The Military History of Boston's Harbor Islands
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About this ebook
Gerald Butler
Gerald W. Butler, a captain in the Massachusetts State Guard, was the former curator of Fort Warren and Fort Independence, Boston Harbor, and Fort Rodman, New Bedford. He has published Military Annals of Nahant, Massachusetts and periodicals on seacoast fortifications. He lectures and serves as a consultant to military museums and state parks, was the former historian for U.S. Navy mine units, and his illustrations of seacoast fortifications are published worldwide. He resides in Nahant.
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The Military History of Boston's Harbor Islands - Gerald Butler
TERMINATION
INTRODUCTION
In May 1632, as part of Governor Winthrop’s defense survey, the first earthwork fortification to protect Boston against attack by sea was begun. Located on what was known as Corn Hill (an elevation inland from the present Rowe’s Wharf), the fort commanded Boston’s inner harbor and passage from the outer harbor. When completed two years later, Corn Hill became known as Fort Hill. In 1687, Governor Andros ordered that the fort be rebuilt and named Fort Andros. This was accomplished, but the structure perished in a spectacular fire in 1760. The stronghold was reworked and occupied by the British during the American Revolution and refortified by General Washington after the war ended, but it served little strategic value. By 1797, the fort was replaced by housing. The area had become a vicious slum by the 1860s, and by 1872, the hill was leveled, most of which was used as fill for the waterfront. By 1979, a parking garage and off-ramp from the Southeastern Expressway to High Street marked the general area.
At the end of the summer of 1634, Governor Winthrop and his advisors recommended and had constructed a fortification on what came to be known as Castle Island. This primitive fort was rebuilt in 1643, but accidentally burned in March 1673. A new fort was quickly constructed in its place and named Fort William and Mary in honor of England’s new rulers. In 1701, a new scientific fortification
of brick was begun and completed by 1703; it later became known as Castle William. Before the American Revolution, the revenue stamps of the hated Stamp Act arrived from England and were stored at Castle William for safety. At the outbreak of the American Revolution, the royal governor of Massachusetts also took refuge in the castle. When British forces evacuated Boston, army engineers blew up the castle. It was immediately rebuilt by the American Army led by Col. Paul Revere. By 1778, the fort on Castle Island was known as Fort Adams. A new fortification was constructed in the early 1800s and President Adams officially named the defensive work Fort Independence. By 1851, a new, granite Fort Independence was constructed and garrisoned.
In 1636, another fort was constructed at the base of Fort Hill; it became known as the Boston Sconce or the South Battery. In 1696, this work was enlarged and became the strongest and most heavily fortified site in the colonies by 1743. The site was in ruins when the British occupied Boston during the American Revolution, and the Americans rebuilt it.
In 1646, the area of Merry’s Point was selected to have another fortification constructed around an existing wharf. When completed, this work was named the North Battery. Although rebuilt and enlarged in 1739, the North Battery was in ruins when the British occupied Boston. In the following century, land-filling created two roads in the area—Battery and Salutation Streets—whose names alone give any indication of the existence of the fortification. By 1789, both the south and north batteries were dismantled and sold.
A proposal to defend the port against an enemy fleet equipped with fireships
was adopted in September 1673. Loaded with inflammable materials, fireships were sailed by skeleton crews close enough to a port or anchored fleet for the ship to drift in on tide and wind; the crew then lit fuses and abandoned the ship. The blazing fireships would lodge against wooden wharves, spreading the fires to the wooden buildings and yards of the waterfront. The only defense against these terror-ships was a barricade or a staggered seawall outlying the immediate port area. Known as the Barricado, this stone defense was completed in 1681. When the threat of fireships passed, the Barricado was put to different use. In 1710, King Street (now known as State Street) was extended out to the center of the Barricado, which formed the original T
of T Wharf,
and progressed beyond. The last segment of the Barricado was used in the construction of Central Wharf in 1816. The general line of the Barricado is best represented today by Atlantic Avenue.
In the early 1800s, the need for additional seacoast fortifications was noted by American engineers. Overseen by Col. Sylvanus Thayer, the first superintendent of