The Monoliths (Manchester-by-the-Sea)
Little Rock is a granite monolith on one of the trails. It rests on a small jagged stone, leaving an opening below. A short distance away, other boulders lie perched on the edge of this glaciated upland. Below, in a small shrub swamp, rests thirty-foot-tall Big Rock. Its depth is unknown.
The trail to the site is a one-mile loop that passes both Big and Little rocks. Following long periods of rain the area surrounding Big Rock often floods.
History
In 1874, a group of students named this site to honor Louis Agassiz, the Harvard University professor who first theorized that the rocks that dot New England's landscape were shaped and deposited by glaciers.
Agassiz visited the site and found the erratic physical features fit his hypothesis. Prior to Agassiz's hypothesis, people widely believed that the scattering of rocks throughout New England were the result of Noah's flood. The rock is often used as a type example of a glacial erratic.
The first parcel on the site was donated in 1957. There were subsequent gifts and purchases in 1958, 1960, 1961, 1963, 1964, 1966, 1967 and 2001.
In 2020, The Trustees of Reservations announced plans to change the name of the property, citing what a news report called "increasing public discomfort with the legacy of the property’s namesake". In 2022, the rename was complete.