Chronology of the Nine Month Siege of Boston, June 17, 1775 to March 17, 1776
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 Monument at Thomas Park in South Boston.
Revolution 250 Boston is a consortium of organizations celebrating the 250th anniversary of the founding of the nation.
Read about the role of the Irish in the American Revolution.

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