fbpx
Wikipedia

Battle of Bunker Hill

The Battle of Bunker Hill was fought on June 17, 1775 during the Siege of Boston in the first stage of the American Revolutionary War.[5] The battle is named after Bunker Hill in Charlestown, Massachusetts, which was peripherally involved. It was the original objective of both the colonial and British troops, though the majority of combat took place on the adjacent hill which became known as Breed's Hill.[6][7]

Battle of Bunker Hill
Part of the American Revolutionary War

Death of General Warren at the Battle of Bunker Hill
by John Trumbull
DateJune 17, 1775
Location42°22′34.9″N 71°3′38.8″W / 42.376361°N 71.060778°W / 42.376361; -71.060778
Result See Aftermath
Territorial
changes
The British capture Charlestown Peninsula
Belligerents

United Colonies

 Great Britain
Commanders and leaders
William Prescott
Israel Putnam
Joseph Warren 
John Stark
William Howe
Thomas Gage
Sir Robert Pigot
James Abercrombie 
Henry Clinton
Samuel Graves
John Pitcairn 
Strength
~2,400[1] 3,000+[2]
Casualties and losses
115 killed,
305 wounded,
30 captured (20 POWs died)
Total: 450[3]
19 officers killed
62 officers wounded
207 soldiers killed
766 soldiers wounded
Total: 1,054[4]
class=notpageimage|
Location within Massachusetts

On June 13, 1775, the leaders of the colonial forces besieging Boston learned that the British were planning to send troops out from the city to fortify the unoccupied hills surrounding the city, which would give them control of Boston Harbor. In response, 1,200 colonial troops under the command of William Prescott stealthily occupied Bunker Hill and Breed's Hill. They constructed a strong redoubt on Breed's Hill overnight, as well as smaller fortified lines across the Charlestown Peninsula.[8]

By daybreak of June 17, the British became aware of the presence of colonial forces on the Peninsula and mounted an attack against them. The Americans repulsed two British assaults, with significant British casualties; the British captured the redoubt on their third assault, after the defenders ran out of ammunition. The colonists retreated over Bunker Hill, leaving the British[9] in control of the Peninsula.[10]

The battle was a tactical victory for the British,[11][12] but it proved to be a sobering experience for them; they incurred many more casualties than the Americans had sustained, including many officers. The battle had demonstrated that inexperienced militia were able to stand up to regular army troops in battle. Subsequently, the battle discouraged the British from any further frontal attacks against well defended front lines. American casualties were much fewer, although their losses included General Joseph Warren and Major Andrew McClary, the final casualty of the battle.[13]

The battle led the British to adopt a more cautious planning and maneuver execution in future engagements, which was evident in the subsequent New York and New Jersey campaign. The costly engagement also convinced the British of the need to hire substantial numbers of Hessian auxiliaries to bolster their strength in the face of the new and formidable Continental Army.

Geography

 
1775 map of the Boston area (contains some inaccuracies)

Boston was situated on a peninsula[a] at the time and was largely protected from close approach by the expanses of water surrounding it, which were dominated by British warships. In the aftermath of the battles of Lexington and Concord on April 19, 1775, the colonial militia of some 15,000 men[14] had surrounded the town and besieged it under the command of Artemas Ward. They controlled the only land access to Boston itself (the Roxbury Neck), but they were unable to contest British domination of the waters of the harbor. The British troops occupied the city, a force of about 6,000 under the command of General Thomas Gage, and they were able to be resupplied and reinforced by sea.[15]

However, the land across the water from Boston contained a number of hills which could be used to advantage. Artillery could be placed on the hills and used to bombard the city until the occupying army evacuated it or surrendered. It was with this in mind that Henry Knox led the noble train of artillery to transport cannon from Fort Ticonderoga.[16]

The Charlestown Peninsula to the north of Boston started from a short, narrow isthmus known as the Charlestown Neck and extended about 1 mile (1.6 km) southeastward into Boston Harbor. Bunker Hill had an elevation of 110 feet (34 m) and lay at the northern end of the peninsula. Breed's Hill had a height of 62 feet (19 m) and was more southerly and nearer to Boston.[17] The American soldiers were at an advantage due to the height of Breed's Hill and Bunker Hill, but it also essentially trapped them at the top.[18][19] The settled part of the town of Charlestown occupied flats at the southern end of the peninsula. At its closest approach, less than 1,000 feet (300 m) separated the Charlestown Peninsula from the Boston Peninsula, where Copp's Hill was at about the same height as Breed's Hill. The British retreat from Concord had ended in Charlestown, but General Gage did not fortify the hills on the peninsula but instead withdrew his troops to Boston, turning the entire Charlestown Peninsula into a no man's land.[20]

 
The Battle of Bunker Hill by Howard Pyle, 1897

British planning

The British received reinforcements throughout May until they reached a strength of about 6,000 men. Generals William Howe, John Burgoyne, and Henry Clinton arrived on May 25 aboard the HMS Cerberus. Gage began planning with them to break out of the city,[21] finalizing a plan on June 12.[22] This plan began with taking the Dorchester Neck, fortifying the Dorchester Heights, and then marching on the colonial forces stationed in Roxbury. Once the southern flank had been secured, the Charlestown heights would be taken, and the forces in Cambridge driven away. The attack was set for June 18.[23]

On June 13, the Committee of Safety in Exeter, New Hampshire notified the Massachusetts Provincial Congress that a New Hampshire gentleman "of undoubted veracity" had overheard the British commanders making plans to capture Dorchester and Charlestown.[24] On June 15, the Massachusetts Committee of Safety decided that additional defenses needed to be erected.[25] General Ward directed General Israel Putnam to set up defenses on the Charlestown Peninsula, specifically on Bunker Hill.[26][27]

Prelude to battle

Fortification of Breed's Hill

 
Array of American forces for the Battle of Bunker Hill

On the night of June 16, colonial Colonel William Prescott led about 1,200 men onto the peninsula in order to set up positions from which artillery fire could be directed into Boston.[28] This force was made up of men from the regiments of Prescott, Putnam (the unit was commanded by Thomas Knowlton), James Frye, and Ebenezer Bridge.[29] At first, Putnam, Prescott, and their engineer Captain Richard Gridley disagreed as to where they should locate their defense. Some work was performed on Bunker Hill, but Breed's Hill was closer to Boston and viewed as being more defensible, and they decided to build their primary redoubt there.[30] Prescott and his men began digging a square fortification about 130 feet (40 m) on a side with ditches and earthen walls. The walls of the redoubt were about 6 feet (1.8 m) high, with a wooden platform inside on which men could stand and fire over the walls.[31][32]

The works on Breed's Hill did not go unnoticed by the British. General Clinton was out on reconnaissance that night and was aware of them, and he tried to convince Gage and Howe that they needed to prepare to attack the position at daylight. British sentries were also aware of the activity, but most apparently did not think it cause for alarm.[33] A sentry on board HMS Lively spotted the new fortification around 4 a.m. and notified his captain. Lively opened fire, temporarily halting the colonists' work. Admiral Samuel Graves awoke aboard his flagship HMS Somerset, irritated by the gunfire that he had not ordered.[34] He stopped it, only to have General Gage countermand his decision when he became fully aware of the situation in the morning. He ordered all 128 guns in the harbor to fire on the colonial position, along with batteries atop Copp's Hill in Boston.[35] The barrage had relatively little effect, as the hilltop fortifications were high enough to frustrate accurate aiming from the ships and far enough from Copp's Hill to render the batteries there ineffective. The shots that did manage to land, however, were able to kill one American soldier and damage the entire supply of water brought for the troops.[36]

The rising sun also alerted Prescott to a significant problem with the location of the redoubt: it could easily be flanked on either side.[33] He promptly ordered his men to begin constructing a breastwork running down the hill to the east, deciding that he did not have the manpower to also build additional defenses to the west of the redoubt.[37]

British preparations

The British generals met to discuss their options. General Clinton had urged an attack as early as possible, and he preferred an attack beginning from the Charlestown Neck that would cut off the colonists' retreat, reducing the process of capturing the new redoubt to one of starving out its occupants. However, he was outvoted by the other three generals, who were concerned that his plan violated the convention of the time to not allow one's army to become trapped between enemy forces.[38] Howe was the senior officer present and would lead the assault, and he was of the opinion that the hill was "open and easy of ascent and in short would be easily carried."[39] General Burgoyne concurred, arguing that the "untrained rabble" would be no match for their "trained troops".[40] Orders were then issued to prepare the expedition.[41]

General Gage surveyed the works from Boston with his staff, and Loyalist Abijah Willard recognized his brother-in-law Colonel Prescott. "Will he fight?" asked Gage. "As to his men, I cannot answer for them," replied Willard, "but Colonel Prescott will fight you to the gates of hell."[42] Prescott lived up to Willard's word, but his men were not so resolute. When the colonists suffered their first casualty, Prescott gave orders to bury the man quickly and quietly, but a large group of men gave him a solemn funeral instead, with several deserting shortly thereafter.[42]

It took six hours for the British to organize an infantry force and to gather up and inspect the men on parade. General Howe was to lead the major assault, driving around the colonial left flank and taking them from the rear. Brigadier General Robert Pigot on the British left flank would lead the direct assault on the redoubt, and Major John Pitcairn would lead the flank or reserve force. It took several trips in longboats to transport Howe's initial forces (consisting of about 1,500 men) to the eastern corner of the peninsula, known as Moulton's Point.[43][44] By 2 p.m., Howe's chosen force had landed.[43] However, while crossing the river, Howe noted the large number of colonial troops on top of Bunker Hill. He believed these to be reinforcements and immediately sent a message to Gage, requesting additional troops. He then ordered some of the light infantry to take a forward position along the eastern side of the peninsula, alerting the colonists to his intended course of action. The troops then sat down to eat while they waited for the reinforcements.[44]

 
The first British attack on Bunker Hill; shaded areas are hills

Colonists reinforce their positions

Prescott saw the British preparations and called for reinforcements. Among the reinforcements were Joseph Warren, the popular young leader of the Massachusetts Committee of Safety, and Seth Pomeroy, an aging Massachusetts militia leader. Both of these men held commissions of rank, but chose to serve as infantry.[43] Prescott ordered the Connecticut men under Captain Knowlton to defend the left flank, where they used a crude dirt wall as a breastwork and topped it with fence rails and hay. They also constructed three small v-shaped trenches between this dirt wall and Prescott's breastwork. Troops that arrived to reinforce this flank position included about 200 men from the 1st and 3rd New Hampshire regiments under Colonels John Stark and James Reed. Stark's men did not arrive until after Howe landed his forces, and thus filled a gap in the defense that Howe could have taken advantage of, had he pressed his attack sooner.[45] They took positions along the breastwork on the northern end of the colonial position. Low tide opened a gap along the Mystic River to the north, so they quickly extended the fence with a short stone wall to the water's edge.[45][46] Colonel Stark placed a stake about 100 feet (30 m) in front of the fence and ordered that no one fire until the British regulars passed it.[47] Further reinforcements arrived just before the battle, including portions of Massachusetts regiments of Colonels Brewer, Nixon, Woodbridge, Little, and Major Moore, as well as Callender's company of artillery.[48]

Confusion reigned behind the Colonial lines. Many units sent toward the action stopped before crossing the Charlestown Neck from Cambridge, which was under constant fire from gun batteries to the south. Others reached Bunker Hill, but then were uncertain where to go from there and just milled around. One commentator wrote of the scene that "it appears to me there never was more confusion and less command."[49] General Putnam was on the scene attempting to direct affairs, but unit commanders often misunderstood or even disobeyed orders.[49][50]

