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Fort Independence (Massachusetts)

Coordinates: 42°20′17″N 71°0′42″W / 42.33806°N 71.01167°W / 42.33806; -71.01167
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Fort Independence
Fort Independence (Massachusetts) is located in Massachusetts
Fort Independence (Massachusetts)
Fort Independence (Massachusetts) is located in the United States
Fort Independence (Massachusetts)
LocationCastle Island, Boston, Massachusetts
Coordinates42°20′17″N 71°0′42″W / 42.33806°N 71.01167°W / 42.33806; -71.01167
Area15 acres (6.1 ha)
Built1634
NRHP reference No.70000921[1]
Added to NRHPOctober 15, 1970

Fort Independence is a granite bastion fort that provided harbor defenses for Boston, Massachusetts, located on Castle Island. Fort Independence is one of the oldest continuously fortified sites of English origin in the United States.[2][3] The first primitive fortification was called "The Castle", placed on the site in 1634. It was rebuilt twice, then replaced around 1692 with a more substantial structure known as Castle William.[4] It was abandoned by the British during the American Revolution, but the Americans renamed it Fort Adams and then Fort Independence. The existing granite fort was constructed between 1833 and 1851. Today it is preserved as a state park and fires occasional ceremonial salutes. Fort Independence was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1970.[5]

History

Castle William

Commander at Castle William William Brattle (1745)

The site of Fort Independence has been occupied by various fortifications since 1634.[6] The first fort to be constructed on Castle Island resulted from a visit by Governor John Winthrop; it was partly financed by him and the council.[4] Construction was planned and supervised by Deputy Gov. Roger Ludlow and Captain John Mason of Dorchester, producing a "castle with mud walls" with masonry of oyster shell lime in which cannon were mounted to defend Boston from attack by sea.[4] The first commander of the fort was Captain Nicholas Simpkins in 1634. The first fort soon fell into disrepair and was rebuilt in 1644 following a scare due to the arrival of a French warship in the harbor.[4] The fort was reconstructed out of pine logs, stone, and earth, with 10-foot walls around a compound 50 feet square.[4] It mounted six saker cannons and three smaller guns.[7] A later commander was Captain Richard Davenport, who supervised the post from 1645 until 1665 when he was struck by lightning and killed.[8] His successor was Captain Roger Clap, who commanded the fort from 1665–1686.[7]

On March 21, 1673, the fort was destroyed by fire. It was rebuilt the next year in stone, with 38 guns and 16 culverins in the four-bastion main fort, along with six guns in a water battery.[4] Governor Edmund Andros was confined in the fort and sent to England to stand trial in 1689, following the Glorious Revolution in England, in which James II was replaced by William III. In 1692, the fort was renamed "Castle William" in honor of the king and rebuilt. The new work had 54 cannon: 24 9-pounders, 12 24-pounders, and a total of 18 32- and 48-pounders.[4]

From 1701 to 1703, the fort was further expanded. It was designed by Wolfgang William Romer, the chief engineer of British forces in the American colonies,[9] and its armament was nearly doubled to 100 guns. In 1740, a fifth bastion was added mounting 20 42-pounders.[4]

In the years leading up to the American Revolution, Castle William became a refuge for British officials during periods of unrest and rioting in Boston. Violence forced provincial leaders and British soldiers to take shelter within the fort in the wake of events such as the Stamp Act crisis in 1765 and the Boston Massacre in 1770.[6] In September 1765, the stamps to be issued under the Stamp Act were kept at the fort.[4]

As the American Revolution erupted in 1775, American forces quickly commenced the Siege of Boston, and British forces made Castle William their primary stronghold. It was not until the Continental Army led by George Washington managed the fortification of Dorchester Heights that Castle William was threatened and the British evacuated Boston in March 1776. Before leaving Castle William, the British set fire to the fort, damaging it and its ordnance as best they could.[10]

During the Revolutionary War, a fort called Fort Independence was built on Point Allerton in Hull, Massachusetts. In 1797, the name was transferred to the former Castle William, apparently leaving the fort in Hull without a name. That fort fell into disuse after the War of 1812. The site in Hull was named Fort Revere with a new fort built in the late 19th century.[11]

Fort Adams

A re-built Castle William, also known at that time as Fort Adams, shortly after the American Revolution

After it was evacuated, the fort was quickly re-built by American forces in 1776. Although still referred to, at times, as Castle William, the fort was officially known as Fort Adams in the years following the Revolution. In 1785, the legislature of Massachusetts designated the fort as a prison, in which capacity it served until 1805.[12]

On 7 December 1797 (1799 in some sources), the fort was renamed Fort Independence during a ceremony attended by President John Adams.[13] The following year, the fortification and the island were turned over to the United States government.[12] The fort was re-built and expanded in 1800-1803 under the first system of US fortifications (some sources place it in the second system), as designed by French-born military engineer Jean Foncin.[14][15][16] The Secretary of War's report on fortifications for December 1811 describes the fort as "...a regular pentagon, with bastions of masonry, mounting 42 heavy cannon, with two [additional] batteries for six guns...".[17] During the War of 1812, a squadron of the British Royal Navy repeatedly captured American merchant and fishing vessels in Massachusetts Bay; however, they never attempted an attack on the port of Boston owing largely to the strength of Fort Independence.[18] Colonel John Breck, namesake of Brecksville, Ohio, was the Commandant of Fort Independence during the War of 1812.

