MONTEREY FROM INDEPENDENCE HILL
Independence Hill and the
Bishop's Palace were the keys to Monterey's western approach.
After taking the redoubt on the crest of the hill early on September 22, Gen. Worth's men
began
to bombard the fortified Bishop's Palace with a 12-pounder howitzer that they had
disassembled
and dragged up the crest. This view depicts the view from Independence Hill on the
day following
the final battle. At far left in the distance (at the print's border) is the Black
Fort or "Citadel", which
remained in the hands of the Mexican defenders hampering Taylor's operations on the
eastern
side of the city. To the left of the Bishop's Palace, on the plain, are Arista's
palace and garden,
and beyond them the Santa Catarina River. Federation Hill appears at far right.
Frederick Swinton after Daniel Powers Whiting. Toned Lithograph. G. & W. Endicott Co., NY. 1847.
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