Old North Church

Missing image
North_End,_Boston.jpg
Image of the North End, Boston neighborhood. The Old North Church is at center, a Big Dig vent building is near the bottom, and the green Tobin Bridge over the Mystic River is at the top.
Contents

Location

The Old North Church, officially called "Christ Church", is located at 193 Salem Street in the North End of Boston, Massachusetts.

General Information

The church is a mission of the Episcopal Diocese of Massachusetts. The Old North Church is the oldest active church building in Boston and is a National Historic Landmark. Inside the church is a bust of George Washington, which the Marquis de Lafayette reportedly remarked was the best likeness of him he had ever seen.

History

The Old North Church was built in 1723, and was inspired by the works of Christopher Wren, a British architect who was responsible for rebuilding London after the Great Fire.

The Lanterns

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Paul_Revere_Lantern.jpg
Paul Revere's lantern at the Concord Museum

On April 18, 1775, probably a little after 10 P.M., the 191 ft steeple of the Church served a military purpose.

Paul Revere told three Boston Patriots to hang two lanterns in the steeple. These men were the church sexton Robert Newman, who probably displayed the lanterns, Captain John Pulling, who probably helped him carry them up the steeple, and Thomas Bernard, who stood watch for British troops outside the church. The lanterns were displayed to send a warning to Charlestown Patriots across the Charles River about the movements of the British Army. Revere and William Dawes would later deliver the same message to Lexington themselves, but this lantern method was faster, and it was a good back-up plan for communication in case they were captured.

The signal only lasted for a few brief moments to avoid catching the eyes of the British troops occupying Boston, but this was long enough for the message to be received in Charlestown. They had kept someone looking at the steeple all night.

Missing image
Boston_1775.jpg
The land and water routes out of Boston are shown in this detail from a map drawn later that year to depict the Siege of Boston.

The meaning of two lanterns has been memorized by countless American schoolchildren for generations.

"One if by land, and two if by sea."

is from Longfellow's poem, "Paul Revere's Ride." One lantern was to notify Charlestown that the British Army would march over Boston Neck and the Great Bridge, and two were to notify them that the troops were taking boats across the Charles to land near Phips farm. After receiving the signal, the Charlestown Patriots sent out a rider to Lexington, but this rider did not reach his destination and his identity has disappeared from history. He was the one who might have been captured by a British patrol.

But the warning was delivered miles away to dozens of towns, first by Revere and Dawes on horses, and then by other men on horses and men who rang church bells and town bells, beat drums, and shot off warning guns. Revere didn't really say "The British are coming!" because most of the people in Massachusetts still thought of themselves as British. But he did say "The Regulars are coming out!" (or something similar) to almost every house along the way to Lexington after he felt safe from that British patrol. See the Battle of Lexington and Concord and Paul Revere's Ride by David Hackett Fischer ISBN 0195088476.

Steeple Damage

The original steeple of the Old North Church was destroyed by a hurricane. The church is now 175 feet tall.

External link

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