There's a pub not far from where I live called the 21st Amendment, afer the amendment that provided for the repeal of prohibition. It's on Bowdoin Street, just across the way from a side entrance to the Masschusetts State House, and I haven't been there in years. Back in the day when I dropped in once in a while, it was called the Golden Dome, named after the golden dome that crowns (if that's the right word, given No Kings) our lovely, Bullfinch-designed state house.
The Dome was a nothing fancy pub, but it was a fun and convivial place.
When I was an occasional patron, the Dome was frequented by state workers and state and local pols. Not that I'd recognized most state pols, but sometimes I'd spot a familiar face in there. One time, I saw Ray Flynn. Ray had been a state rep, but at the point I saw him there, he was a member of the Boston City Counil, and was running for mayor. Ray was in his cups, and walking from table to table schmoozing voters up. When he got to us, my BF (later husband) said to Ray that I had told him that Ray was an honest pol. Ray's answer: "I am honest. I just drink too much."
Ah, Ray.
Anyway, he went on to become the mayor, and held that office until Bill Clinton appointed him Ambassador to the Holy See (Vatican).
The big kahuna pol who had supposedly frequented the Golden Dome was JFK, whose Boston apartment was a couple of doors down on Bowdoin Street. Or so it was rumored.
Anyway, a few weeks ago, I spotted this sign on the sidewalk on the corner of Bowdoin and Beacon, inviting passers-by to stop in for a libation at JFK's local tavern.
This raised a couple of questions in my mind.
First off, just how much time did Congressman (and later Senator) John Fitzgerald Kennedy spend in Boston? His parents were native Bostonians - his maternal grandfather had been the mayor - but JFK was born in Brookline, just oustide of Boston. The family moved to NY when he was still a child. He went to prep school in Connecticut. And Harvard is in Cambridge. The Kennedy family spent their summers in Hyannis, so Massachusetts, but not exactly Boston.
JFK was famously in the South Pacific during WWII.
JFK was someting of a war hero, and in the absence of his golden boy older brother, who was killed during the war, he was designated by the family to get on the path to the presidency. First step: Congress.
In order to run for Congress, JFK had to establish a residency here. Thus he rented a pied a terre on Beacon Hill.
Once elected to the House, and later the Senate, his center of gravity was Washington, DC. Not Boston.
So did he ever really spend any more time than necessary here?
Oh, I don't doubt he popped in occasionally to his local for a pop, especially as a couple of his inner circle were boyos, not fellow Harvardites. And his grandfather had been a tavern owner. (As was mine, btw.) But was it truly his watering hole?
Rather than hanging out at an Irish-y local pub, I could see young JFK - rich, handsome, well-educated, well-traveled, sophisticated - at the Ritz or at Locke-Ober. Not at whatever the Golden Dome 21st Amendment was called back in the way back.
But, hey, JFK may have been anticipating the advice Robert Frost gave him on the occasion of his inauguration: Be more Irish than Harvard. Which translates into local pub, not Locke-Ober.
Still, there's a question of whether that sign is false advertising or creative marketing. Little of both, I suspect. And just plain fun.
But I'm also wondering just how much the JFK name still resonates with young folks - the prime constituency for the 21st Amendment - or with tourists, even. He has, after all, been dead for a good long time. It reminds me of the "George Washington slept here" signs of my youth - there was actually one on a house near where I grew up that had been a tavern - that were sort of interesting, but didn't really drawn you in. More of a good to know, shrug sort of thing.
Or are people (young folks, tourists) still drawn to JFK.
I suppose tourists may be. After all, Cheers, which takes place in Boston, has been off the air for 30+ years, and there's still a line out front most of the time. And I guess JFK would and should be more of a draw than Sam, Norm, or Carla.
Anyway, when I spotted the sign there, I was curious. And I did find it amusing. A few weeks after I first saw it, the sign was down.
Maybe it didn't work. Maybe it just kept blowing down.
Did JFK really hang out at the 21st Amendment?
I don't really see it, but Johnny we hardly knew ya!





