
This
diagram shows the original dimension of the Shawmut Peninsula. The gray areas marked with the words "New Boston" have since been filled in.
'Shawmut Peninsula' is the
promontory of land on which
Boston, Massachusetts was built. The
peninsula, originally a mere 789 acres
3 in area, is most remarkable for having more than doubled in size due to
land reclamation efforts throughout the
19th century.
Geology and original topography
Like much of the
Massachusetts landscape, the peninsula was shaped by glacial erosion and deposits left by retreating glaciers at the end of the last
ice age.
[1] When Europeans arrived, Shawmut was thickly forested.
The pre-settlement topography of the peninsula was marked by three hills: Copps Hill, in what is now the
North End; Fort Hill, in today's
Financial District; and the Trimountain, today's
Beacon Hill district. Of the three hills, the Trimountain was by far the largest, a steep-sided mass with three summits. Its name was eventually shortened to Tremont. To the south was a narrow
isthmus named
Boston Neck.
English settlement
The name is derived from ''
Mashauwomuk'', an
Algonquin word of uncertain meaning. The first recorded use of "Shawmutt" to describe the peninsula occurs in 1630, by the lone settler
William Blackstone,
[2] in an invitation to
John Winthrop to move the site of Winthrop's colonial settlement to the peninsula from what is now
Charlestown. The Charlestown peninsula lacked a source of fresh water, while the Shawmut peninsula had an "excellent spring" on the north side of what is now
Beacon Hill.
[3]
Land reclamation
These reclaimation projects began in
1820 and continued intermittently until
1900 and created the Boston
neighborhoods of the
South End,
Back Bay, and
Fenway-Kenmore. The
Back Bay Fens, a
freshwater urban wild in the latter area, is a remnant of the
saltmarshes that once surrounded Shawmut Peninsula.
Although this project eliminated the
wetland ecosystem that existed there at the time and would be impossible under modern
environmental regulations, it was considered a great boon to the community for two reasons. Firstly, it eliminated the foul-smelling
tidal flats that had become
polluted with
sewage. Secondly, it created what is now some of the most valuable
real estate in
New England.
Notes
1. MIller, Bradford A., "Digging up Boston: The Big Dig Builds on Centuries of Geological Engineering", GeoTimes, October 2002.
2. Horsford, Eben Norton, ''The Indian Names of Boston, and their Meaning'', John Wilson and Son, Cambridge, MA, University Press, 1886.
3. Shurtleff, Nathaniel B., ''A Topographical and Historical Description of Boston'', printed by request of Boston City Council, Boston, 1871.