British assault

 
The second British attack on Bunker Hill

By 3 p.m., the British reinforcements had arrived, which included the 47th Regiment of Foot and the 1st Marines, and the British were ready to march.[51] Brigadier General Pigot's force were gathering just south of Charlestown village, and they were already taking casualties from sniper fire from the settlement. Howe asked Admiral Graves for assistance in clearing out the snipers. Graves had planned for such a possibility and ordered a carcass fired into the village, and then sent a landing party to set fire to the town.[52][53] The smoke billowing from Charlestown lent an almost surreal backdrop to the fighting, as the winds were such that the smoke was kept from the field of battle.[54]

General Howe led the light infantry companies and grenadiers in the assault on the American left flank along the rail fence, expecting an easy effort against Stark's recently arrived troops.[55] His light infantry were set along the narrow beach, in column formation, in order to turn the far left flank of the colonial position.[56] The grenadiers were deployed in the center, lining up four deep and several hundred across. Pigot was commanding the 5th, 38th, 43rd, 47th, and 52nd regiments, as well as Major Pitcairn's Marines; they were to feint an assault on the redoubt. Just before the British advanced, the American position along the rail fence was reinforced by two pieces of artillery from Bunker Hill.[57]

Howe had intended the advance to be preceded by an artillery bombardment from the field pieces present, but it was soon discovered that these cannon had been supplied with the wrong caliber of ammunition, delaying the assault. Attacking Breed's Hill presented an array of difficulties. The hay on the hillside had not been harvested, requiring that the regulars marched through waist-high grass which concealed the uneven terrain beneath. The pastureland of the hillside was covered with crisscrossing rail fences hampering the cohesion of marching formations. The regulars were loaded down with gear wholly unnecessary for the attack, and the British troops were overheating in their wool uniforms under the heat of the afternoon sun, compounded by the nearby inferno from Charlestown.[58][59]

The colonists withheld their fire until the regulars were within at least 50 paces of their position. As the regulars closed in range, they suffered heavy casualties from colonial fire. The colonists benefited from the rail fence to steady and aim their muskets, and enjoyed a modicum of cover from return fire. Under this withering fire, the light companies melted away and retreated, some as far as their boats. James Abercrombie, commanding the Grenadiers, was fatally wounded. Pigot's attacks on the redoubt and breastworks fared little better; by stopping and exchanging fire with the colonists, the regulars were fully exposed and suffered heavy losses. They continued to be harried by snipers in Charlestown, and Pigot ordered a retreat after seeing what happened to Howe's advance.[60][61][62]

The regulars reformed on the field and marched out again, this time navigating a field strewn with dead and wounded comrades. This time, Pigot was not to feint; he was to assault the redoubt directly, possibly without the assistance of Howe's force. Howe advanced against Knowlton's position along the rail fence, instead of marching against Stark's position along the beach. The outcome of the second attack was very much the same as the first. One British observer wrote, "Most of our Grenadiers and Light-infantry, the moment of presenting themselves lost three-fourths, and many nine-tenths, of their men. Some had only eight or nine men a company left."[63] Pigot's attack did not enjoy any greater success than Howe, and he ordered a retreat after almost 30 minutes of firing ineffective volleys at the colonial position.[64][65] The second attack had failed.

Meanwhile, confusion continued in the rear of the colonial forces. General Putnam tried with limited success to send additional troops from Bunker Hill to the forward positions on Breed's Hill to support the embattled regiments.[66][67] One colonial observer wrote to Samuel Adams afterwards, "it appears to me that there was never more confusion and less command". Some companies and leaderless groups of men moved toward the field; others retreated. They were running low on powder and ammunition, and the colonial regiments suffered from a hemorrhage of deserters. By the time that the third attack came, there were only 700-800 men left on Breed's Hill, with only 150 in the redoubt.[68][69] Connecticut's Captain John Chester saw an entire company in retreat and ordered his company to aim muskets at them to halt the retreat; they turned about and headed back to the battlefield.[70]

 
The third and final British attack on Bunker Hill

The British rear was also in disarray. Wounded soldiers that were mobile had made their way to the landing areas and were being ferried back to Boston, while the wounded lying on the field of battle were the source of moans and cries of pain.[71] Howe sent word to Clinton in Boston for additional troops. Clinton had observed the first two attacks and sent around 400 men from the 2nd Marines and the 63rd Foot, and followed himself to help rally the troops. In addition to these reserves, he convinced around 200 walking wounded to form up for the third attack.[72]

The third assault was to concentrate squarely on the redoubt, with only a feint on the colonists' flank. Howe ordered his men to remove their heavy packs and leave all unnecessary equipment behind. He arrayed his forces in column formation rather than the extended order of the first two assaults, exposing fewer men along the front to colonial fire.[73] The third attack was made at the point of the bayonet and successfully carried the redoubt; however, the final volleys of fire from the colonists cost the life of Major Pitcairn.[74] The defenders had run out of ammunition, reducing the battle to close combat. The advantage turned to the British, as their troops were equipped with bayonets on their muskets, while most of the colonists were not. Colonel Prescott, one of the last men to leave the redoubt, parried bayonet thrusts with his normally ceremonial sabre.[75] It is during the retreat from the redoubt that Joseph Warren was killed.[76]

The retreat of much of the colonial forces from the peninsula was made possible in part by the controlled withdrawal of the forces along the rail fence, led by John Stark and Thomas Knowlton, which prevented the encirclement of the hill. Burgoyne described their orderly retreat as "no flight; it was even covered with bravery and military skill". It was so effective that most of the wounded were saved;[77] most of the prisoners taken by the British were mortally wounded.[77] General Putnam attempted to reform the troops on Bunker Hill; however, the flight of the colonial forces was so rapid that artillery pieces and entrenching tools had to be abandoned. The colonists suffered most of their casualties during the retreat on Bunker Hill. By 5 p.m., the colonists had retreated over the Charlestown Neck to fortified positions in Cambridge, and the British were in control of the peninsula.[78]

Aftermath

 
Ralph Farnham, one of the last survivors

The British had taken the ground but at a great loss; they had suffered 1,054 casualties (226 dead and 828 wounded), and a disproportionate number of these were officers. The casualty count was the highest suffered by the British in any single encounter during the entire war.[79] General Clinton echoed Pyrrhus of Epirus, remarking in his diary that "A few more such victories would have shortly put an end to British dominion in America."[11] British dead and wounded included 100 commissioned officers, a significant portion of the British officer corps in America.[80] Much of General Howe's field staff was among the casualties.[81] General Gage reported the following officer casualties in his report after the battle (listing lieutenants and above by name):[82]

  • 1 lieutenant colonel killed
  • 2 majors killed, 3 wounded
  • 7 captains killed, 27 wounded
  • 9 lieutenants killed, 32 wounded
  • 15 sergeants killed, 42 wounded
  • 1 drummer killed, 12 wounded

Colonial losses were about 450 in total, of whom 140 were killed. Most of the colonial losses came during the withdrawal. Major Andrew McClary was technically the highest ranking colonial officer to die in the battle; he was hit by cannon fire on Charlestown Neck, the last person to be killed in the battle. He was later commemorated by the dedication of Fort McClary in Kittery, Maine.[83] A serious loss to the Patriot cause, however, was the death of Dr. Joseph Warren. He was the President of Massachusetts' Provincial Congress, and he had been appointed a Major General on June 14. His commission had not yet taken effect when he served as a volunteer private three days later at Bunker Hill.[84] Only 30 men were captured by the British, most of them with grievous wounds; 20 died while held prisoner. The colonials also lost numerous shovels and other entrenching tools, as well as five out of the six cannons that they had brought to the peninsula.[85][86]

Political consequences

When news of the battle spread through the colonies, it was reported as a colonial loss, as the ground had been taken by the enemy, and significant casualties were incurred. George Washington was on his way to Boston as the new commander of the Continental Army, and he received news of the battle while in New York City. The report included casualty figures that were somewhat inaccurate, but it gave Washington hope that his army might prevail in the conflict.[87]

We have ... learned one melancholy truth, which is, that the Americans, if they were equally well commanded, are full as good soldiers as ours.[88]

A British officer in Boston, after the battle

The Massachusetts Committee of Safety sought to repeat the sort of propaganda victory that it won following the battles at Lexington and Concord, so it commissioned a report of the battle to send to England. Their report, however, did not reach England before Gage's official account arrived on July 20. His report unsurprisingly caused friction and argument between the Tories and the Whigs, but the casualty counts alarmed the military establishment, and forced many to rethink their views of colonial military capability.[89] King George's attitude hardened toward the colonies, and the news may have contributed to his rejection of the Continental Congress' Olive Branch Petition, the last substantive political attempt at reconciliation. Sir James Adolphus Oughton, part of the Tory majority, wrote to Lord Dartmouth of the colonies, "the sooner they are made to Taste Distress the sooner will [Crown control over them] be produced, and the Effusion of Blood be put a stop to."[90] About a month after receiving Gage's report, the Proclamation of Rebellion was issued in response. This hardening of the British position also strengthened previously weak support for independence among Americans, especially in the southern colonies.[90]

Gage's report had a more direct effect on his own career. He was dismissed from office just three days after his report was received, although General Howe did not replace him until October 1775.[91] Gage wrote another report to the British Cabinet in which he repeated earlier warnings that "a large army must at length be employed to reduce these people" which would require "the hiring of foreign troops".[92]

Analysis

General Dearborn published an account of the battle in Port Folio magazine years later, after Israel Putnam had died. Dearborn accused General Putnam of inaction, cowardly leadership, and failure to supply reinforcements during the battle, which subsequently sparked a major controversy among veterans of the war and historians.[93][b] People were shocked by the rancor of the attack, and this prompted a forceful response from defenders of Putnam, including such notables as John and Abigail Adams. It also prompted Putnam's son Daniel Putnam to defend his father using a letter of thanks written by George Washington, and statements from Colonel John Trumbull and Judge Thomas Grosvenor in Putnam's defense.[94] Historian Harold Murdock wrote that Dearborn's account "abounds in absurd misstatements and amazing flights of imagination." The Dearborn attack received considerable attention because at the time he was in the middle of considerable controversy himself. He had been relieved of one of the top commands in the War of 1812 due to his mistakes. He had also been nominated to serve as Secretary of War by President James Monroe, but was rejected by the United States Senate (which was the first time that the Senate had voted against confirming a presidential cabinet choice).[95][96][97][98]

Disposition of Colonial forces

 
A historic map of Bunker Hill featuring military notes

The colonial regiments were under the overall command of General Ward, with General Putnam and Colonel Prescott leading in the field, but they often acted quite independently.[99] This was evident in the opening stages of the battle, when a tactical decision was made that had strategic implications. Colonel Prescott and his staff decided to fortify Breed's Hill rather than Bunker Hill, apparently in contravention of orders.[100] The fortification of Breed's Hill was more militarily provocative; it would have put offensive artillery closer to Boston, directly threatening the city.[101] It also exposed the forces there to the possibility of being trapped, as they probably could not properly defend against attempts by the British to land troops and take control of Charlestown Neck. If the British had taken that step, they might have had a victory with many fewer casualties.[102] The colonial fortifications were haphazardly arrayed; it was not until the morning that Prescott discovered that the redoubt could be easily flanked,[33] compelling the hasty construction of a rail fence. Furthermore, the colonists did not have the manpower to defend to the west.[37]

