Walden Street Cattle Pass

Adjacent to MBTA right-of-way at Walden St., Cambridge, Massachusetts. County/parish: Middlesex.

Added to the National Register of Historic Places June 03, 1994. NRIS 94000554.

1 contributing structure.

From Wikipedia:

Walden Street Cattle Pass

The Walden Street Cattle Pass, also referred to as the cow path, is an historic site adjacent to the MBTA Commuter Rail Fitchburg Line right-of-way, under the Walden Street Bridge in Cambridge, Massachusetts. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1994.

The site, a tunnel for moving cattle between the railroad and the nearby stockyards of the 19th century, was built in 1857. The cattle yards were closed in 1868 or "about 1871", but the cattle trade continued; "until the 1920s, cows were unloaded here and driven down Massachusetts Avenue, through Harvard Square, and across the river to the Brighton Abattoir".

Restoration (re-pointing) of the tunnel's brickwork was carried out during the 2007–08 replacement of the second-generation bridge dating from 1914. The third-generation bridge opened for traffic in December 2008. The Cambridge City Council discussed creation of a vantage point for viewing the tunnel, ca. 2008, but no action was taken.

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National Park Service documentation: https://catalog.archives.gov/id/63790391

LC