'Deer Island' is part of the
Boston Harbor Islands National Recreation Area. Although still an island by name, Deer Island has in fact been connected to the mainland since the former
Shirley Gut channel, which once separated the island from the town of
Winthrop, was filled in by a
hurricane in 1938. Today Deer Island is best known as the location of the
Deer Island Waste Water Treatment Plant, whose 150
foot tall egg-like
sludge digesters are major harbor landmarks.
[1][2]
The island has a permanent size of 185
acres, plus an
intertidal zone of a further 80 acres. Two-thirds of the island's area is taken up with the waste water plant, which treats sewage from 43 nearby cities and towns, and is the second largest such plant in the
United States. The remainder of the island consists of park land surrounding the treatment plant, and offers walking, jogging, sightseeing, picnicking, and fishing.
[1][2]
It was once leased to
Sir Thomas Temple (1614-1674)
[5], a British proprietor and governor of Nova Scotia, and a descendent of the renowned
Lady Godiva of
Coventry.
[6] [7] Sir Thomas Temple was also the uncle of
John Nelson (1654-1734), a New England trader and statesman, who owned neighboring
Long Island in Boston Harbor which at one time was also known as "Nelson's Island".
Over the years, Deer Island has had several different uses. During
King Philip's War in the
1670s, it was used as a place of
internment. Christian
"praying Indians" were moved from
Marlborough and
Natick under the auspices of
John Eliot, the minister of
Roxbury, mostly to Deer Island, but at least one colony was sent to Long Island.
[8]
During the winter of 1675-76 some 500
American Indians were held on the island and, without adequate food or shelter, many died. In the middle of the
19th century, the island was the landing point for thousands of refugees from the
Irish Potato Famine, many sick and poverty-stricken.
In 1847, a hospital was established to treat incoming immigrants, and during the following two years approximately 4,800 men, women, and children were admitted. Many recovered and went on to new lives, but more than 800 died.
In 1850, an
almshouse was built to house
paupers. It became the Suffolk County jail and is mentioned in
Sylvia Plath's poem "Point Shirley."
The first sewage treatment plant was constructed on Deer Island in the late 19th century, and expanded in the 1960s. The current plant dates from the 1990s.
[2]
References
1. Islands You Can Visit - Deer Island
2. Deer Island Factsheet
3. Islands You Can Visit - Deer Island
4. Deer Island Factsheet
5. Temple, Thomas, 1614-1674. Correspondence concerning Nova Scotia: Guide.
Houghton Library, Harvard College Library
6. cf. "The Islands of Boston Harbor", in "Some Events of Boston and Its Neighbors", Chapter 4, printed for the State Street Trust Company, Boston, Massachusetts, 1917."Deer Island was so called because deer often swam over from the mainland when chased by the wolves from Boston Neck. It was granted to Boston in 1634, and its use is too well known to require any description. It was leased at one time to Sir Thomas Temple, who was a descendant of Lady Godiva of Coventry fame, a rather curious relation to history for one of our islands to bear. During King Philip’s War Massachusetts confined many Christian Indians in this bleak spot, and John Eliot often visited and comforted them. It is owned by Boston, the State of Massachusetts, and the United States Government."
7. Sir Thomas Temple and early New England coinage, from "First New England Coinage", in "Some Events of Boston and Its Neighbors", Chapter 7, printed for the State Street Trust Company, Boston, Massachusetts, 1917."It is related that not long after the starting of the mint Charles II in great wrath questioned Sir Thomas Temple, the first agent officially despatched by the General Court to London, as to why this Colony presumed to invade His Majesty’s rights by coining money."
8. cf. Winsor and Jewett, "The Memorial History of Boston", 1880, pp.320-1."And by another vote, Eliot's colony of praying Indians at Natick were removed to Deer Island in Boston harbor, with the consent of Mr. Shrimpton who owned it. ... Another colony of friendly Indians and prisoners were afterwards sent to Long Island, in the harbor."
9. Deer Island Factsheet
Bibliography
★
"Some Events of Boston and Its Neighbors", printed for the State Street Trust Company, Boston, Massachusetts, 1917.
★
"The Islands of Boston Harbor", in "Some Events of Boston and Its Neighbors", Chapter 4, printed for the State Street Trust Company, Boston, Massachusetts, 1917.
★ Winsor, Justin, Jewett, C.F., "The Memorial History of Boston Including Suffolk County, Massachusetts. 1630-1880", 1880.
[1]
External links
★
Deer Island web page, with visitor information.