Middlesex Fells Climbing Club

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Lost Boston
04/29/2026

Lost Boston

Incredible photo
04/23/2026

Incredible photo

Throwback Thursday!

Two old industries of Medford . . .
Riverside Avenue from Medford Square. - Notice the pipe (looks white in the middle background of the picture) over Riverside Avenue that carried molasses to a warehouse and boats for distribution. (Photograph - circa 1870. - From the Charlotte and William Bloomberg Medford Public Library local history collection. Medford, Massachusetts.)

Cutting edge of tourism.Respect!
04/22/2026

Cutting edge of tourism.
Respect!

The Lexington Visitors Center has just launched something truly exciting, and we think our community will love it!
iREV is a brand-new virtual reality experience located right on the historic Lexington Battle Green. Led by a guide in Colonial dress, the 20-minute experience lets visitors wear VR headsets and watch the Battle Green transform, revealing the Meeting House and the Belfry exactly as they appeared in the Revolutionary era. Tours starting on May 1st, 2026.
Tours run daily May through October, and on select dates in November. Open to the public and groups. Learn more and book your tickets at tourlexington.us. Tag a friend who would love this! 👇

It’s here!
04/08/2026

It’s here!

Preach.John Stark is another facet to that story.And John Brooks
02/20/2026

Preach.
John Stark is another facet to that story.
And John Brooks

On this day in 1726, William Prescott is born in Groton, Massachusetts. He is best known for his role in the Battle of Bunker Hill.

You may remember that Americans besieged the British in Boston following the Battles of Lexington and Concord in April 1775. A few months into the siege, Americans became worried that British General Thomas Gage might try to possess the Charlestown peninsula.

They decided to beat Gage to the punch.

On June 16, Prescott was thus told to proceed “to Bunker Hill, and build such fortifications as he and Colonel Gridley [an engineer] . . . should judge best adapted to its defence, and as could be put in a condition to protect his men the next morning.” About 1,200 men were put under Prescott’s command.

Confusingly, Prescott and his men did not fortify Bunker Hill that night. They fortified nearby Breed’s Hill instead. Historian Nathaniel Philbrick explains: “To place a fort overlooking Charlestown on Breed’s Hill—right in the figurative face of the British—was an entirely different undertaking than had been ordered by the Committee of Safety. Instead of a defensive position, this was an unmistakable act of defiance.”

To this day, no one is quite sure why Prescott’s forces began building on the wrong hill.

Either way, sunrise revealed the difficult situation they’d created for themselves. The fortifications weren’t finished, and they soon saw that they were within firing range of the British warships floating nearby. Not to be intimidated, Prescott jumped up on the redoubt. He strode back and forth, encouraging his men to keep working.

It was a brave thing to do! He was making himself an easy target for British fire.

At about this time, Gage was inspecting the American effort through a spyglass. He saw Prescott standing atop the redoubt, and he asked a Loyalist, Abijah Willard, who the man was. Willard recognized Prescott, who happened to be his brother-in-law. “Will he fight?” Gage asked. “Yes, sir.” Willard affirmed. “He is an old soldier and will fight as long as a drop of blood remains in his veins.”

The battle that followed surely proved Willard right.

You’ve doubtless heard the phrase, “Don’t one of you fire until you see the whites of their eyes!” It’s been said that an American officer, possibly Prescott, uttered that command when the British marched on Bunker Hill. The reality was a little less poetic. The real command, if issued, was probably an instruction not to fire until “you see their white half-gaiters.” British soldiers would have been wearing gaiters on their calves.

Either way, the British marched on the hill twice, only to be rebuffed. It wasn’t until the third advance that Americans were forced into a retreat. By then, as Prescott later wrote, “Our Amunition being nearly exausted could keep up only a scattering Fire.” His son later described the final retreat:

“The British had entered the redoubt, and were advancing, when Colonel Prescott ordered a retreat. He was among the last, and before leaving it was surrounded by the enemy who had entered, and had several passes with the bayonet made at his body, which he parried with his sword . . . . His banyan and waistcoat were pierced in several places, but he escaped unhurt.”

The Battle of Bunker Hill was technically a British victory, but only technically. And Prescott was one of the heroes of the day.

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If you enjoy these history posts, please see my note below. :)

Gentle reminder: History posts are copyright © 2013-2026 by Tara Ross. I appreciate it when you use the shar e feature instead of cutting/pasting.

It’s coming!
04/30/2025

It’s coming!

05/30/2024

It’s so surreal looking.

Bam!
12/13/2023

Bam!

In early December 1775, 25-year-old Bostonian Henry Knox was in charge of transporting 59 cannons weighing nearly 60 tons from the Lake Champlain region to George Washington who was in dire need of cannons and other artillery to deal with the British that were under siege in Boston.

Knox arrived with cannons and artillery in January 1776. British Commander William Howe soon realized his position was indefensible and evacuated Boston moving his forces to the British stronghold at Halifax, Nova Scotia on March 17.

The 300-mile trek through the Adirondack Mountains and over the Berkshires to Boston was laden with obstacles. Frozen lakes, that weren’t always as frozen as desired...blizzards with icy winds and deep snow, and when the weather warmed a bit, there were muddy wet trails to haul the heavy load through!

Henry Knox was successful! 57 monuments mark the Knox Cannon Trail – 31 in New York State and 26 in Massachusetts. Researchers have revealed that 29 of the 59 cannons came from Crown Point. Crown Point is the official start of the Knox Cannon Trail and its marker was the last marker placed only recently, - in 2017! The trail markers were installed along the route in 1927 to commemorate the 150th anniversary of the arduous journey.

Pictured is the marker located at Cambridge Commons, Cambridge, MA

Address

489 Winthrop Street
Medford, MA
02155

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