Manpower was a further problem on Breed's Hill. The defenses were thin toward the northern end of the colonial position and could have been easily exploited by the British (as they had already landed), had reinforcements not arrived in time.[45] The front lines of the colonial forces were generally well-managed, but the scene behind them was significantly disorganized, due at least in part due to a poor chain of command and logistical organization. One commentator wrote: "it appears to me there never was more confusion and less command."[49] Only some of the militias operated directly under Ward's and Putnam's authority,[103] and some commanders directly disobeyed orders, remaining at Bunker Hill rather than committing to the defense of Breed's Hill once fighting began. Several officers were subjected to court martial and cashiered after the battle.[104]

Once combat began, desertion was a chronic issue for the colonial troops. By the time of the third British assault, there were only 700-800 troops left, with only 150 in the redoubt.[68] Colonel Prescott was of the opinion that the third assault would have been repulsed, had his forces in the redoubt been reinforced with more men, or if more supplies of ammunition and powder had been brought forward from Bunker Hill.[105] Despite these issues, the withdrawal of the colonial forces was generally well-managed, recovering most of their wounded in the process, and elicited praise from British generals such as Burgoyne.[77] However, the speed of the withdrawal precipitated leaving behind their artillery and entrenching tools.[78]

Disposition of British forces

The British leadership acted slowly once the works were spotted on Breed's Hill. It was 2 p.m. when the troops were ready for the assault, roughly ten hours after the Lively first opened fire. This leisurely pace gave the colonial forces ample time to reinforce the flanking positions that would have otherwise been poorly defended and vulnerable.[106] Gage and Howe decided that a frontal assault on the works would be a simple matter, although an encircling move, gaining control of Charlestown Neck, would have given them a more rapid and resounding victory.[102] However, the British leadership was excessively optimistic, believing that "two regiments were sufficient to beat the strength of the province".[107]

 
View of the Attack on Bunker's Hill with the Burning of Charlestown by Lodge

The artillery bombardment that was to have preceded the assault did not transpire because the field guns had been supplied with the wrong caliber of ammunition.[58] Once in the field, Howe twice opted to dilute the force attacking the redoubt with flanking assaults against the colonial left. The formations that the British used were not conducive to a successful assault, arrayed in long lines and weighed down by unnecessary heavy gear; many of the troops were immediately vulnerable to colonial fire, which resulted in heavy casualties in the initial attacks. The impetus of any British attack was further diluted when officers opted to concentrate on firing repeated volleys which were simply absorbed by the earthworks and rail fences. The third attack succeeded, when the forces were arrayed in deep columns, the troops were ordered to leave all unnecessary gear behind, the attacks were to be at the point of the bayonet,[73] and the flanking attack was merely a feint.[108][109]

Following the taking of the peninsula, the British had a tactical advantage that they could have used to press into Cambridge. General Clinton proposed this to Howe, but Howe declined, having just led three assaults with grievous casualties, including most of his field staff among them.[110] The colonial military leaders eventually recognized Howe as a tentative decision-maker, to his detriment. In the aftermath of the Battle of Long Island (1776), he again had tactical advantages that might have delivered Washington's army into his hands, but he again refused to act.[111]

Historian John Ferling maintains that, had General Gage used the Royal Navy to secure the narrow neck to the Charleston peninsula, cutting the Americans off from the mainland, he could have achieved a far less costly victory. But he was motivated by revenge over patriot resistance at the Battles of Lexington and Concord and relatively heavy British losses, and he also felt that the colonial militia were completely untrained and could be overtaken with little effort, opting for a frontal assault.[112]

"The whites of their eyes"

The famous order "Don't fire until you see the whites of their eyes" was popularized in stories about the battle of Bunker Hill.[citation needed] It is uncertain as to who said it there, since various histories, including eyewitness accounts,[113] attribute it to Putnam, Stark, Prescott, or Gridley, and it may have been said first by one and repeated by the others.[114] It was also not an original statement. The idea dates originally to the general-king Gustavus Adolphus (1594–1632) who gave standing orders to his musketeers "never to give fire, till they could see their own image in the pupil of their enemy's eye".[115] Gustavus Adolphus's military teachings were widely admired and imitated and caused this saying to be often repeated. It was used by General James Wolfe on the Plains of Abraham when his troops defeated Montcalm's army on September 13, 1759.[116] The earliest similar quotation came from the Battle of Dettingen on June 27, 1743, where Lieutenant-Colonel Sir Andrew Agnew of Lochnaw warned the Royal Scots Fusiliers not to fire until they could "see the white of their e'en."[117] The phrase was also used by Prince Charles of Prussia in 1745, and repeated in 1755 by Frederick the Great, and may have been mentioned in histories with which the colonial military leaders were familiar.[118] Whether or not it was actually said in this battle, it was clear that the colonial military leadership were regularly reminding their troops to hold their fire until the moment when it would have the greatest effect, especially in situations where their ammunition would be limited.[119]

Notable participants

 
According to the John Trumbull painting, this flag of New England was carried by the colonists during the battle.
 
This flag, known as the Bunker Hill flag, is also associated with the battle.

A significant number of notable American patriots fought in this battle. Henry Dearborn and William Eustis, for example, went on to distinguished military and political careers; both served in Congress, the Cabinet, and in diplomatic posts. Others, like John Brooks, Henry Burbeck, Christian Febiger, Thomas Knowlton, and John Stark, became well known for later actions in the war.[120][121] Stark became known as the "Hero of Bennington" for his role in the 1777 Battle of Bennington. Free African-Americans also fought in the battle; notable examples include Barzillai Lew, Salem Poor, and Peter Salem.[122][123] Another notable participant was Daniel Shays, who later became famous for his army of protest in Shays' Rebellion.[124] Israel Potter was immortalized in Israel Potter: His Fifty Years of Exile, a novel by Herman Melville.[125][126] Colonel John Paterson commanded the Massachusetts First Militia, served in Shays' Rebellion, and became a congressman from New York.[127] Lt. Col. Seth Read, who served under John Paterson at Bunker Hill, went on to settle Geneva, New York and Erie, Pennsylvania, and was said to have been instrumental in the phrase E pluribus unum being added to U.S. coins.[128][129][130][131] George Claghorn of the Massachusetts militia was shot in the knee at Bunker Hill and went on after the war to become the master builder of the USS Constitution, a.k.a. "Old Ironsides", which is the oldest naval vessel in the world that is still commissioned and afloat.[132][133]

Notable British participants in the battle were: Lt. Col. Samuel Birch, Major John Small, Lord Rawdon, General William Howe, Major John Pitcairn and General Henry Clinton.

Commemorations

John Trumbull's painting, The Death of General Warren at the Battle of Bunker Hill (displayed in lede), was created as an allegorical depiction of the battle and Warren's death, not as an actual pictorial recording of the event. The painting shows a number of participants in the battle including a British officer, John Small, among those who stormed the redoubt, yet came to be the one holding the mortally wounded Warren and preventing a fellow redcoat from bayoneting him. He was friends of Putnam and Trumbull. Other central figures include Andrew McClary who was the last man to fall in the battle.[134]

The Bunker Hill Monument is an obelisk that stands 221 feet (67 m) high on Breed's Hill. On June 17, 1825, the fiftieth anniversary of the battle, the cornerstone of the monument was laid by the Marquis de Lafayette and an address delivered by Daniel Webster.[135][136] The Leonard P. Zakim Bunker Hill Memorial Bridge was specifically designed to evoke this monument.[137] There is also a statue of William Prescott showing him calming his men down.

 
Bunker Hill clipper ship

The National Park Service operates a museum dedicated to the battle near the monument, which is part of the Boston National Historical Park.[138] A cyclorama of the battle was added in 2007 when the museum was renovated.[139]

In nearby Cambridge, a small granite monument just north of Harvard Yard bears this inscription: "Here assembled on the night of June 16, 1775, 1200 Continental troops under command of Colonel Prescott. After prayer by President Langdon, they marched to Bunker Hill." See footnote for picture.[140] (Samuel Langdon, a Congregational minister, was Harvard's 11th president.)[141] Another small monument nearby marks the location of the Committee of Safety, which had become the Patriots' provisional government as Tories left Cambridge.[142] These monuments are on the lawn to the west of Harvard's Littaeur Center, which is itself the west of Harvard's huge Science Center. See footnote for map.[143]

Bunker Hill Day, observed every June 17, is a legal holiday in Suffolk County, Massachusetts (which includes the city of Boston), as well as Somerville in Middlesex County. Prospect Hill, site of colonial fortifications overlooking the Charlestown Neck, is now in Somerville, which was previously part of Charlestown.[144][145] State institutions in Massachusetts (such as public institutions of higher education) in Boston also celebrate the holiday.[146][147] However, the state's FY2011 budget requires that all state and municipal offices in Suffolk County be open on Bunker Hill Day and Evacuation Day.[148]

On June 16 and 17, 1875, the centennial of the battle was celebrated with a military parade and a reception featuring notable speakers, among them General William Tecumseh Sherman and Vice President Henry Wilson. It was attended by dignitaries from across the country.[149] Celebratory events also marked the sesquicentennial (150th anniversary) in 1925 and the bicentennial in 1975.[150][151]

Over the years the Battle of Bunker Hill has been commemorated on four U.S. Postage stamps.[152]

 
 Issue of 1959             Issue of 1975            Issue of 1968                  Issue of 1968
Left stamp depicts Battle of Bunker Hill battle flag and Monument
Left-center, depicts John Trumbull's painting of the battle
Right-center depicts detail of Trumbull's painting
Right depicts image of Bunker Hill battle flag

See also

Notes

  1. ^ 18th century Boston was a peninsula. Primarily in the 19th century, much land around the peninsula was filled, giving the modern city its present geography. See the history of Boston for details.
  2. ^ In 1822, Dearborn wrote an anonymous plea in the Boston Patriot to urge the purchase of the Bunker Hill battlefield, which was listed for sale.[93]

