Entries tagged as minute man national historical park

June 2025

PARK NEWS

America’s 250th anniversary in the National Park Service

          On the march toward celebrating the sesquicentennial of the signing of Declaration of Independence is the anniversary of the Battle of Bunker Hill, which took place on June 17, 1775.

While this clash between the British and American forces is named for the highest knoll in the hilly terrain of Charlestown, just north of Boston, the combat actually happened on a mound closer to the Charles River, Breed’s Hill.

         In the wake of levies imposed by Great Britain on the American colonies—“taxation without representation”—local militias began stashing guns, ammunition, and other essentials in towns surrounding Boston. Some of these soldiers were known as “minutemen,” ready for battle “at a minute’s notice.”

         When Massachusetts’ royal governor, General Thomas Gage, caught word of this, he sent troops to investigate, leading to the Battle of Lexington and Concord, which I mentioned in my April post.

         This stirred other colonies to action, with New England men—whites, enslaved and free Blacks, and Natives—to gather in Massachusetts, where they expected more encounters with British troops stationed in Boston. They encircled the city, and when they learned the British planned to break through to take the strategic Dorchester Heights to the north and Charlestown Heights to the south, the colonist troops used the cover of darkness to construct an earthen fort atop Breed’s Hill on the night of June 16.

         As dawn broke the next morning, British General William Howe led an assault on the fort, while the British Navy fired off cannon. But the ships couldn’t get close enough to do much good, and the colonists, who knew the boggy terrain much better than their enemies, dug in. Reinforcements arrived to back them up. Howe’s soldiers advanced, and came under heavy fire.

         Howe withdrew, regrouped, and breached the fort, resulting in close combat. The colonists, tired and low on ammunition, retreated. The British chased them as far as Bunker Hill, but neither side mounted any further attack.

         In the two-hour battle, the first major encounter between the two forces, the British had 1,054 causalities, the colonists only an estimated 450. The town of Charlestown was destroyed, but the conflict served to unite the thirteen colonies as never before. Another outcome was the appointment by the Continental Congress, established by American colony governments to organize resistance to British rule, of General George Washington to form and command a Continental Army. I’ll talk about that next month.  

Visit Minute Man and Boston National Historical Parks to learn more about this key battle of the American Revolution. At the former site is a statue of a minuteman, to honor those killed at Lexington and Concord; the latter is where you’ll find the Bunker Hill Memorial, which opened on June 17, 1843.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Flag Day

          Why is Flag Day June 14? This also is tied to the American Revolution. It’s the anniversary of the date in 1777 the Continental Congress officially adopted the Stars and Stripes as our national flag.

         The Park Service’s Star-Spangled Banner National Historic Trail, winding through Washington, D.C., Maryland, and Virigina, is a 560-mile land and water route telling the story of the War of 1812 in the Chesapeake Bay region.

         The flag had a huge role in that war. Along the trail is Fort McHenry National Monument and Historic Shrine where, after that war’s Battle of Baltimore, Francis Scott Key penned a poem called “Defence [sic] of Fort McHenry” (you know, writing “that our flag was still there”). That verse in turn was set to music and retitled “The Star-Spangled Banner.” And we have Ella Virginia Houck Holloway to thank for making that the song we sing with a hand over our hearts. She hounded her congressman for thirteen years to sponsor a bill to make the “Star-Spangled Banner” our national anthem, finally succeeding in 1931.

 

 

 

And who sewed that flag Key saw? Mary Pickersgill, at her Baltimore flag shop.

 

 

 

 

 


This month’s Subpar Parks Review

“Goes on forever” is the take on the Blue Ridge Parkway

          Yes, the 469-mile-long road connecting Shenandoah and Great Smoky Mountains National Parks is part of the Park Service. In fact, according to 2024 statistics,  it was the second-most visited spot among the 433 Park Service units, with 16.7 million visitors, just behind #1, Golden Gate National Recreation Area in California (17.1 million).

          Also known as “America’s favorite drive” and a “museum of the American countryside,” the roadway was constructed during the Great Depression by private contractors, with help from New Deal programs such as the Works Progress Administration, the Emergency Relief Administration, and the Civilian Conservation Corps. Three hundred miles of hiking trails run off the Blue Ridge Parkway, with traces of early European as well as pre-historic settlements.

My article about flags

         My oldest brother, the Latin and Greek scholar, would know this, but I had no idea the study of flags is vexillology, and there’s a North American Vexillogical Association. I had fun writing this 2022 piece for Fodor’s Travel. I also had fun coming up with its alliterative subtitle (“A curious chronicle of peculiar pennants”), and a line in the third paragraph (“These vexillologists voiced vehement views over various vexilla”).

The article's opening photo is from a national park site, which I'm sure you recognize as Mount Rushmore National Memorial in South Dakota. And yes, the flag-flying entrance is pretty cool.

