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A national park area
Island Tidbits

. . . or a few Interesting facts


Not only are the Boston Harbor Islands a source of natural beauty and wonder--they're also rich in history and legends, with tales to tell of pirates, shipwrecks, wars, abandoned prisons and even ghosts!

History & Legends

Peddocks Island has a long history of use by American Indians, and then British and American inhabitants.

Boston Light, Little Brewster Island's lighthouse, was the first light station established in the U.S. and remains the only lighthouse staffed by the U.S. Coast Guard.

Gallops Island quartered the Mass. 54th Colored Regiment during the Civil War. Their story was later immortalized in the movie "Glory."

On Georges Island, Fort Warren, used as a prison for captured Confederate soldiers during the Civil War, is said to be inhabited by "The Lady in Black," the ghost of a prisoner's wife.

Lovells Island was the site of a number of notable shipwrecks, most famous of which was the 74-gun French warship Magnifique in 1782.

Once the site of U.S. Naval barracks, Bumpkin Island was used to house German prisoners rescued from the harbor during World War I.

During the Revolutionary War, the U.S. and Great Britain fought The Battle of Grape Island.

Thompson Island, known for its longtime Native American residents, was once a Native American trading post in the early 1600's.

Landscape Architect Frederick Law Olmsted planned a bucolic landscape for Worlds End.

Deer Island was one of several islands used for internment camps for American Indians during King Philip's War, which began in 1675.

A World War II military post on Great Brewster Island included 90 mm rapid-fire guns, searchlight stations, and a command post that aided in controlling the harbor's minefield.

Nature & Wildlife

Some of the slate bedrock that underlies the entire harbor region is visible as an outcrop on the bluff at Grape Island.

Dozens of Great Black-Backed and Herring gulls nest on Gallops Island each spring.

Sea gulls may seem numerous today but, in the 1800s gulls were hunted almost to extinction for their feathers.

Apple and pear trees remain on Bumpkin from the island's agricultural past.

Hundreds of Brant, a small goose, stop on Georges Island each spring and Snowy owls have been seen there during the winter.

Lovells Island has a large population of European hares, introduced during the 1940s and 1950s.

Little Brewster and nearby Shag Rocks offer roosting sites for Cormorants that fish the waters nearby; Cormorants are sometimes called Shags in Britain.

Tidal flats at Worlds End attract thousands of migrating shore birds each autumn.

Marshes on Thompson Island serve as a nursery for fish and shellfish and a stop-over for migrating shore birds in the spring and fall.

Peddocks Island has sand bars, called tomobolos, that connect with Prince's Head; over time this area of the island has eroded greatly.

Fishing for flounder and striped bass is now a favorite pastime off Deer Island, thanks to the new wastewater treatment plant and public concern for a clean harbor.

One hundred-foot bluffs on the Great Brewster Island drumlin offer spectacular views.

 

Metacom (King Philip), son of the Wampanoag Massasoit

photo: beach rose
Official Visitor Guide of the Boston Harbor Islands Partnership - Email Us