Existing structure

Fort Independence map in 1883 study for a plan of Pleasure Bay
Fort Independence[19]

Work on the present fort was to begin in 1833 under the third system of US fortifications, supervised by Colonel Sylvanus Thayer, one of the nation's leading military engineers of the time. However, commencement was delayed until 1836 due to funding problems cause by an inflation spike.[20] The new fort would have walls 30 feet (9.1 m) high and 5.5 feet (1.7 m) thick. It was constructed primarily out of granite from Rockport, Massachusetts. The re-built fort was substantially complete by 1848, although repairs and other work continued until 1861.[20] At the height of its strength during the American Civil War, the fort mounted 96 cannon, some of which were 15-inch Rodman guns capable of firing a 450-pound shot more than 3 miles (4.8 km).[21][22] A small part of Castle William's brick structure remains in the rear portion of the present fort, but is covered up by subsequent stonework.[9]

Flag claimed to have flown over Fort Independence in the late 18th century.[23]

At the start of the Civil War in 1861, Fort Independence was garrisoned by the Fourth Battalion Massachusetts Volunteer Militia. The battalion set the fort in order and were trained in infantry and artillery drill, eventually forming the nucleus of the 24th Regiment Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry. At least two other infantry regiments were trained at Fort Independence during the Civil War—the 11th Massachusetts and the 13th Massachusetts.[24]

Following the Civil War, Fort Independence gradually fell out of use, as its importance was reduced by the larger Fort Warren which had also been constructed under the direction of Sylvanus Thayer. In the 1880s, landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted designed a series of parkways and parks in Boston known as the Emerald Necklace. Olmsted had originally envisioned a parkway to be known as the Dorchesterway that would connect Castle Island (via a new earthen causeway) to the rest of the Emerald Necklace. The Dorchesterway was never realized; however, the city of Boston did undertake a large-scale project in the 1890s to create a park-like environment around Fort Independence. In 1890, Castle Island (excluding the fort) was ceded by the United States government. The city of Boston commenced filling the marshes separating Castle Island from South Boston in 1890 with the intention of creating green space and promenades. The process was finished in the 1920s and Castle Island ceased to be an island. The fort itself was ceded by the federal government to the city of Boston in 1908.[25]

Castle Island and Fort Independence commanding the approach to modern Boston Harbor

In 1898, during the Spanish–American War, the U.S. government briefly reclaimed Castle Island, however it was quickly returned to the city of Boston in 1899. The military again took control of Fort Independence during World War I and World War II and anti-aircraft guns were added. During World War I, the fort was used primarily as a depot for small arms ammunition and during World War II, it was used by the United States Navy as a degaussing station for de-magnetizing the hulls of ships. At the close of both conflicts, the fort was promptly returned to the custody of the city of Boston.[26]

In 1962, the U.S. government permanently deeded Castle Island and Fort Independence to the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.[25] It is now overseen by the Massachusetts Department of Conservation and Recreation and the non-profit Castle Island Association. Over the course of its history, a shot was never fired in anger from Fort Independence by United States forces.[2]

Edgar Allan Poe and a duel

A persistent, though mostly apocryphal, story involving Fort Independence was allegedly the inspiration behind one of Edgar Allan Poe's most well known works. A monument outside the west battery of the fort marks the former site of the grave of Lieutenant Robert F. Massie, who was killed in a sword duel with Lieutenant Gustavus Drane at the fort on December 25, 1817.

According to folklorist Edward Rowe Snow, Massie was so popular with the soldiers stationed at Fort Independence that they took out their frustration on his killer, Lieutenant Drane, by walling him up within a vault in the fort. Edgar Allan Poe, while serving with the 1st United States Artillery Regiment at Fort Independence in 1827, purportedly heard the tale and was inspired by it, according to Snow, to write "The Cask of Amontillado".[27]

The legend that purportedly inspired Poe is not, however, entirely accurate. The duel did, in fact, take place, but the victor, Lieutenant Drane, was not murdered by the fort's soldiers. Drane, instead, continued in his military career, was later promoted to the rank of captain and died on active duty in 1846. After World War II, Lieutenant Massie's remains were moved to the Fort Devens Cemetery near the town of Ayer.[28]

Fort Independence makes an appearance in the post-apocalyptic video game Fallout 4. It was once the headquarters of the Minutemen faction before it was taken over by a Mirelurk Queen, with the Minutemen being driven out. The player has the option of retaking the fort and turning into a possible settlement location by defeating the queen.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. March 13, 2009.
  2. ^ a b Wilson, 312.
  3. ^ Fort Constitution at NorthAmericanForts.com
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i Roberts, pp. 402-404
  5. ^ Massachusetts Department of Conservation and Recreation
  6. ^ a b Wilson, 313.
  7. ^ a b Shurtleff, 478.
  8. ^ Shurtleff, 490.
  9. ^ a b Shurtleff, p. 493
  10. ^ Kales, 49.
  11. ^ Fort Independence (1) at American Forts Network
  12. ^ a b Shurtleff, 495–496.
  13. ^ The Fort Adams name was then used for a fort in Newport, Rhode Island.
  14. ^ Fort Independence (2) at American Forts Network
  15. ^ Fort Independence at FortWiki.com
  16. ^ Parkman, p. 10
  17. ^ Wade, p. 242
  18. ^ Kales, 57.
  19. ^ Lossing, Benson (1868). The Pictorial Field-Book of the War of 1812. Harper & Brothers, Publishers. p. 236. ISBN 9780665291364.
  20. ^ a b Parkman, pp. 19-20
  21. ^ Wilson, 315.
  22. ^ Weaver, pp. 111–114
  23. ^ malegislature.gov https://malegislature.gov/VirtualTour/Artifact/8. Retrieved 2021-04-22. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  24. ^ Kales, 76.
  25. ^ a b Seasholes, 326.
  26. ^ Kales, 111 and 123.
  27. ^ Wilson, 317.
  28. ^ Heitman, Historical Register and Dictionary of the United States Army 1789 - 1903.

References