20+20 Vision

Page 16

A Brief History of the Charlestown Navy Yard When the Martinos Center moved to the Charlestown Navy Yard, it joined a long, proud history, dating back nearly two centuries to the beginnings of a nation. On June 17, 1800, in honor of the 25th anniversary of the Battle of Bunker Hill, the first major battle of the American Revolution, the Massachusetts legislature approved the purchase of a tract of land along the water in Charlestown. Standing in the shadow of Bunker Hill, the land would serve as a shipyard for the nation’s young Navy, which had been commissioned only six years before. Purchase of the first 23 acres was completed on August 16, 1800, for the sum of $19,350. The first ship built in the yard, the 18-gun sloop USS Frolic, was launched on June 22, 1813. The next 55 years saw the construction of another 38 ships and the repair and outfitting of many hundreds more. The new ships included the USS Merrimack, which launched in 1855. Rechristened the CSS Virginia, this vessel later fought in a pivotal battle in the American Civil War, where it engaged the USS Monitor in the first-ever meeting of iron-clad warships. After the Civil War, the Charlestown Navy Yard underwent several periods of retrenchment and expansion. The latter included the years spanning the Spanish-American War and World War I as well as the years before and during World War II, when the United States created and maintained a two-ocean Navy. By the end of the 1940s, shipbuilding activities slowed to a virtual halt as the Navy focused its attention on the modernization of its existing fleet. The last ship to launch from Charlestown was the Land Ship Tank USS Suffolk County in 1956. The Charlestown Navy Yard was decommissioned in 1974, after 174 years of operation and service to hundreds of vessels. The last 12

ship to undergo repair in the Navy Yard was also the first: the USS Constitution, a heavy frigate launched in 1797 as one of the first six ships authorized by the Naval Act of 1794. The Constitution entered the public imagination during the War of 1812, where it earned the nickname “Old Ironsides” after British cannonballs appeared to bounce off its wooden hull. The world’s oldest commissioned naval vessel still afloat, it remains to this day in the Historic Monument Area of the Charlestown Navy Yard, where its crew of active-duty Navy personnel participates in educational programs and occasional special events. In 1977, the Charlestown Navy Yard was designated a National Landmark. The City of Boston acquired the land the following year and commenced a major redevelopment effort. By 1989, this effort had grown into the largest preservation and reuse project in the country, with $469 million in private sector investment.

Building 149: the Heart of the Martinos Center One of the centerpieces of the Navy Yard redevelopment plan was the structure known as Building 149. Completed in 1919, this structure served as a general storehouse for most of its time as a Navy facility. From 1965 until the Yard was decommissioned in 1974, it housed the Computer Applications Support and Development Office, or CASDO, which sought to standardize Management Information Systems for all navy yards through its centralized office design, computer analysis, programming and maintenance efforts. In the first years after the city acquired the land, developers envisioned Building 149 as a combination of retail space and condominiums and began to renovate the building with this in mind, thus accounting for the marble and brass finishes on the first floor.


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Articles inside

Detecting Consciousness in Unresponsive Patients with COVID-19

3min
pages 212-213

Will Social Distancing Have a Lasting Impact on ‘Personal Space’?

4min
pages 208-209

AI Measures COVID-19 Lung Disease Severity on Chest X-Rays

3min
pages 204-207

The Martinos Center Responds

3min
pages 194-197

2020 (Introduction)

1min
pages 192-193

The Center’s Bruce Jenkins: Born to Be Wild

2min
page 191

The Secret Lives of Martinos Folk: Carol Barnstead & the Center’s cast of colorful characters

5min
pages 188-190

The State of the Center Today

1min
page 184

The Spark (Introduction)

1min
pages 182-183

Learning to See: AI Technique Dramatically Improves the Quality of Medical Imaging

3min
pages 180-181

Artificial Intelligence Improves Treatment Monitoring in Patients with Glioma

4min
pages 178-179

Artificial Intelligence (Introduction)

1min
pages 176-177

Structural Connectivity and Alzheimer’s Disease

1min
page 172

Buckle Up: With New Techniques, MRI is Faster than Ever Before

2min
pages 170-171

Studying Anxiety and Depression with Diffusion MRI

4min
pages 166-169

The Roots of Diffusion Imaging

3min
pages 164-165

Diffusion Imaging (Introduction)