God’s flag

Vexillology comes from the Latin word vexillum, which was a banner, or standard, carried by some Roman soldiers. This signal conveys the idea of a rallying point, a place where troops gather under a leader to prepare for combat. The book of Exodus tells the story of Moses raising his hands as Joshua and his forces battled the Amalekites; as long as he kept his arms up, they prevailed. The Lord then instructed Moses to write down this incident so the Israelites would remember how God fought for them, and also build an altar. Moses called it Jehovah Nissi, which in Hebrew means “The Lord is My Banner” (Exodus 17:12-16).

In the Song of Solomon, the author gushes over his romance with a Shulamite woman. The book also illustrates God’s love for His people, most poignantly in chapter 2, verse 4: “his banner over me is love.” Solomon’s protective love exemplifies Jehovah Nissi’s love for us, especially in Jesus’s sacrifice to save us from our sins.

Rally ‘round that flag, and find rest (Isaiah 11:10).

April 2025

Park News

         For Christmas, my son-in-law got me a Subpar Parks Illustrated National Parks calendar, featuring those with “one-star reviews.” We’re only four months into 2025, but I’ve enjoyed the laughs it’s given me so far:

         January: “It’s just a big mountain of sand” (Great Sand Dunes National Park, Colorado)

         February: “Nothing to do there” (Lake Clark National Park and Preserve, Alaska)

         March: “Pretty ugly” (Mojave National Preserve, California)

         April: “Very very very very muddy; a lot of mud” (Cuyahoga Valley National Park, Ohio)

         I’ll keep you posted on the reviews month by month.

America’s 250th

         A big birthday’s coming up! The National Park Service will hold many events as we approach July 4, 2026.

         This month, the place to be is Boston National Historical Park.  On the evening of April 18-19, 1775, silversmith Paul Revere left his home to warn fellow patriots Samuel Adams and John Hancock the British might be coming to arrest them. Others spread the alarm about the advancing troops, but Revere got all the press, thanks to Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s 1861 poem:

Listen, my children, and you shall hear

Of the midnight ride of Paul Revere,

On the eighteenth of April, in Seventy-five;

Hardly a man is now alive

Who remembers that famous day and year.

         While you’re in the area, also check out the Longfellow House Washington’s Headquarters National Historic Site.

         The Revere house is the oldest standing residential building in downtown Boston. The Park Service partners with the Paul Revere Memorial Association, which operates the home.

         Just outside Boston, visit Minute Man National Historical Park to see where the Revolutionary War began with the Battles of Lexington and Concord (you know, “the shot heard ‘round the world”). Patriots Day is a Massachusetts state holiday, and lots of events are planned.

               

Free Day!

         On the first day of National Parks Week, which this year is Saturday, April 19, entrance fees are waived at any park site that changes admission (the two Boston park sites I mentioned above are free, although some of their partner sites, including the Revere House, do have an admission fee).

For Those Who Love to Read

         You can preorder my fellow Pelican Publishing Group author Mallary Mitchell’s American Civil War romance novel Echoes of Blue and Gray, beginning April 4. A week later, Carol James comes out with a contemporary Christian second-chance romance, Always and Only.

Easter

         “Christ died for our sins according to the Scriptures; He was buried, and He rose again the third day according to the Scriptures” (I Corinthians 15:3-4).

         In this chapter, the apostle Paul goes on to summarize who saw Jesus alive again after His death—a guy named Cephas, the twelve disciples, 500 others, his half-brother James, and then, much later, Paul himself (he doesn’t mention the followers who encountered Him on the road to Emmaus—Luke 24:13-35). After twenty-five years Jesus’s resurrection was still being attested to by living witnesses. If He wasn’t, or if all these people were lying, then the Christian faith is meaningless, and there is no hope of anything beyond death.

         Countless people over the years have doubted the resurrection, and some have written about their disbelief. An oldie but goodie is Who Moved the Stone? A Skeptic Looks at the Death and Resurrection of Christ by Frank Morison (I found it in my local library). A more recent look into the subject is Josh and Sean McDowell’s Evidence that Demands a Verdict: Life-Changing Truth for a Skeptical World.

…And Tax Day (sigh)

         I can’t wait to pay my taxes, said no one ever. But I love the answer Jesus gave to a Pharisee, a member of the most influential Jewish sect at the time, who asked if it was permissible to pay Caesar’s poll-tax, a levy imposed by Rome on every Jew. But the questions was, if they worshipped God, how could they pay tribute to another king?

         Jesus recognized they were trying to trap Him, to get Him to say something that would show either disloyalty to the Jewish faith or to Rome. He replied by asking them to show Him a Roman coin. “Whose is this image?” He queried. The answer, of course, was…Caesar. “Render therefore unto Caesar the things which are Caesar’s; and unto God the things that are God’s” (Matthew 22:15-22).

         Jesus rightly distinguished between political and spiritual responsibilities. Taxes are our civic responsibility, as is submission to law; worship, service and obedience our duty to God.