Tremont Row
Image:1895 TremontRow map [Boston byCCPerkins BPL 12471.png|thumb|right|Detail of map of Boston in 1895, showing Tremont Row]
Tremont Row in Boston, Massachusetts, was a short street that flourished in the 19th and early-20th centuries. It was located near the intersection of Court [Street (Boston, Massachusetts)|Court], Tremont, and Cambridge streets, in today's Government Center area. It existed until the 1920s, when it became known as Scollay Square. In 1859 the Barre Gazette newspaper described Tremont Row as "the great Dry Goods Street of Boston."
Tenants
Anthony Feola Photographer- Thomas Gold Appleton
- Austin and Stone's Dime Museum
- Thomas Ball, sculptor
- Hammatt Billings, architect
- Boston Artists' Association
- Comstock & Ross
- Cutting & Turner, photographers
- John J.P. Davis, daguerreotype artist
- Dobson & Schumann, photographers
- R.A. Dobson, photographer
- John Doggett & Co.
- Thomas Edwards (artist)
- Marguerite F. Foley, "cameo cutter"
- E.J. Foss, photographer
- Miss Addie M. Gendron, photographer
- Frederick Gleason, publisher
- Mr. Gray, portrait artist
- Harris & Stanwood, silver
- Haven, Pierce & Co., shoes
- Josiah Johnson Hawes, photographer
- Heard & Moseley
- John B. Heywood
- Albert Gallatin Hoit
- Charles Hubbard (artist)
- William Hudson Jr., artist
- F.A. Jones & Co. "Great Silk and Shawl House"
- Joseph Leonard, auctioneer; Leonard & Cunningham
- Leonard & Pierce
- G.H. Loomis, photographer
- Mayer's Confectionary
- Mechanic Apprentices Library Association
- Naismith Photographer
- New England Art Union
- William H. Oakes
- Alfred Ordway
- Pavilion Hotel
- George P. Reed, publisher
- Scollay Theatre
- Sharp & Michelin lithographers
- Southworth & Hawes, photographers
- I.A. Wetherbee
- Merrill G. Wheelock
- Moses Wight, artist