References

  1. ^ Chidsey p. 122 counts 1,400 in the night-time fortification work. Frothingham is unclear on the number of reinforcements arriving just before the battle breaks out. In a footnote on p. 136, as well as on p. 190, he elaborates the difficulty in getting an accurate count.
  2. ^ Chidsey p. 90 says the initial force requested was 1,550, but Howe requested and received reinforcements before the battle began. Frothingham p. 137 puts the total British contingent likely to be over 3,000. Furthermore, according to Frothingham p. 148, additional reinforcements arrived from Boston after the second attack was repulsed. Frothingham, p. 191 notes the difficulty in attaining an accurate count of British troops involved.
  3. ^ Chidsey, p. 104
  4. ^ Frothingham pp. 191, 194.
  5. ^ James L. Nelson, With Fire and Sword: The Battle of Bunker Hill and the Beginning of the American Revolution (2011)
  6. ^ Borneman, Walter R. American Spring: Lexington, Concord, and the Road to Revolution, p. 350, Little, Brown and Company, New York, Boston, London, 2014. ISBN 978-0-316-22102-3.
  7. ^ Hubbard, Robert Ernest. Major General Israel Putnam: Hero of the American Revolution, p. 85, McFarland & Company, Inc., Jefferson, North Carolina, 2017. ISBN 978-1-4766-6453-8.
  8. ^ Hubbard, Robert Ernest. Major General Israel Putnam: Hero of the American Revolution, pp. 85–87, McFarland & Company, Inc., Jefferson, North Carolina, 2017. ISBN 978-1-4766-6453-8.
  9. ^ Withington, Robert (June 1949). "A French Comment on the Battle of Bunker Hill". The New England Quarterly. 22 (2): 235–240. doi:10.2307/362033. ISSN 0028-4866. JSTOR 362033.
  10. ^ Hubbard, Robert Ernest. Major General Israel Putnam: Hero of the American Revolution, pp. 87–95, McFarland & Company, Inc., Jefferson, North Carolina, 2017. ISBN 978-1-4766-6453-8.
  11. ^ a b Clinton, p. 19. General Clinton's remark is an echoing of Pyrrhus of Epirus's original sentiment after the Battle of Heraclea, "one more such victory and the cause is lost".
  12. ^ "Battle of Bunker Hill". Encyclopædia Britannica. Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. December 8, 2016. Retrieved January 25, 2016. Although the British eventually won the battle, it was a Pyrrhic victory that lent considerable encouragement to the revolutionary cause.
  13. ^ Hubbard, Robert Ernest. Major General Israel Putnam: Hero of the American Revolution, pp. 94–95, McFarland & Company, Inc., Jefferson, North Carolina, 2017. ISBN 978-1-4766-6453-8.
  14. ^ Chidsey, p. 72 New Hampshire 1,200, Rhode Island 1,000, Connecticut 2,300, Massachusetts 11,500
  15. ^ Alden, p. 178
  16. ^ Martin, James Kirby (1997). Benedict Arnold: Revolutionary Hero. New York: New York University Press. p. 73. ISBN 978-0-8147-5560-0. OCLC 36343341.
  17. ^ Chidsey p. 91 has a historic map showing elevations.
  18. ^ Withington, Robert (1949). "A French Comment on the Battle of Bunker Hill". The New England Quarterly. 2: 235–240 – via JSTOR.
  19. ^ Adams, Charles Francis (1896). "The Battle of Bunker Hill". The American Historical Review. 1: 401–413 – via JSTOR.
  20. ^ French, p. 220
  21. ^ French, p. 249
  22. ^ Brooks, p. 119
  23. ^ Ketchum, pp. 45–46
  24. ^ Ketchum, p. 47
  25. ^ Ketchum, pp. 74–75
  26. ^ French, p. 255
  27. ^ Hubbard, Robert Ernest. Major General Israel Putnam: Hero of the American Revolution, p. 84, McFarland & Company, Inc., Jefferson, North Carolina, 2017. ISBN 978-1-4766-6453-8.
  28. ^ Frothingham, pp. 122–123
  29. ^ Ketchum, pp. 102, 245
  30. ^ Frothingham, pp. 123–124
  31. ^ Frothingham, p. 135
  32. ^ Hubbard, Robert Ernest. Major General Israel Putnam: Hero of the American Revolution, pp. 87–88, McFarland & Company, Inc., Jefferson, North Carolina, 2017. ISBN 978-1-4766-6453-8.
  33. ^ a b c Ketchum, p. 115
  34. ^ Frothingham, p. 125
  35. ^ Brooks, p. 127
  36. ^ Middlekauff, Robert (2005). The Glorious Cause: The American Revolution, 1763-1789. New York, NY: Oxford University Press. p. 290. ISBN 0-19-516247-1. OCLC 55960833.
  37. ^ a b Ketchum, p. 117
  38. ^ Middlekauff, Robert (2005). The Glorious Cause: The American Revolution, 1763-1789. New York, NY: Oxford University Press. p. 293. ISBN 0-19-516247-1. OCLC 55960833.
  39. ^ Ketchum, pp. 120–121
  40. ^ Wood, p. 54
  41. ^ Ketchum, p. 122
  42. ^ a b Graydon, p. 424
  43. ^ a b c Frothingham, p. 133
  44. ^ a b Ketchum, p. 139
  45. ^ a b c Ketchum, p 143
  46. ^ Chidsey p. 93
  47. ^ Chidsey p. 96
  48. ^ Frothingham, p. 136
  49. ^ a b c Ketchum, p. 147
  50. ^ Hubbard, Robert Ernest. Major General Israel Putnam: Hero of the American Revolution, pp. 92–93, McFarland & Company, Inc., Jefferson, North Carolina, 2017. ISBN 978-1-4766-6453-8.
  51. ^ Ketchum, pp. 152–153
  52. ^ Ketchum, pp. 151–152
  53. ^ Middlekauff, Robert (2005). The Glorious Cause: The American Revolution, 1763-1789. New York, NY: Oxford University Press. p. 296. ISBN 0-19-516247-1. OCLC 55960833.
  54. ^ Frothingham, pp. 144–145
  55. ^ Ketchum, p. 152
  56. ^ Fusillers, Mark Urban p38
  57. ^ Kurtz, Henry I. Men of War: Essays on American Wars and Warriors, p. 31, Xlibris Corporation, 2006.
  58. ^ a b Philbrick, Nathaniel. Bunker Hill: A City, A Siege, A Revolution, p. 219-220, New York: Viking Press, 2013.
  59. ^ Kurtz, p. 29
  60. ^ Ketchum, p. 160
  61. ^ Kurtz, p. 31-33
  62. ^ Frothingham, pp. 141–142
  63. ^ Ketchum, p. 161
  64. ^ Kurtz, p. 33
  65. ^ Ketchum, p. 162
  66. ^ Frothingham, p. 146
  67. ^ Hubbard, Robert Ernest. Major General Israel Putnam: Hero of the American Revolution, p. 92, McFarland & Company, Inc., Jefferson, North Carolina, 2017. ISBN 978-1-4766-6453-8.
  68. ^ a b Kurtz, p. 30-35
  69. ^ Hubbard, Robert Ernest. Major General Israel Putnam: Hero of the American Revolution, pp. 92–95, McFarland & Company, Inc., Jefferson, North Carolina, 2017. ISBN 978-1-4766-6453-8.
  70. ^ Ketchum, pp. 165–166
  71. ^ Ketchum, p. 163
  72. ^ Ketchum, p. 164
  73. ^ a b Kurtz p. 35
  74. ^ Chidsey p. 99
  75. ^ Frothingham, p. 150
  76. ^ Frothingham, p. 151
  77. ^ a b c Ketchum, p. 181
  78. ^ a b Frothingham, pp. 151–152
  79. ^ Brooks, p. 237
  80. ^ Brooks, pp. 183–184
  81. ^ Frothingham, pp. 145, 196
  82. ^ Frothingham, pp. 387–389 lists the officer casualties by name, as well as this summary
  83. ^ Bardwell, p. 76
  84. ^ Ketchum, p. 150
  85. ^ Ketchum, p. 255
  86. ^ Hubbard, Robert Ernest. Major General Israel Putnam: Hero of the American Revolution, pp. 94–96, McFarland & Company, Inc., Jefferson, North Carolina, 2017. ISBN 978-1-4766-6453-8.
  87. ^ Ketchum, pp. 207–208
  88. ^ Ketchum, p. 209
  89. ^ Ketchum, pp. 208–209
  90. ^ a b Ketchum, p. 211
  91. ^ Ketchum, p. 213
  92. ^ Scheer, p. 64
  93. ^ a b Cray, 2001
  94. ^ Cray, Robert E. (2001). "Bunker Hill Refought: Memory Wars and Partisan Conflicts, 1775-1825". Historical Journal of Massachusetts – via Proquest.
  95. ^ Purcell, 2010, pp.164-168
  96. ^ Ketchum, Richard M. The Battle for Bunker Hill, p. 178, The Cresset Press, London, England, 1963.
  97. ^ Murdock, Harold. Bunker Hill, Notes and Queries on a Famous Battle, Kessinger Publishing, LLC, 2010. ISBN 1163174912,
  98. ^ Hubbard, Robert Ernest. Major General Israel Putnam: Hero of the American Revolution, pp. 191–92, McFarland & Company, Inc., Jefferson, North Carolina, 2017 ISBN 978-1-4766-6453-8.
  99. ^ Frothingham, p. 131
  100. ^ Frothingham, p. 19
  101. ^ Hubbard, Robert Ernest. Major General Israel Putnam: Hero of the American Revolution, p. 87, McFarland & Company, Inc., Jefferson, North Carolina, 2017 ISBN 978-1-4766-6453-8.
  102. ^ a b Frothingham, p. 155
  103. ^ Frothingham, pp. 158–159
  104. ^ French, pp. 274–276
  105. ^ Frothingham, p. 153
  106. ^ French, pp. 263–265
  107. ^ Frothingham, p. 156
  108. ^ French, p. 277
  109. ^ Frothingham, p. 148
  110. ^ Frothingham pp. 152–153
  111. ^ Jackson, p. 20
  112. ^ Ferling, 2015, p. 127-129
  113. ^ Lewis, John E., ed. The Mammoth Book of How it Happened. London: Robinson, 1998. Print. P. 179
  114. ^ Hubbard, Robert Ernest. Major General Israel Putnam: Hero of the American Revolution, p. 97, McFarland & Company, Inc., Jefferson, North Carolina, 2017 ISBN 978-1-4766-6453-8.
  115. ^ Joannis Schefferi, "Memorabilium Sueticae Gentis Exemplorum Liber Singularis" (1671) p. 42
  116. ^ R. Reilly, The Rest to Fortune: The Life of Major-General James Wolfe (1960), p. 324
  117. ^ Anderson, p. 679
  118. ^ Winsor, p. 85
  119. ^ French, pp. 269–270
  120. ^ Abbatt, p. 252
  121. ^ Ketchum, pp. 132,165
  122. ^ Woodson, p. 204
  123. ^ Ketchum, p. 260
  124. ^ Richards, p. 95
  125. ^ Ketchum, p. 257
  126. ^ Melville
  127. ^ Biographical Directory of the United States
  128. ^ Buford, 1895, Preface
  129. ^ Marvin, p. 425, 436
  130. ^ "Massachusetts Coppers 1787–1788: Introduction". University of Notre Dame. from the original on November 8, 2007. Retrieved October 9, 2007.
  131. ^ "e pluribus unum FAQ #7". www.treas.gov. Retrieved September 29, 2007.[permanent dead link]
  132. ^ Wheeler, O. Keith (January 30, 2002). "Individual Summary for COL. GEORGE CLAGHORN". Retrieved October 10, 2012.
  133. ^ HMS Victory is the oldest commissioned vessel by three decades; however, Victory has been in dry dock since 1922. . HMS Victory website. Archived from the original on September 24, 2013. Retrieved October 14, 2012.
  134. ^ Bunce, p. 336
  135. ^ Hayward, p. 322
  136. ^ Clary
  137. ^ MTA Bridges
  138. ^ Bunker Hill Museum
  139. ^ McKenna
  140. ^ "Album Archive". Picasaweb.google.com. Retrieved November 19, 2017.
  141. ^ . Archived from the original on January 1, 2013. Retrieved 2013-12-31.
  142. ^ Committee of Safety (American Revolution)
  143. ^ . Map.harvard.edu. Archived from the original on January 6, 2013. Retrieved November 19, 2017.
  144. ^ MA List of legal holidays
  145. ^ Somerville Environmental Services Guide
  146. ^ University of Massachusetts, Boston, observed holidays
  147. ^ Bunker Hill Day closings
  148. ^ "Commonwealth of Massachusetts FY2011 Budget, Outside Section 5". Mass.gov. July 14, 2010. Retrieved August 6, 2010.
  149. ^ See the Centennial Book for a complete description of the events.
  150. ^ Sesquicentennial celebration
  151. ^ New York Times, June 15, 1975
  152. ^ Scotts 2008 United States stamp catalogue

Bibliography

Major sources Most of the information about the battle itself in this article comes from the following sources.

