68
THE A B C OF TAXATION
exempted, the land alone would yield the same amount,
(161,135,900 at I18.70 equals $1,143,672).
Some Pertinent Illustrations
There are on this street, between Adams Square
and Eliot Street, 179 buildings, twenty-one of which
have been erected in the last twenty years. At this
rate Washington Street is confronted with the happy
prospect of buildings of modern beauty and con
venience in only a trifle more than one hundred and
seventy years, provided only that none of them
grows old meantime. Has not fifty years been the
limit of a useful life for the average building of the
past? If so, Washington Street should have three
full crops of new buildings, instead of one, in the
one hundred and seventy years.
All nature renews itself and comes out in a new
dress once a year. The more the land is enriched,
the more fertile the agricultural crop. Why is there
not found the richest economic crop of buildings on
land richest in value? Is not something “rotten in
Denmark”? If so, what is it?
The human body, as man’s habitation, is renewed
once in seven years, cuticle and all. Of Boston’s 87,300
buildings 1,657 were erected in 1907. If one-half, or
828, of these are due to a natural growth of less than
1 per cent annually (the annual increase in population
is over 2 per cent), and only one-half are to renew old
buildings already enumerated, then it v/ill take at this
rate upwards of one hundred years to scrape off the
surface scurf, and give to Boston a fresh and healthy
cuticle. It will require these one hundred years even
if every new building is proof against decay.