Facebook Twitter Instagram
    Greco AmericoGreco Americo
    Facebook Twitter Instagram
    SUBSCRIBE
    • Business and Entrepreneurship
    • Community News
    • Culture and Heritage
    • Diaspora Spotlight
    • History and Heritage
    Greco AmericoGreco Americo
    History and Heritage

    The Best of Boston’s Hidden History with Author and Guide Dina Vargo

    EbrahimBy EbrahimNovember 5, 2023No Comments2 Mins Read

    5. Rookie Murderer’s House, Beacon Hill

    Arguably Boston’s most prestigious address, Louisburg Square is a short block with chic Greek Revival-style homes on both sides and a pretty oval park at its center. The block exudes a sense of Victorian propriety; but, Vargo reveals, it was there that one of the city’s spiciest scandals took place.

    In the 1960s, the red brick rowhouse of 85 Pinckney Street was the home of Suzanne Clift, child of a prominent Boston family that included television producer Thomas Brooks Clift and film actor Montgomery Clift. Vargo tells the story of Suzanne’s torrid affair with an Italian lover named Pietro. As the story goes, Pietro and Suzanne had been dating for two years, but he was about to end their affair and move to the West Coast to find a job. Before he could leave, he was found dead. Meanwhile, Suzanne had fled the country with her dog Shnipsi, inspiring titillating headlines about the “socialite” who murdered her lover in Beacon Hill. “For a while, it was the most exciting news in Boston: this young woman, a debutante from a posh family, who had killed her boyfriend in a crime of passion.”

    Suzanne eventually returned to Boston and confessed to the crime, claiming it was an accident. Hundreds of onlookers came to watch her trial, where defense lawyers revealed that she had previously been diagnosed with schizophrenia. And that she was pregnant with Pietro’s child. Suzanne was convicted of manslaughter, but her sentence involved time in a mental health center rather than prison. And so, the tantalizing story of the Rookie Murderer faded into the annals of Boston’s hidden history.

    The Debutante Murderer House is now a private residence, but only one of many notable homes on this picturesque city block. Stroll around Louisburg Square to see the homes of some famous residents from history, including writer Louisa May Alcott (author of Little Women), artist John Singleton Copley (painter of Watson and the Shark) and l architect Charles Bullfinch (designer of the Massachusetts State House).

    Ebrahim
    • Website

    Related Posts

    Reviews | Fear of a black Cleopatra

    April 16, 2024

    Why the Nile was so important to ancient Egypt

    April 16, 2024

    A day to be proud to be of Greek origin | Herald Community Newspapers

    April 16, 2024

    35 years of Cultural Routes: safeguarding European values, heritage and dialogue

    April 14, 2024

    Monumenta Documenting the architectural heritage of the 19th and 20th centuries in Greece

    April 13, 2024

    Archbishop visits Transfiguration Greek Orthodox Church during Covid-19 pandemic

    April 12, 2024
    Add A Comment

    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Categories
    • Business and Entrepreneurship (560)
    • Community News (695)
    • Culture and Heritage (614)
    • Diaspora Spotlight (427)
    • History and Heritage (536)
    • Uncategorized (29)
    News
    • Business and Entrepreneurship (560)
    • Community News (695)
    • Culture and Heritage (614)
    • Diaspora Spotlight (427)
    • History and Heritage (536)
    • Uncategorized (29)
    Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest
    © 2025 Designed by grecoamerico.com

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.