  • Brooks, Victor (1999). The Boston Campaign. Conshohocken, PA: Combined Publishing. ISBN 1-58097-007-9. OCLC 42581510.
  • Chidsey, Donald Barr (1966). The Siege of Boston. Boston, MA: Crown. OCLC 890813.
  • Frothingham, Richard Jr. (1851). History of the Siege of Boston and of the Battles of Lexington, Concord, and Bunker Hill, Second Edition. Boston, MA: Charles C. Little and James Brown. OCLC 2138693.
  • French, Allen (1911). The Siege of Boston. New York: Macmillan. OCLC 3927532.
  • Ketchum, Richard (1999). Decisive Day: The Battle of Bunker Hill. New York: Owl Books. ISBN 0-385-41897-3. OCLC 24147566. (Paperback: ISBN 0-8050-6099-5)
  • Nelson, James L. With Fire and Sword: The Battle of Bunker Hill and the Beginning of the American Revolution (2011) excerpt
  • Philbrick, Nathaniel. Bunker Hill: A City, a Siege, a Revolution (New York: Viking, 2013) excerpt

Minor sources Specific facts not necessarily covered by the major sources come from the following sources.

  • Buford, Mary Hunter (1895). Seth Read, Lieut.-Col. Continental Army; Pioneer at Geneva, New York, 1787, and at Erie, Penn., June, 1795. His Ancestors and Descendants. Boston, Mass. pp. 167 Pages on CD in PDF Format.
  • Bunce, Oliver Bell (1870). The romance of the revolution: being true stories of the adventures, romantic incidents, hairbreath escapes, and heroic exploits of the days of '76. Philadelphia: Porter & Coates. p. 337. OCLC 3714510.
  • Abbatt, William, ed. (1883). The Magazine of American History with Notes and Queries, volume 8. A.S. Barnes. OCLC 1590082.
  • Alden, John R (1989). A History of the American Revolution. Da Capo. ISBN 0-306-80366-6.
  • Anderson, William (1863). The Scottish Nation: Or, The Surnames, Families, Literature, Honours, and Biographical History of the People of Scotland, volume 2. Fullarton. OCLC 1290413.
  • Bardwell, John D (2005). Old Kittery. Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7385-2476-4.
  • Clinton, Henry (1954). Willcox, William B. (ed.). The American Rebellion: Sir Henry Clinton's Narrative of His Campaigns, 1775–1782. Yale University Press. OCLC 1305132.
  • Graydon, Alexander (1846). Littell, John Stockton (ed.). Memoirs of His Own Time: With Reminiscences of the Men and Events of the Revolution. Philadelphia: Lindsay & Blakiston. OCLC 1557096.
  • Ferling, John (2015). Whirlwind, The American Revolution and the War That Won it. Bloomsbury Press, New York, London. ISBN 9781620401736.
  • Hayward, John (1854). A Gazetteer of the United States of America. self published. OCLC 68756962.
  • Jackson, Kenneth T; Dunbar, David S (2005). Empire City: New York Through the Centuries. Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-231-10909-3.
  • Melville, Herman (1855). Israel Potter: his fifty years of exile. G. Routledge. OCLC 13065897.
  • Richards, Leonard L (2003). Shays's Rebellion: The American Revolution's Final Battle. University of Pennsylvania Press. ISBN 978-0-8122-1870-1.
  • Scheer, George F; Rankin, Hugh F (1987). Rebels and Redcoats: The American Revolution Through the Eyes of Those Who Fought and Lived It. Da Capo Press. ISBN 978-0-306-80307-9.
  • Winsor, Justin; Jewett, Clarence F (1882). The Memorial History of Boston: Including Suffolk County, Massachusetts, 1630–1880, Volume 3. James R. Osgood. OCLC 4952179.
  • Wood, Gordon S. (2002). The American Revolution: A History. Modern Library. ISBN 0-8129-7041-1.
  • Woodson, Carter Godwin; Logan, Rayford Whittingham (1917). The Journal of Negro History, Volume 2. Association for the Study of Negro Life and History. OCLC 1782257.
  • Cray, Robert E. (2001). (PDF). Historical Journal of Massachusetts. Archived from the original (PDF) on May 5, 2016. Retrieved April 14, 2016.
  • "Congressional bio of John Patterson". Biographical Directory of the United States.

Commemorations Various commemorations of the battle are described in the following sources.

  • . Massachusetts Turnpike Authority. Archived from the original on September 28, 2007. Retrieved November 26, 2008.
  • "Massachusetts List of Legal Holidays". Massachusetts Secretary of State. Retrieved December 16, 2008.
  • (PDF). City of Somerville, Massachusetts. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 4, 2009. Retrieved February 26, 2009.
  • "UMass Boston Holidays observed". University of Massachusetts, Boston. from the original on February 25, 2009. Retrieved March 16, 2009.
  • "Bunker Hill Day Closings". Boston Globe. June 18, 2007. Retrieved March 16, 2009.
  • Winsor, Justin (1875). Celebration of the centennial anniversary of the battle of Bunker Hill. Boston, MA: Boston City Council. OCLC 2776599.
  • Celebration of the sesquicentennial anniversary of the Battle of Bunker Hill, June 17, 1925. Boston, MA: City of Boston. 1925. OCLC 235594934.
  • "Bunker Hill Museum". National Park Service. from the original on April 3, 2009. Retrieved March 17, 2009.
  • Clary, David (2007). Adopted Son: Washington, Lafayette, and the Friendship that Saved the Revolution. New York City: Bantam Books. pp. 443–448. ISBN 978-0-553-80435-5. OCLC 70407848.
  • Kifner, John (July 15, 1975). "Not Unusual Occurrence: British Take Bunker Hill". The New York Times. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |url= (help)
  • McKenna, Kathleen (June 10, 2007). "On Bunker Hill, a boost in La Fayette profile". Boston Globe. from the original on February 20, 2009. Retrieved March 17, 2009.

Further reading

  • Axelrod, Alan (2007). The real History of the American Revolution. Sterling Publishing Company, New York. ISBN 9781402768163.
  • Beck, Derek W. (2016). The War Before Independence: 1775-1776. Sourcebooks, Inc. ISBN 9781492633105., 480 pages
  • Doyle, Peter (1998). Bunker Hill. Charlottesville, VA: Providence Foundation. ISBN 1-887456-08-2. OCLC 42421560.
  • Drake, Samuel Adams (1875). Bunker Hill: the story told in letters from the battle field by British Officers Engaged. Boston: Nichols and Hall.
  • Elting, John R. (1975). The Battle of Bunker's Hill. Monmouth Beach, NJ: Phillip Freneau Press. ISBN 0-912480-11-4. OCLC 2867199.
  • Ferling, John (2007). Almost a Miracle. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199758470.
  • Fast, Howard (2001). Bunker Hill. New York: ibooks inc. ISBN 0-7434-2384-4. OCLC 248511443.
  • Lanning, Michael Lee (2008). The American Revolution 100. Source Books, Naperville, Illinois. ISBN 9781402252808.
  • O'Brien, Michael J. (1968). The Irish at Bunker Hill: Evidence of Irish Participation in the Battle of 17 June 1775. Irish University Press. ISBN 9780716505020.
  • Philbrick, Nathaniel (2013). Bunker Hill: A City, a Siege, a Revolution. Viking. ISBN 978-0670025442.
  • Ristow, W. Walter (1979). Cartography of the Battle of Bunker Hill.
  • Swett, S (1826). History of Bunker Hill Battle, With a Plan, Second Edition. Boston, MA: Munroe and Francis. OCLC 3554078. This book contains printings of both Gage's official account and that of the Massachusetts Congress.
  • Commager, Henry Steele; Morris, Richard B. (1958). The Spirit of 76. Harper & Row Publishers, New York, London. ISBN 0306806207., eBook, Vol 2

External links

  • Boston National Historical Park official website
  • Bunker Hill Museum website

