertisement in the Rhode-Island American read, “The Late Storm has spread contagion more or less wherever it prevailed.” But, with the help of “Dr. Relfe's Asmathick Pills, ”the whole of the inflammatory symptoms will be subdued in a few hours.”

Location

4 Market Square, Providence, RI 02903

Metadata

Elyssa Tardif, “Market Square and the Market House,” Rhode Tour, accessed November 18, 2024, https://rhodetour.org/items/show/187.