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Charlestown
Charlestown
Charlestown
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Charlestown

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Images of America: Charlestown explores this historic city's rich and fascinating history through photographs.


Originally settled in 1629, Charlestown became well-known as the scene of the pivotal Revolutionary Battle of Bunker Hill, actually fought on Breed's Hill. Recovering from a devastating fire at the hands of the British soon after the battle, Charlestown went on to become a prosperous neighbor to Boston, eventually being annexed to the larger city in 1874. Today the city is enjoying a tremendous rebirth and the restoration of many of its important landmarks, such as the 1780 Warren Tavern.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateJun 9, 2004
ISBN9781439615553
Charlestown
Author

Anthony Mitchell Sammarco

Anthony Mitchell Sammarco is a noted historian and author of over sixty books on Boston, its neighborhoods and surrounding cities and towns. He lectures widely on the history and development of his native city.

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    Charlestown - Anthony Mitchell Sammarco

    Acknowledgments

    Introduction

    On January 1, 1874, the City of Charlestown, Massachusetts, was officially annexed to the City of Boston. A city since its incorporation in 1847, Charlestown became part of a thriving metropolis composed of once-independent towns that supported the burgeoning population and expansion of Boston.

    Settled in 1628, Charlestown was originally known as Mishawum by the Native Americans. Wonohaquaham (known to the Puritans as Sagamore John), a member of the Pawtucket tribe, sold the lands to the English. Originally, Charlestown encompassed a much larger land area than it does today, as it included Somerville, Malden, Everett, Woburn, Stoneham, and Burlington, as well as parts of Medford, Cambridge, Arlington, and Reading. Within a few years, Charlestown—named in honor of King Charles I—had become a bustling town that attracted new settlers from England.

    The fierce Revolutionary War battle that took place on Breed’s Hill in Charlestown on June 17, 1775—an event that posterity has recorded as the Battle of Bunker Hill—represents the most widely known aspect of Charlestown’s history. At that critical juncture in the forging of America’s independence, U.S. troops under the direction of Colonel Prescott, General Putnam, and Major Brooks defended their land against the British. General Putnam’s dictum that day—Don’t fire until you see the whites of their eyes—has become famous, but the stalwart American troops were forced to retreat from their position in the end. The British troops took further devastating and decisive action after the battle when they burned the town to the ground.

    Though most Americans associate Charlestown with the Battle of Bunker Hill, the city actually has a long and rich history outside of that event. John Harvard (1607–1638) was admitted in 1637 as a freeman to Charlestown, where he was a sometime minister of God’s Word. Though he died the following year, his bequest of half of his estate and his entire library to the new college in Cambridge led to that famous school being named in his honor. Harvard’s bequest ensured the future of the college at Newtowne, now Cambridge.

    After the Revolution, Charlestown was slowly rebuilt with Market Square (later City Square) as the center of town government. Numerous unique forms of transportation developed in order to maintain accessibility to Boston, including the penny ferry in the seventeenth century, the horse-drawn omnibus in the early nineteenth century, and the Elevated Railway in the twentieth century. From the Charlestown Navy Yard, such famous ships as the Constitution (or Old Ironsides) were launched, and the city’s industrial concerns were varied and significant. The Stickney and Poor Spice Company, the Schrafft and Cowdrey candy companies, the Diamond Match Company, and the Davidson Syringe Company were all based in Charlestown, and from the latter two firms came two firsts in American history: wooden matches and rubber syringes. Both inventions were patented and distributed worldwide.

    Today, Charlestown is a neighborhood of the City of Boston. Accessible by the Charlestown Bridge, which connects the North End and City Square, the town is known for its restored early nineteenth-century houses, the redeveloped Navy Yard, gas lamps, and the Bunker Hill Monument. An independent city from 1847 to 1874, with a fascinating industrial base in the nineteenth century, Charlestown has a rich and fascinating history, much of which is brought to life in the photographs that follow.

    One

    City of Charlestown

    Seen from the Copp’s Hill Burial Ground in Boston’s North End, this view of Charlestown was drawn by John Warner Barber for his 1839 book, Historical Collections of Massachusetts. The unfinished Bunker Hill Monument rises on Breed’s Hill and the Charlestown Navy Yard is on the far right.

    The seal of the City of Charlestown had the Bunker Hill Monument in the center with the motto Liberty—A Trust to Be Transmitted To Posterity encircling it. Established as a city in 1847, Charlestown would later be annexed to the City of Boston in 1874.

    Henry Fairbanks (1808–1854) was a member of the Charlestown Common Council, serving as president between 1849 and 1853. He was also a member and the first president of the erudite Charlestown Lyceum.

    Charlestown City Hall was built in City Square, the junction of Warren

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