About the battle

About people in the battle

  • Genealogy of Captain Samuel Cherry, who fought at Bunker Hill

battle, bunker, hill, list, numerous, places, things, that, named, after, this, battle, bunker, hill, fought, june, 1775, during, siege, boston, first, stage, american, revolutionary, battle, named, after, bunker, hill, charlestown, massachusetts, which, perip. For a list of numerous places and things that are named after this battle see Bunker Hill The Battle of Bunker Hill was fought on June 17 1775 during the Siege of Boston in the first stage of the American Revolutionary War 5 The battle is named after Bunker Hill in Charlestown Massachusetts which was peripherally involved It was the original objective of both the colonial and British troops though the majority of combat took place on the adjacent hill which became known as Breed s Hill 6 7 Battle of Bunker HillPart of the American Revolutionary WarDeath of General Warren at the Battle of Bunker Hillby John TrumbullDateJune 17 1775LocationCharlestown Massachusetts42 22 34 9 N 71 3 38 8 W 42 376361 N 71 060778 W 42 376361 71 060778ResultSee AftermathTerritorialchangesThe British capture Charlestown PeninsulaBelligerentsUnited Colonies Connecticut Massachusetts Bay New Hampshire Rhode Island Great BritainCommanders and leadersWilliam Prescott Israel Putnam Joseph Warren John StarkWilliam Howe Thomas Gage Sir Robert Pigot James Abercrombie Henry Clinton Samuel Graves John Pitcairn Strength 2 400 1 3 000 2 Casualties and losses115 killed 305 wounded 30 captured 20 POWs died Total 450 3 19 officers killed62 officers wounded207 soldiers killed766 soldiers woundedTotal 1 054 4 class notpageimage Location within Massachusetts On June 13 1775 the leaders of the colonial forces besieging Boston learned that the British were planning to send troops out from the city to fortify the unoccupied hills surrounding the city which would give them control of Boston Harbor In response 1 200 colonial troops under the command of William Prescott stealthily occupied Bunker Hill and Breed s Hill They constructed a strong redoubt on Breed s Hill overnight as well as smaller fortified lines across the Charlestown Peninsula 8 By daybreak of June 17 the British became aware of the presence of colonial forces on the Peninsula and mounted an attack against them The Americans repulsed two British assaults with significant British casualties the British captured the redoubt on their third assault after the defenders ran out of ammunition The colonists retreated over Bunker Hill leaving the British 9 in control of the Peninsula 10 The battle was a tactical victory for the British 11 12 but it proved to be a sobering experience for them they incurred many more casualties than the Americans had sustained including many officers The battle had demonstrated that inexperienced militia were able to stand up to regular army troops in battle Subsequently the battle discouraged the British from any further frontal attacks against well defended front lines American casualties were much fewer although their losses included General Joseph Warren and Major Andrew McClary the final casualty of the battle 13 The battle led the British to adopt a more cautious planning and maneuver execution in future engagements which was evident in the subsequent New York and New Jersey campaign The costly engagement also convinced the British of the need to hire substantial numbers of Hessian auxiliaries to bolster their strength in the face of the new and formidable Continental Army Contents 1 Geography 2 British planning 3 Prelude to battle 3 1 Fortification of Breed s Hill 3 2 British preparations 3 3 Colonists reinforce their positions 4 British assault 5 Aftermath 6 Political consequences 7 Analysis 7 1 Disposition of Colonial forces 7 2 Disposition of British forces 8 The whites of their eyes 9 Notable participants 10 Commemorations 11 See also 12 Notes 13 References 14 Bibliography 15 Further reading 16 External linksGeography 1775 map of the Boston area contains some inaccuracies Boston was situated on a peninsula a at the time and was largely protected from close approach by the expanses of water surrounding it which were dominated by British warships In the aftermath of the battles of Lexington and Concord on April 19 1775 the colonial militia of some 15 000 men 14 had surrounded the town and besieged it under the command of Artemas Ward They controlled the only land access to Boston itself the Roxbury Neck but they were unable to contest British domination of the waters of the harbor The British troops occupied the city a force of about 6 000 under the command of General Thomas Gage and they were able to be resupplied and reinforced by sea 15 However the land across the water from Boston contained a number of hills which could be used to advantage Artillery could be placed on the hills and used to bombard the city until the occupying army evacuated it or surrendered It was with this in mind that Henry Knox led the noble train of artillery to transport cannon from Fort Ticonderoga 16 The Charlestown Peninsula to the north of Boston started from a short narrow isthmus known as the Charlestown Neck and extended about 1 mile 1 6 km southeastward into Boston Harbor Bunker Hill had an elevation of 110 feet 34 m and lay at the northern end of the peninsula Breed s Hill had a height of 62 feet 19 m and was more southerly and nearer to Boston 17 The American soldiers were at an advantage due to the height of Breed s Hill and Bunker Hill but it also essentially trapped them at the top 18 19 The settled part of the town of Charlestown occupied flats at the southern end of the peninsula At its closest approach less than 1 000 feet 300 m separated the Charlestown Peninsula from the Boston Peninsula where Copp s Hill was at about the same height as Breed s Hill The British retreat from Concord had ended in Charlestown but General Gage did not fortify the hills on the peninsula but instead withdrew his troops to Boston turning the entire Charlestown Peninsula into a no man s land 20 The Battle of Bunker Hill by Howard Pyle 1897British planningThe British received reinforcements throughout May until they reached a strength of about 6 000 men Generals William Howe John Burgoyne and Henry Clinton arrived on May 25 aboard the HMS Cerberus Gage began planning with them to break out of the city 21 finalizing a plan on June 12 22 This plan began with taking the Dorchester Neck fortifying the Dorchester Heights and then marching on the colonial forces stationed in Roxbury Once the southern flank had been secured the Charlestown heights would be taken and the forces in Cambridge driven away The attack was set for June 18 23 On June 13 the Committee of Safety in Exeter New Hampshire notified the Massachusetts Provincial Congress that a New Hampshire gentleman of undoubted veracity had overheard the British commanders making plans to capture Dorchester and Charlestown 24 On June 15 the Massachusetts Committee of Safety decided that additional defenses needed to be erected 25 General Ward directed General Israel Putnam to set up defenses on the Charlestown Peninsula specifically on Bunker Hill 26 27 Prelude to battleFortification of Breed s Hill Array of American forces for the Battle of Bunker Hill On the night of June 16 colonial Colonel William Prescott led about 1 200 men onto the peninsula in order to set up positions from which artillery fire could be directed into Boston 28 This force was made up of men from the regiments of Prescott Putnam the unit was commanded by Thomas Knowlton James Frye and Ebenezer Bridge 29 At first Putnam Prescott and their engineer Captain Richard Gridley disagreed as to where they should locate their defense Some work was performed on Bunker Hill but Breed s Hill was closer to Boston and viewed as being more defensible and they decided to build their primary redoubt there 30 Prescott and his men began digging a square fortification about 130 feet 40 m on a side with ditches and earthen walls The walls of the redoubt were about 6 feet 1 8 m high with a wooden platform inside on which men could stand and fire over the walls 31 32 The works on Breed s Hill did not go unnoticed by the British General Clinton was out on reconnaissance that night and was aware of them and he tried to convince Gage and Howe that they needed to prepare to attack the position at daylight British sentries were also aware of the activity but most apparently did not think it cause for alarm 33 A sentry on board HMS Lively spotted the new fortification around 4 a m and notified his captain Lively opened fire temporarily halting the colonists work Admiral Samuel Graves awoke aboard his flagship HMS Somerset irritated by the gunfire that he had not ordered 34 He stopped it only to have General Gage countermand his decision when he became fully aware of the situation in the morning He ordered all 128 guns in the harbor to fire on the colonial position along with batteries atop Copp s Hill in Boston 35 The barrage had relatively little effect as the hilltop fortifications were high enough to frustrate accurate aiming from the ships and far enough from Copp s Hill to render the batteries there ineffective The shots that did manage to land however were able to kill one American soldier and damage the entire supply of water brought for the troops 36 The rising sun also alerted Prescott to a significant problem with the location of the redoubt it could easily be flanked on either side 33 He promptly ordered his men to begin constructing a breastwork running down the hill to the east deciding that he did not have the manpower to also build additional defenses to the west of the redoubt 37 British preparations The British generals met to discuss their options General Clinton had urged an attack as early as possible and he preferred an attack beginning from the Charlestown Neck that would cut off the colonists retreat reducing the process of capturing the new redoubt to one of starving out its occupants However he was outvoted by the other three generals who were concerned that his plan violated the convention of the time to not allow one s army to become trapped between enemy forces 38 Howe was the senior officer present and would lead the assault and he was of the opinion that the hill was open and easy of ascent and in short would be easily carried 39 General Burgoyne concurred arguing that the untrained rabble would be no match for their trained troops 40 Orders were then issued to prepare the expedition 41 General Gage surveyed the works from Boston with his staff and Loyalist Abijah Willard recognized his brother in law Colonel Prescott Will he fight asked Gage As to his men I cannot answer for them replied Willard but Colonel Prescott will fight you to the gates of hell 42 Prescott lived up to Willard s word but his men were not so resolute When the colonists suffered their first casualty Prescott gave orders to bury the man quickly and quietly but a large group of men gave him a solemn funeral instead with several deserting shortly thereafter 42 It took six hours for the British to organize an infantry force and to gather up and inspect the men on parade General Howe was to lead the major assault driving around the colonial left flank and taking them from the rear Brigadier General Robert Pigot on the British left flank would lead the direct assault on the redoubt and Major John Pitcairn would lead the flank or reserve force It took several trips in longboats to transport Howe s initial forces consisting of about 1 500 men to the eastern corner of the peninsula known as Moulton s Point 43 44 By 2 p m Howe s chosen force had landed 43 However while crossing the river Howe noted the large number of colonial troops on top of Bunker Hill He believed these to be reinforcements and immediately sent a message to Gage requesting additional troops He then ordered some of the light infantry to take a forward position along the eastern side of the peninsula alerting the colonists to his intended course of action The troops then sat down to eat while they waited for the reinforcements 44 The first British attack on Bunker Hill shaded areas are hills Colonists reinforce their positions Prescott saw the British preparations and called for reinforcements Among the reinforcements were Joseph Warren the popular young leader of the Massachusetts Committee of Safety and Seth Pomeroy an aging Massachusetts militia leader Both of these men held commissions of rank but chose to serve as infantry 43 Prescott ordered the Connecticut men under Captain Knowlton to defend the left flank where they used a crude dirt wall as a breastwork and topped it with fence rails and hay They also constructed three small v shaped trenches between this dirt wall and Prescott s breastwork Troops that arrived to reinforce this flank position included about 200 men from the 1st and 3rd New Hampshire regiments under Colonels John Stark and James Reed Stark s men did not arrive until after Howe landed his forces and thus filled a gap in the defense that Howe could have taken advantage of had he pressed his attack sooner 45 They took positions along the breastwork on the northern end of the colonial position Low tide opened a gap along the Mystic River to the north so they quickly extended the fence with a short stone wall to the water s edge 45 46 Colonel Stark placed a stake about 100 feet 30 m in front of the fence and ordered that no one fire until the British regulars passed it 47 Further reinforcements arrived just before the battle including portions of Massachusetts regiments of Colonels Brewer Nixon Woodbridge Little and Major Moore as well as Callender s company of artillery 48 Confusion reigned behind the Colonial lines Many units sent toward the action stopped before crossing the Charlestown Neck from Cambridge which was under constant fire from gun batteries to the south Others reached Bunker Hill but then were uncertain where to go from there and just milled around One commentator wrote of the scene that it appears to me there never was more confusion and less command 49 General Putnam was on the scene attempting to direct affairs but unit commanders often misunderstood or even disobeyed orders 49 50 British assault The second British attack on Bunker Hill By 3 p m the British reinforcements had arrived which included the 47th Regiment of Foot and the 1st Marines and the British were ready to march 51 Brigadier General Pigot s force were gathering just south of Charlestown village and they were already taking casualties from sniper fire from the settlement Howe asked Admiral Graves for assistance in clearing out the snipers Graves had planned for such a possibility and ordered a carcass fired into the village and then sent a landing party to set fire to the town 52 53 The smoke billowing from Charlestown lent an almost surreal backdrop to the fighting as the winds were such that the smoke was kept from the field of battle 54 General Howe led the light infantry companies and grenadiers in the assault on the American left flank along the rail fence expecting an easy effort against Stark s recently arrived troops 55 His light infantry were set along the narrow beach in column formation in order to turn the far left flank of the colonial position 56 The grenadiers were deployed in the