thumb|leftthumb|leftDorchester Heights is the central area of
South Boston. It is the highest area in the neighborhood and commands a view of both Boston Harbor and downtown.
In the American Revolution
Dorchester Heights was and is remembered in American history for an action in the
American Revolutionary War known as the
Fortification of Dorchester Heights. After the battles of
Lexington and Concord, Revolutionary sentiment within New England reached a new high, and thousands of militiamen from the Northern colonies converged on Boston, pushing the British back within the city limits. In June 1775 British soldiers under General Howe attacked and seized
Bunker Hill, but in the process sustained many losses. Following this encounter, the
Continental Congress in
Philadelphia gave
George Washington the title of
commander-in-chief and sent him to oversee the efforts outside of Boston.
The stalemate in Boston lasted for months, only breaking when
Colonel Henry Knox returned from
Fort Ticonderoga in New York, having led a team of sleds loaded with tens of thousands of pounds of artillery (cannon) in winter from the fort across hundreds of miles to Boston. This added artillery gave Washington and his military council the firepower they needed to make a drastic move. Over the night of
March 4,
1776, as 800 American soldiers stood guard along the river of Dorchester shores, 1200 American soldiers took Dorchester Heights uninhibited. They began working through the night to build structures suitable to defend against the British Army. A large portion of the artillery, pulled by oxen, was moved and installed, without being noticed by the British command, at Dorchester Heights, a point of strategic importance due to its elevation and commanding view of all of Boston and Boston Harbor.
In response, Howe planned on mounting a counter-offensive against the fortified positions on the Heights, but bad weather forced him to rethink his plan. In the end he fell back from the city. The
Royal Navy evacuated
British Army troops stationed there, as well as many
Loyalists.
Dorchester Heights Monument
The Dorchester Heights Monument was completed in 1902 to designs by Boston architects
Peabody and Stearns. It is 115 feet (35m) tall, built of Georgia white marble capped with octagonal cupola and weather vane, and is generally reminiscent of a church steeple in the Federal style. The monument is now operated by the
National Park Service as part of
Boston National Historical Park.
References and external links
- Anthony Mitchell Sammarco, Charlie Rosenberg, South Boston, Arcadia Publishing, 2006, page 43. ISBN 0738539481.
Category:National Register of Historic Places in MassachusettsCategory:Landmarks in Boston, MassachusettsCategory:American Revolutionary War sitesCategory:Peabody and Stearns buildingsCategory:National Historic Sites