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Chronology of the Nine Month Siege of Boston, June 17, 1775 to March 17, 1776

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  The Boston Daily Globe published a nine month chronology of the Siege of Boston in its March 17, 1910 edition of the paper. "Evacuation day is written large in the history of the United States, but the people of Boston who celebrate that day now could better appreciate what it meant to the inhabitants of Boston in 1776 if they realize the seriousness of the events which led up to the evacuation by the British," wrote the Globe. "For months, the patriots and their families had been subjected to all the horrors of war, and they lived through every kind of discomfort, from the Battle of Bunker Hill, June 17, 1775, until the British fleet dropped down the harbor to Nantasket roads. The siege continued for 273 days, or until the following March 17." The chronology gives a weekly and sometimes daily account of the key episodes of the Siege of Boston and the lead up to Evacuation Day on March 17, 1776, which is still celebrated annually at the Dorchester Heights Monumen...

Eunice Kennedy Shriver, Founder of the Special Olympics

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  Eunice Shriver and Special Olympian   Eunice Kennedy Shriver , sister of President John F. Kennedy, was a leader in the field of intellectual disability and founder of the Special Olympics . Born at the Kennedy family home on Abbotsford Road in Brookline, MA on July 20, 1921, she was the fifth child and third daughter of Rose and Joseph Kennedy’s nine children.  She began her career as a social worker for women prisoners and juvenile offenders, and in 1957 headed up the Joseph P. Kennedy Foundation, dedicated to improving the way society deals with mental retardation. Her sister Rosemary had an intellectual disability, and that experience shaped Eunice's conviction that if people with intellectual disabilities had the same opportunities and experiences as everyone else, they could accomplish far more than anyone ever thought possible.  Eunice put that vision into action in 1962 by inviting young people with intellectual disabilities to a summer day camp she hosted ...

Irish Connections to Castle Island in South Boston

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Castle Island in South Boston  Historic Castle Island dates to 1634, when early Puritan settlers built a fort with mud walls.    During the American Revolution it was called Fort William, and was a key outpost for British troops during the  Siege of Boston, which ended on March 17, 1776.   The earliest reference to the Irish occurred in the 1770s, when several Irish regiments in the British Army were stationed here.  Among them were the 14th and 29th Irish Regiment, whose soldiers were involved in the  Boston Massacre  as well as the Battle of Bunker Hill .  In 1799, U.S. President John Adams changed the name from Fort Williams to  Fort Independence .   Between 1834 and 1851, Fort Independence was rebuilt as a pentagonal five-bastioned, granite fort built. L ocated at 2010 William J. Day Boulevard, it  is open to the public for tours, and is part of a beautiful outdoor setting.  See  National Park Service  for de...

Boston Irish Sculptor Joseph Milmore Died in Geneva, Switzerland on January 10, 1886

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Joseph Milmore was the model for the Sailor statue on the Soldiers & Sailors Monument,  Boston Common    Joseph Milmore (1841-1886), a preeminent sculptor and expert stone carver based in Boston, died in Geneva, Switzerland on January 10, 1886 at age 46, while traveling in Europe with his wife, Mary Longfellow. He contracted pleurisy and was bedridden for several weeks before his death. His remains were sent back to Boston, where he was buried at the Milmore family plot in Forest Hills Cemetery, Jamaica Plain. Born in Sligo, Ireland in October 1842, Joseph and his four brothers emigrated to Boston in 1851 with their widowed mother, where they lived on Common Street. Joseph apprenticed in Boston as a cabinet maker, took up wood carving and then began carving in marble and granite, eventually becoming an expert carver. Martin Milmore Though his career, Joseph worked alongside his famous younger brother Martin Milmore (1844-1883), who received dozens of commissio...

Boston Patriot Henry Knox Arrives at Fort Ticonderoga on December 6, 1775 to Transport 59 Canons Back to Boston

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  Image Courtesy of Wikipedia  On December 5, 1775, Boston bookseller and young patriot Henry Knox (1750-1806) arrived at Fort Ticonderoga in New York, to transport 59 cannons and assorted artillery and ammunition back to Boston to use against the British forces who had captured the town. Knox was the mastermind and commander of what became known as the Noble Train of Artillery, a 300 mile trek across a frozen landscape in the dead of winter. Knox and his men dragged the arsenal across hills and mountains, frozen lakes and fields, on boats and sleds, with horse and oxen, through dozens of small villages in eastern New York and across all of Massachusetts until they arrived at their destination. His younger brother William Knox, age 19, was also on the expedition. Knox and his team of patriots, which included his youngest brother John, dragged the cannons across the frozen landscape of eastern New York and western Massachusetts, finally arriving in Cambridge on January 24, 177...

On the Eve of the 1929 Great Depression, One Million Believers Descend on Holy Cross Cemetery in Malden, Praying for a Miracle

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Martha Clark Cured at Holy Cross Cemetery. Photo by Leslie Jones Was it the power of suggestion, or the power of faith? In1929, just as the Wall Street Stock Market Crash devastated the country's financial stability and led to the Great Depression, rumors began to spread around Boston that a gravesite at Holy Cross Cemetery in Malden, MA was the source of miracles taking place. It was the gravesite of Father Patrick Power, who was born in Bantry, Co. Cork, Ireland in 1844. After his parents died in the Irish Famine, Power was sent to Boston to live with relatives. He was ordained a priest in 1867 at Holy Cross Cathedral and was popular among his congregation. A frail person all his life, Power died of phthisis at age 25 on December 8, 1869. Sixty years later, he became the source of hope for scores of faithful Catholics, and within days, hundreds of believers began showing up at the cemetery, hoping for a miracle for themselves or their loved ones. "From Boston, from all New....

Bunker Hill Monument Association Issues an RFP for Architectural Rendering of the Bunker Hill Monument

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  The committee of the Bunker Hili Monument Association issued a Request for Proposals to the Bunker Hill Monument being planned in Charlestown Massachusetts, according to an advertisement in the Vermont Journal dated November 21, 1825. The proposal offered "a premium of $100 for the best model of a monumental structure or column, 220 feet in height, to be built of hewn granite." The committee stipulated that "the proposals should contain two plans; one, the architectural plan and elevation of the work, with a suitable scale; vertical and horizontal sections of the interior; particular statements of the proportions and magnitudes of the members; and if a column, drawings of the ornamental portions of the pedestal; the other (plan) a handsomely finished prospective communications view be of the forwarded work."  Edward Everett was the signatory. But even as the request for proposals had gone out, the Committee had already decided that architect Solomon Willard was th...