center lining up four deep and several hundred across Pigot was commanding the 5th 38th 43rd 47th and 52nd regiments as well as Major Pitcairn s Marines they were to feint an assault on the redoubt Just before the British advanced the American position along the rail fence was reinforced by two pieces of artillery from Bunker Hill 57 Howe had intended the advance to be preceded by an artillery bombardment from the field pieces present but it was soon discovered that these cannon had been supplied with the wrong caliber of ammunition delaying the assault Attacking Breed s Hill presented an array of difficulties The hay on the hillside had not been harvested requiring that the regulars marched through waist high grass which concealed the uneven terrain beneath The pastureland of the hillside was covered with crisscrossing rail fences hampering the cohesion of marching formations The regulars were loaded down with gear wholly unnecessary for the attack and the British troops were overheating in their wool uniforms under the heat of the afternoon sun compounded by the nearby inferno from Charlestown 58 59 The colonists withheld their fire until the regulars were within at least 50 paces of their position As the regulars closed in range they suffered heavy casualties from colonial fire The colonists benefited from the rail fence to steady and aim their muskets and enjoyed a modicum of cover from return fire Under this withering fire the light companies melted away and retreated some as far as their boats James Abercrombie commanding the Grenadiers was fatally wounded Pigot s attacks on the redoubt and breastworks fared little better by stopping and exchanging fire with the colonists the regulars were fully exposed and suffered heavy losses They continued to be harried by snipers in Charlestown and Pigot ordered a retreat after seeing what happened to Howe s advance 60 61 62 The regulars reformed on the field and marched out again this time navigating a field strewn with dead and wounded comrades This time Pigot was not to feint he was to assault the redoubt directly possibly without the assistance of Howe s force Howe advanced against Knowlton s position along the rail fence instead of marching against Stark s position along the beach The outcome of the second attack was very much the same as the first One British observer wrote Most of our Grenadiers and Light infantry the moment of presenting themselves lost three fourths and many nine tenths of their men Some had only eight or nine men a company left 63 Pigot s attack did not enjoy any greater success than Howe and he ordered a retreat after almost 30 minutes of firing ineffective volleys at the colonial position 64 65 The second attack had failed Meanwhile confusion continued in the rear of the colonial forces General Putnam tried with limited success to send additional troops from Bunker Hill to the forward positions on Breed s Hill to support the embattled regiments 66 67 One colonial observer wrote to Samuel Adams afterwards it appears to me that there was never more confusion and less command Some companies and leaderless groups of men moved toward the field others retreated They were running low on powder and ammunition and the colonial regiments suffered from a hemorrhage of deserters By the time that the third attack came there were only 700 800 men left on Breed s Hill with only 150 in the redoubt 68 69 Connecticut s Captain John Chester saw an entire company in retreat and ordered his company to aim muskets at them to halt the retreat they turned about and headed back to the battlefield 70 The third and final British attack on Bunker Hill The British rear was also in disarray Wounded soldiers that were mobile had made their way to the landing areas and were being ferried back to Boston while the wounded lying on the field of battle were the source of moans and cries of pain 71 Howe sent word to Clinton in Boston for additional troops Clinton had observed the first two attacks and sent around 400 men from the 2nd Marines and the 63rd Foot and followed himself to help rally the troops In addition to these reserves he convinced around 200 walking wounded to form up for the third attack 72 The third assault was to concentrate squarely on the redoubt with only a feint on the colonists flank Howe ordered his men to remove their heavy packs and leave all unnecessary equipment behind He arrayed his forces in column formation rather than the extended order of the first two assaults exposing fewer men along the front to colonial fire 73 The third attack was made at the point of the bayonet and successfully carried the redoubt however the final volleys of fire from the colonists cost the life of Major Pitcairn 74 The defenders had run out of ammunition reducing the battle to close combat The advantage turned to the British as their troops were equipped with bayonets on their muskets while most of the colonists were not Colonel Prescott one of the last men to leave the redoubt parried bayonet thrusts with his normally ceremonial sabre 75 It is during the retreat from the redoubt that Joseph Warren was killed 76 The retreat of much of the colonial forces from the peninsula was made possible in part by the controlled withdrawal of the forces along the rail fence led by John Stark and Thomas Knowlton which prevented the encirclement of the hill Burgoyne described their orderly retreat as no flight it was even covered with bravery and military skill It was so effective that most of the wounded were saved 77 most of the prisoners taken by the British were mortally wounded 77 General Putnam attempted to reform the troops on Bunker Hill however the flight of the colonial forces was so rapid that artillery pieces and entrenching tools had to be abandoned The colonists suffered most of their casualties during the retreat on Bunker Hill By 5 p m the colonists had retreated over the Charlestown Neck to fortified positions in Cambridge and the British were in control of the peninsula 78 Aftermath The Bunker Hill Monument Ralph Farnham one of the last survivors The British had taken the ground but at a great loss they had suffered 1 054 casualties 226 dead and 828 wounded and a disproportionate number of these were officers The casualty count was the highest suffered by the British in any single encounter during the entire war 79 General Clinton echoed Pyrrhus of Epirus remarking in his diary that A few more such victories would have shortly put an end to British dominion in America 11 British dead and wounded included 100 commissioned officers a significant portion of the British officer corps in America 80 Much of General Howe s field staff was among the casualties 81 General Gage reported the following officer casualties in his report after the battle listing lieutenants and above by name 82 1 lieutenant colonel killed 2 majors killed 3 wounded 7 captains killed 27 wounded 9 lieutenants killed 32 wounded 15 sergeants killed 42 wounded 1 drummer killed 12 woundedColonial losses were about 450 in total of whom 140 were killed Most of the colonial losses came during the withdrawal Major Andrew McClary was technically the highest ranking colonial officer to die in the battle he was hit by cannon fire on Charlestown Neck the last person to be killed in the battle He was later commemorated by the dedication of Fort McClary in Kittery Maine 83 A serious loss to the Patriot cause however was the death of Dr Joseph Warren He was the President of Massachusetts Provincial Congress and he had been appointed a Major General on June 14 His commission had not yet taken effect when he served as a volunteer private three days later at Bunker Hill 84 Only 30 men were captured by the British most of them with grievous wounds 20 died while held prisoner The colonials also lost numerous shovels and other entrenching tools as well as five out of the six cannons that they had brought to the peninsula 85 86 Political consequencesWhen news of the battle spread through the colonies it was reported as a colonial loss as the ground had been taken by the enemy and significant casualties were incurred George Washington was on his way to Boston as the new commander of the Continental Army and he received news of the battle while in New York City The report included casualty figures that were somewhat inaccurate but it gave Washington hope that his army might prevail in the conflict 87 We have learned one melancholy truth which is that the Americans if they were equally well commanded are full as good soldiers as ours 88 A British officer in Boston after the battle The Massachusetts Committee of Safety sought to repeat the sort of propaganda victory that it won following the battles at Lexington and Concord so it commissioned a report of the battle to send to England Their report however did not reach England before Gage s official account arrived on July 20 His report unsurprisingly caused friction and argument between the Tories and the Whigs but the casualty counts alarmed the military establishment and forced many to rethink their views of colonial military capability 89 King George s attitude hardened toward the colonies and the news may have contributed to his rejection of the Continental Congress Olive Branch Petition the last substantive political attempt at reconciliation Sir James Adolphus Oughton part of the Tory majority wrote to Lord Dartmouth of the colonies the sooner they are made to Taste Distress the sooner will Crown control over them be produced and the Effusion of Blood be put a stop to 90 About a month after receiving Gage s report the Proclamation of Rebellion was issued in response This hardening of the British position also strengthened previously weak support for independence among Americans especially in the southern colonies 90 Gage s report had a more direct effect on his own career He was dismissed from office just three days after his report was received although General Howe did not replace him until October 1775 91 Gage wrote another report to the British Cabinet in which he repeated earlier warnings that a large army must at length be employed to reduce these people which would require the hiring of foreign troops 92 AnalysisGeneral Dearborn published an account of the battle in Port Folio magazine years later after Israel Putnam had died Dearborn accused General Putnam of inaction cowardly leadership and failure to supply reinforcements during the battle which subsequently sparked a major controversy among veterans of the war and historians 93 b People were shocked by the rancor of the attack and this prompted a forceful response from defenders of Putnam including such notables as John and Abigail Adams It also prompted Putnam s son Daniel Putnam to defend his father using a letter of thanks written by George Washington and statements from Colonel John Trumbull and Judge Thomas Grosvenor in Putnam s defense 94 Historian Harold Murdock wrote that Dearborn s account abounds in absurd misstatements and amazing flights of imagination The Dearborn attack received considerable attention because at the time he was in the middle of considerable controversy himself He had been relieved of one of the top commands in the War of 1812 due to his mistakes He had also been nominated to serve as Secretary of War by President James Monroe but was rejected by the United States Senate which was the first time that the Senate had voted against confirming a presidential cabinet choice 95 96 97 98 Disposition of Colonial forces A historic map of Bunker Hill featuring military notes The colonial regiments were under the overall command of General Ward with General Putnam and Colonel Prescott leading in the field but they often acted quite independently 99 This was evident in the opening stages of the battle when a tactical decision was made that had strategic implications Colonel Prescott and his staff decided to fortify Breed s Hill rather than Bunker Hill apparently in contravention of orders 100 The fortification of Breed s Hill was more militarily provocative it would have put offensive artillery closer to Boston directly threatening the city 101 It also exposed the forces there to the possibility of being trapped as they probably could not properly defend against attempts by the British to land troops and take control of Charlestown Neck If the British had taken that step they might have had a victory with many fewer casualties 102 The colonial fortifications were haphazardly arrayed it was not until the morning that Prescott discovered that the redoubt could be easily flanked 33 compelling the hasty construction of a rail fence Furthermore the colonists did not have the manpower to defend to the west 37 Manpower was a further problem on Breed s Hill The defenses were thin toward the northern end of the colonial position and could have been easily exploited by the British as they had already landed had reinforcements not arrived in time 45 The front lines of the colonial forces were generally well managed but the scene behind them was significantly disorganized due at least in part due to a poor chain of command and logistical organization One commentator wrote it appears to me there never was more confusion and less command 49 Only some of the militias operated directly under Ward s and Putnam s authority 103 and some commanders directly disobeyed orders remaining at Bunker Hill rather than committing to the defense of Breed s Hill once fighting began Several officers were subjected to court martial and cashiered after the battle 104 Once combat began desertion was a chronic issue for the colonial troops By the time of the third British assault there were only 700 800 troops left with only 150 in the redoubt 68 Colonel Prescott was of the opinion that the third assault would have been repulsed had his forces in the redoubt been reinforced with more men or if more supplies of ammunition and powder had been brought forward from Bunker Hill 105 Despite these issues the withdrawal of the colonial forces was generally well managed recovering most of their wounded in the process and elicited praise from British generals such as Burgoyne 77 However the speed of the withdrawal precipitated leaving behind their artillery and entrenching tools 78 Disposition of British forces The British leadership acted slowly once the works were spotted on Breed s Hill It was 2 p m when the troops were ready for the assault roughly ten hours after the Lively first opened fire This leisurely pace gave the colonial forces ample time to reinforce the flanking positions that would have otherwise been poorly defended and vulnerable 106 Gage and Howe decided that a frontal assault on the works would be a simple matter although an encircling move gaining control of Charlestown Neck would have given them a more rapid and resounding victory 102 However the British leadership was excessively optimistic believing that two regiments were sufficient to beat the strength of the province 107 View of the Attack on Bunker s Hill with the Burning of Charlestown by Lodge The artillery bombardment that was to have preceded the assault did not transpire because the field guns had been supplied with the wrong caliber of ammunition 58 Once in the field Howe twice opted to dilute the force attacking the redoubt with flanking assaults against the colonial left The