Archive for May 13th, 2011

May 13th, 2011

May 13, 1861: Ben Butler seizes Baltimore

by DickH

Federal Hill

Less than a month after the Lowell-based Sixth Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry Regiment had to fight its way through a pro-secessionist mob in Baltimore to make it through to Washington, Ben Butler acted decisively and on his own initiative to wrest that key city away from the rebel sympathizers, putting it squarely under the control of the Union Army. On a very rainy May 13, 1861, Butler loaded the Sixth Regiment and part of the Eighth New York plus a couple of cannon onto a train in Washington and quietly rolled northward until the train eased into Camden Station. Rather than go to the north of the inner harbor to the site of the most important government buildings (and also the site of the April 18th riot), Butler led his men around the southern edge of the harbor to high ground that overlooked the city from across the harbor. With the driving rain keeping so many inside, Butler and the Lowell soldiers were able to ascend Federal Hill (shown above) and hastily construct a fort atop it. When the city awoke the next morning, the sight of a mammoth US flag flying over the hill was stunning as was the dug in cannon pointed at the heart of Baltimore. The pro-secessionist forces quickly crumbled and Butler made full use of the President’s suspension of the right to obtain a Writ of Habeas Corpus to arrest all pro-southern government officials, imprisoning them in nearby Fort McHenry.

On May 13, 1861, Butler acted without orders. His initiative served the Union well in this situation, for Baltimore was never again a problem for the Union supply line.

May 13th, 2011

UML’s Talty Talks About St. Patrick Church Archeological Dig at PA

by Marie

Rosary found at the dig site of the Irish settlement in Lowell’s Acre section on St. Patrick’s Church property.

Reconnaissance Excavation in Lowell, MA: Unearthing Irish History Start Date: May 17 7:00 PM

Phillips Academy in Andover, Massachusetts

This event is open to the public

The Massachusetts Archaeological Society’s Northeast Chapter will host speaker Dr. Frank Talty at Kemper Auditorium. The meeting will begin with Chapter business and then the speaker will follow shortly thereafter.

A team of 30 Irish workers was hired in 1822 to work on the widening of the Pawtucket Canal in Lowell, MA. By 1830, a community of 400 Irish residents settled on the site where St. Patrick’s Church was constructed. This presentation will discuss the results of excavation in 2010 by UMass Lowell students and archaeologists from Queen’s University in Northern Ireland.

Dr. Frank Talty is Director of Academic Programs and Co-Director of the Center for Irish Partnerships at the University of Massachusetts, Lowell.

May 13th, 2011

City Lights

by DickH

City Lights by Tony Sampas

May 13th, 2011

Lowell Superior Courthouse, New Elevator

by Tony

The new elevator at the Lowell Superior Courthouse has been operational for over a week now. The interior design blends well with the older buildings that house it.