1min
pages 162-163

The Secret Lives of Martinos Folk: Zeynab Alshelh fights stereotypes of women in Islam, one karate kick at a time

4min
pages 160-161

The Possible Role of Glow Sticks—Yes, Glow Sticks—in Treating Alzheimer’s

1min
pages 158-159

Imaging Interactions between Genes and the Environment

2min
pages 156-157

Moving Beyond Biopsy for Liver Fibrosis

3min
pages 152-154

Advancing PET Imaging with Quantitative Methods

1min
page 149

Imaging at the Molecular Level

4min
pages 146-148

Molecular Imaging (Introduction)

1min
pages 144-145

3 Things You Didn’t Know About David Cohen and MEG

3min
pages 142-143

MEG Method May Hold the Secret to Baldness

1min
page 140

Diagnosing and Treating Epilepsy, Other Disorders

2min
pages 138-139

Improving Communication Skills in Autism

3min
pages 136-137

The Music of MEG

4min
pages 128-131

MEG (Introduction)

1min
pages 126-127

The (Nearly) Lost Art of Scientific Glassblowing

3min
pages 124-125

The Road to MPI

3min
pages 122-123

Extremity Scanners and ‘Moving’ MRI

3min
pages 120-121

MRI at Bedside

3min
pages 118-119

New, Portable Scanner to Bring MRI to the Patient

3min
pages 116-117

Low-Field & Novel Imaging (Introduction)

1min
pages 114-115

The (Totally True) Legend of Thomas Witzel and the Ultrahigh-Field MRI Quench

3min
pages 112-113

Ultrahigh-field MRI and Multiple Sclerosis

2min
pages 108-109

7T MRI Memories

1min
pages 102-103

7T at the Martinos Center: An Origin Story

3min
pages 100-101

Larry Wald and the Three Traumas

4min
pages 98-99

Ultrahigh-Field Imaging (Introduction)

1min
pages 96-97

The Secret Lives of Martinos Folk: The Masked Scientist

3min
pages 94-95

Nutrition and Brain Growth in the Developing World

5min
pages 90-93

Estimating Tumor Boundaries with Fluorescence Lifetime Imaging

2min
pages 88-89

Maintaining Cerebral Blood Flow During Cardiac Surgery

3min
pages 86-87

Seeing the Light with Optical Imaging Technologies

6min
pages 80-85

Optics (Introduction)

1min
pages 78-79

The Secret Lives of Scientists: Anastasia Yendiki

2min
pages 76-77

'Women in Science' Group Tackles Sexism, Other Issues

4min
pages 74-75

Predicting Cognitive Decline in Alzheimer's Disease

2min
pages 70-71

The First 20 (Plus) Years of FreeSurfer

9min
pages 64-69

FreeSurfer (Introduction)

1min
pages 62-63

Meet the Neuronauts

3min
pages 60-61

Understanding the Patient-Clinician Relationship

2min
pages 58-59

What Is ‘Covert Consciousness’ and Why Is It So Important?

2min
pages 56-57

Eye-Contact Avoidance in Autism

3min
pages 54-55

The Neuroscience of Personal Space

5min
pages 52-53

Is Functional MRI the New X-Ray Vision?

3min
pages 50-51

Building 75 Opens Its Doors

1min
pages 46-47

Martinos Staff

1min
pages 44-45

In Memory of Athinoula

4min
pages 38-39

The Martinos Gift (Introduction)

1min
pages 36-37

Behind the Cover: The Story of the Original fMRI Image

3min
pages 34-35

Captivating Tales from the Pioneer Trail

1min
page 33

The ‘Unassuming’ Ken Kwong and a Pivotal fMRI Breakthrough

8min
pages 28-32

The Life and Science of Jack Belliveau

8min
pages 22, 24-27

The Foundations of Functional MRI

2min
pages 20-21

Functional MRI: Origins (Introduction)

1min
pages 18-19

A Brief History of the Charlestown Navy Yard

4min
pages 16-17

The Birth of a Center

7min
pages 10-13

The Early Years (Introduction)

1min
pages 8-9

Functional MRI: Applications (Introduction)

1min
pages 48-61

Message from the Director

2min
pages 6-7
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