Spectacle Island is a 114-acre (46 ha) island in Boston Harbor,[1] 4 miles (6.4 km) offshore of downtown Boston, Massachusetts. It is part of the city of Boston. The island has a varied history, and today is a public park with a marina, visitor center, cafe, lifeguarded swimming beach, and five miles of walking trails,[1] forming part of the Boston Harbor Islands National Recreation Area. It is served all year by ferries from Boston, and on weekends and summer weekdays by a shuttle boat to and from nearby islands.[2][3]
Topography
The island was initially composed of two small drumlins connected by a spit, with an approximate size of 49 acres (200,000 m2). The name is believed to derive from its then-resemblance to a pair of spectacles.[4] However, dumping of trash and dirt, together with subsequent landscaping, have resulted in a significantly larger island with a permanent size of 85 acres (340,000 m2), plus an intertidal zone of a further 28 acres (110,000 m2).
The island is now composed of two artificial earth mounds, terraced with retaining walls, roads and newly planted vegetation. With its tallest height above sea level being 157 feet (48 m), Spectacle Island is one of the highest points on Boston Harbor.[2] The island's inner harbor acreage is 114 (46 ha), with 85.5 upland acres (34.6 ha) and 28.4 intertidal acres (11.5 ha).[1]
History
Starting in the early 19th century, the island was used exclusively for its relative remoteness from Boston. A horse rendering plant was built on Spectacle Island in 1857, followed by a city trash incinerator that remained active until 1935. When the incinerator closed, trash was simply dumped on the island for the next thirty years. A bulldozer was supposedly swallowed up by the trash sometime during the 1950s. The island remained a trash dump until the 1990s.[5][6]
In September 1846, Spectacle Island became a pivotal location in the story of George, a freedom seeker escaping from slavery. George was discovered as a stowaway aboard the Ottoman, a ship from New Orleans, in Boston Harbor. Upon this discovery, Captain James Hannum of the Ottoman took George to Spectacle Island under guard. While Captain Hannum stopped at one of the island's hotels for a drink, George seized the opportunity to escape, stealing Hannum's small boat and headed towards South Boston. Captain Hannum quickly realized George's escape and pursued him by boat and on foot. After a two-mile (3 km) chase through cornfields and over fences, Hannum captured George just as he reached a bridge. This event sparked outrage within Boston's abolitionist community, leading to Hannum's arrest on charges of kidnapping. In a desperate bid to return George to enslavement, Captain Hannum transferred him to another ship bound for New Orleans, but abolitionists intercepted Hannum's vessel. Despite a tense confrontation at sea, George's fate remained uncertain.[7]
When the Central Artery/Third Harbor Tunnel Project, or the Big Dig, began work in Boston in 1992, some of the project's excavated dirt and clay was used to resurface the island. The island was covered and built up by dirt, capped with two feet (0.6 m) of clay, and covered with two to five feet (0.6 to 1.5 m) of topsoil. Thousands of trees were planted, and paths, buildings, and a dock were built.
Spectacle Island opened to the public in June 2006 for use as a recreational area with hiking trails, a beach, a visitors' center with cafe, and a marina with 38 boat slips for visitors.[1][11]
Transportation
Spectacle Island is accessible to the public either through a ferry from Long Wharf or to private watercraft at the island's marina. Ferries run from and to Boston as well as from and to Georges Island.[3] The marina was closed for almost two years in the late 2010s due to repairs required as the result of a storm in the winter of 2015. As of July 2017, the marina is open and public moorings are available.
Popular culture
Spectacle Island is featured in the video game Fallout 4.
Spectacle Island is mentioned in the book The Speckled Monster by Jennifer Lee Carrell. It is described as a quarantine island used especially during the smallpox epidemic as a place for ships carrying disease to unload ill passengers.
^Goode, G. Brown (George Brown); Atwater, W. O. (Wilbur Olin) (1880). "A Description of the factory of the Pacific Guano Company, at Wood's Holl, Mass., by Messrs. Crowell and Shiverick, of the Pacific Guano Company, and short-hand notes taken by Mr. H. A. Gill.". American fisheries: a history of the menhaden. New York: Orange Judd. pp. 487–90. Retrieved November 9, 2024. This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.