formations that the British used were not conducive to a successful assault arrayed in long lines and weighed down by unnecessary heavy gear many of the troops were immediately vulnerable to colonial fire which resulted in heavy casualties in the initial attacks The impetus of any British attack was further diluted when officers opted to concentrate on firing repeated volleys which were simply absorbed by the earthworks and rail fences The third attack succeeded when the forces were arrayed in deep columns the troops were ordered to leave all unnecessary gear behind the attacks were to be at the point of the bayonet 73 and the flanking attack was merely a feint 108 109 Following the taking of the peninsula the British had a tactical advantage that they could have used to press into Cambridge General Clinton proposed this to Howe but Howe declined having just led three assaults with grievous casualties including most of his field staff among them 110 The colonial military leaders eventually recognized Howe as a tentative decision maker to his detriment In the aftermath of the Battle of Long Island 1776 he again had tactical advantages that might have delivered Washington s army into his hands but he again refused to act 111 Historian John Ferling maintains that had General Gage used the Royal Navy to secure the narrow neck to the Charleston peninsula cutting the Americans off from the mainland he could have achieved a far less costly victory But he was motivated by revenge over patriot resistance at the Battles of Lexington and Concord and relatively heavy British losses and he also felt that the colonial militia were completely untrained and could be overtaken with little effort opting for a frontal assault 112 The whites of their eyes The famous order Don t fire until you see the whites of their eyes was popularized in stories about the battle of Bunker Hill citation needed It is uncertain as to who said it there since various histories including eyewitness accounts 113 attribute it to Putnam Stark Prescott or Gridley and it may have been said first by one and repeated by the others 114 It was also not an original statement The idea dates originally to the general king Gustavus Adolphus 1594 1632 who gave standing orders to his musketeers never to give fire till they could see their own image in the pupil of their enemy s eye 115 Gustavus Adolphus s military teachings were widely admired and imitated and caused this saying to be often repeated It was used by General James Wolfe on the Plains of Abraham when his troops defeated Montcalm s army on September 13 1759 116 The earliest similar quotation came from the Battle of Dettingen on June 27 1743 where Lieutenant Colonel Sir Andrew Agnew of Lochnaw warned the Royal Scots Fusiliers not to fire until they could see the white of their e en 117 The phrase was also used by Prince Charles of Prussia in 1745 and repeated in 1755 by Frederick the Great and may have been mentioned in histories with which the colonial military leaders were familiar 118 Whether or not it was actually said in this battle it was clear that the colonial military leadership were regularly reminding their troops to hold their fire until the moment when it would have the greatest effect especially in situations where their ammunition would be limited 119 Notable participants According to the John Trumbull painting this flag of New England was carried by the colonists during the battle This flag known as the Bunker Hill flag is also associated with the battle A significant number of notable American patriots fought in this battle Henry Dearborn and William Eustis for example went on to distinguished military and political careers both served in Congress the Cabinet and in diplomatic posts Others like John Brooks Henry Burbeck Christian Febiger Thomas Knowlton and John Stark became well known for later actions in the war 120 121 Stark became known as the Hero of Bennington for his role in the 1777 Battle of Bennington Free African Americans also fought in the battle notable examples include Barzillai Lew Salem Poor and Peter Salem 122 123 Another notable participant was Daniel Shays who later became famous for his army of protest in Shays Rebellion 124 Israel Potter was immortalized in Israel Potter His Fifty Years of Exile a novel by Herman Melville 125 126 Colonel John Paterson commanded the Massachusetts First Militia served in Shays Rebellion and became a congressman from New York 127 Lt Col Seth Read who served under John Paterson at Bunker Hill went on to settle Geneva New York and Erie Pennsylvania and was said to have been instrumental in the phrase E pluribus unum being added to U S coins 128 129 130 131 George Claghorn of the Massachusetts militia was shot in the knee at Bunker Hill and went on after the war to become the master builder of the USS Constitution a k a Old Ironsides which is the oldest naval vessel in the world that is still commissioned and afloat 132 133 Notable British participants in the battle were Lt Col Samuel Birch Major John Small Lord Rawdon General William Howe Major John Pitcairn and General Henry Clinton CommemorationsJohn Trumbull s painting The Death of General Warren at the Battle of Bunker Hill displayed in lede was created as an allegorical depiction of the battle and Warren s death not as an actual pictorial recording of the event The painting shows a number of participants in the battle including a British officer John Small among those who stormed the redoubt yet came to be the one holding the mortally wounded Warren and preventing a fellow redcoat from bayoneting him He was friends of Putnam and Trumbull Other central figures include Andrew McClary who was the last man to fall in the battle 134 The Bunker Hill Monument is an obelisk that stands 221 feet 67 m high on Breed s Hill On June 17 1825 the fiftieth anniversary of the battle the cornerstone of the monument was laid by the Marquis de Lafayette and an address delivered by Daniel Webster 135 136 The Leonard P Zakim Bunker Hill Memorial Bridge was specifically designed to evoke this monument 137 There is also a statue of William Prescott showing him calming his men down Bunker Hill clipper ship The National Park Service operates a museum dedicated to the battle near the monument which is part of the Boston National Historical Park 138 A cyclorama of the battle was added in 2007 when the museum was renovated 139 In nearby Cambridge a small granite monument just north of Harvard Yard bears this inscription Here assembled on the night of June 16 1775 1200 Continental troops under command of Colonel Prescott After prayer by President Langdon they marched to Bunker Hill See footnote for picture 140 Samuel Langdon a Congregational minister was Harvard s 11th president 141 Another small monument nearby marks the location of the Committee of Safety which had become the Patriots provisional government as Tories left Cambridge 142 These monuments are on the lawn to the west of Harvard s Littaeur Center which is itself the west of Harvard s huge Science Center See footnote for map 143 Statue of William Prescott in Charlestown Massachusetts Bunker Hill Day observed every June 17 is a legal holiday in Suffolk County Massachusetts which includes the city of Boston as well as Somerville in Middlesex County Prospect Hill site of colonial fortifications overlooking the Charlestown Neck is now in Somerville which was previously part of Charlestown 144 145 State institutions in Massachusetts such as public institutions of higher education in Boston also celebrate the holiday 146 147 However the state s FY2011 budget requires that all state and municipal offices in Suffolk County be open on Bunker Hill Day and Evacuation Day 148 On June 16 and 17 1875 the centennial of the battle was celebrated with a military parade and a reception featuring notable speakers among them General William Tecumseh Sherman and Vice President Henry Wilson It was attended by dignitaries from across the country 149 Celebratory events also marked the sesquicentennial 150th anniversary in 1925 and the bicentennial in 1975 150 151 Over the years the Battle of Bunker Hill has been commemorated on four U S Postage stamps 152 Issue of 1959 Issue of 1975 Issue of 1968 Issue of 1968 Left stamp depicts Battle of Bunker Hill battle flag and MonumentLeft center depicts John Trumbull s painting of the battleRight center depicts detail of Trumbull s paintingRight depicts image of Bunker Hill battle flagSee also American Revolutionary War portalList of American Revolutionary War battles American Revolutionary War Early Engagements The Battle of Bunker Hill placed in sequence and strategic context List of Continental Forces in the American Revolutionary War List of British Forces in the American Revolutionary War Dr John Hart Regimental Surgeon of Col Prescott s Regiment who treated the wounded at Bunker Hill Royal Welch Fusiliers USS Bunker HillNotes 18th century Boston was a peninsula Primarily in the 19th century much land around the peninsula was filled giving the modern city its present geography See the history of Boston for details In 1822 Dearborn wrote an anonymous plea in the Boston Patriot to urge the purchase of the Bunker Hill battlefield which was listed for sale 93 References Chidsey p 122 counts 1 400 in the night time fortification work Frothingham is unclear on the number of reinforcements arriving just before the battle breaks out In a footnote on p 136 as well as on p 190 he elaborates the difficulty in getting an accurate count Chidsey p 90 says the initial force requested was 1 550 but Howe requested and received reinforcements before the battle began Frothingham p 137 puts the total British contingent likely to be over 3 000 Furthermore according to Frothingham p 148 additional reinforcements arrived from Boston after the second attack was repulsed Frothingham p 191 notes the difficulty in attaining an accurate count of British troops involved Chidsey p 104 Frothingham pp 191 194 James L Nelson With Fire and Sword The Battle of Bunker Hill and the Beginning of the American Revolution 2011 Borneman Walter R American Spring Lexington Concord and the Road to Revolution p 350 Little Brown and Company New York Boston London 2014 ISBN 978 0 316 22102 3 Hubbard Robert Ernest Major General Israel Putnam Hero of the American Revolution p 85 McFarland amp Company Inc Jefferson North Carolina 2017 ISBN 978 1 4766 6453 8 Hubbard Robert Ernest Major General Israel Putnam Hero of the American Revolution pp 85 87 McFarland amp Company Inc Jefferson North Carolina 2017 ISBN 978 1 4766 6453 8 Withington Robert June 1949 A French Comment on the Battle of Bunker Hill The New England Quarterly 22 2 235 240 doi 10 2307 362033 ISSN 0028 4866 JSTOR 362033 Hubbard Robert Ernest Major General Israel Putnam Hero of the American Revolution pp 87 95 McFarland amp Company Inc Jefferson North Carolina 2017 ISBN 978 1 4766 6453 8 a b Clinton p 19 General Clinton s remark is an echoing of Pyrrhus of Epirus s original sentiment after the Battle of Heraclea one more such victory and the cause is lost Battle of Bunker Hill Encyclopaedia Britannica Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc December 8 2016 Retrieved January 25 2016 Although the British eventually won the battle it was a Pyrrhic victory that lent considerable encouragement to the revolutionary cause Hubbard Robert Ernest Major General Israel Putnam Hero of the American Revolution pp 94 95 McFarland amp Company Inc Jefferson North Carolina 2017 ISBN 978 1 4766 6453 8 Chidsey p 72 New Hampshire 1 200 Rhode Island 1 000 Connecticut 2 300 Massachusetts 11 500 Alden p 178 Martin James Kirby 1997 Benedict Arnold Revolutionary Hero New York New York University Press p 73 ISBN 978 0 8147 5560 0 OCLC 36343341 Chidsey p 91 has a historic map showing elevations Withington Robert 1949 A French Comment on the Battle of Bunker Hill The New England Quarterly 2 235 240 via JSTOR Adams Charles Francis 1896 The Battle of Bunker Hill The American Historical Review 1 401 413 via JSTOR French p 220 French p 249 Brooks p 119 Ketchum pp 45 46 Ketchum p 47 Ketchum pp 74 75 French p 255 Hubbard Robert Ernest Major General Israel Putnam Hero of the American Revolution p 84 McFarland amp Company Inc Jefferson North Carolina 2017 ISBN 978 1 4766 6453 8 Frothingham pp 122 123 Ketchum pp 102 245 Frothingham pp 123 124 Frothingham p 135 Hubbard Robert Ernest Major General Israel Putnam Hero of the American Revolution pp 87 88 McFarland amp Company Inc Jefferson North Carolina 2017 ISBN 978 1 4766 6453 8 a b c Ketchum p 115 Frothingham p 125 Brooks p 127 Middlekauff Robert 2005 The Glorious Cause The American Revolution 1763 1789 New York NY Oxford University Press p 290 ISBN 0 19 516247 1 OCLC 55960833 a b Ketchum p 117 Middlekauff Robert 2005 The Glorious Cause The American Revolution 1763 1789 New York NY Oxford University Press p 293 ISBN 0 19 516247 1 OCLC 55960833 Ketchum pp 120 121 Wood p 54 Ketchum p 122 a b Graydon p 424 a b c Frothingham p 133 a b Ketchum p 139 a b c Ketchum p 143 Chidsey p 93 Chidsey p 96 Frothingham p 136 a b c Ketchum p 147 Hubbard Robert Ernest Major General Israel Putnam Hero of the American Revolution pp 92 93 McFarland amp Company Inc Jefferson North Carolina 2017 ISBN 978 1 4766 6453 8 Ketchum pp 152 153 Ketchum pp 151 152 Middlekauff Robert 2005 The Glorious Cause The American Revolution 1763 1789 New York NY Oxford University Press p 296 ISBN 0 19 516247 1 OCLC 55960833 Frothingham pp 144 145 Ketchum p 152 Fusillers Mark Urban p38 Kurtz Henry I Men of War Essays on American Wars and Warriors p 31 Xlibris Corporation 2006 a b Philbrick Nathaniel Bunker Hill A City A Siege A Revolution p 219 220 New York Viking Press 2013 Kurtz p 29 Ketchum p 160 Kurtz p 31 33 Frothingham pp 141 142 Ketchum p 161 Kurtz p 33 Ketchum p 162 Frothingham p 146 Hubbard Robert Ernest Major General Israel Putnam Hero of the American Revolution p 92 McFarland amp Company Inc Jefferson North Carolina 2017 ISBN 978 1 4766 6453 8 a b Kurtz p 30 35 Hubbard Robert Ernest Major General Israel Putnam Hero of the American Revolution pp 92 95 McFarland amp Company Inc Jefferson North Carolina 2017 ISBN 978 1 4766 6453 8 Ketchum pp 165 166 Ketchum p 163 Ketchum p 164 a b Kurtz p 35 Chidsey p 99 Frothingham p 150 Frothingham p 151 a b c Ketchum p 181 a b Frothingham pp 151 152 Brooks p 237 Brooks pp 183 184 Frothingham pp 145 196 Frothingham pp 387 389 lists the officer casualties by name as well as this summary Bardwell p 76 Ketchum p 150 Ketchum p 255 Hubbard Robert Ernest Major General Israel Putnam Hero of the American Revolution pp 94 96 McFarland amp Company Inc Jefferson North Carolina 2017 ISBN 978 1 4766 6453 8 Ketchum pp 207 208 Ketchum p 209 Ketchum pp 208 209 a b Ketchum p 211 Ketchum p 213 Scheer p 64 a b Cray 2001 Cray Robert E 2001 Bunker Hill Refought Memory Wars and Partisan Conflicts 1775 1825 Historical Journal of Massachusetts via Proquest Purcell 2010 pp 164 168 Ketchum Richard M The Battle for Bunker Hill p 178 The Cresset Press London England 1963 Murdock Harold Bunker Hill Notes and Queries on a Famous Battle Kessinger Publishing LLC 2010 ISBN 1163174912 Hubbard Robert Ernest Major General Israel Putnam Hero of the American Revolution pp 191 92 McFarland amp Company Inc Jefferson North Carolina 2017 ISBN 978 1 4766 6453 8 Frothingham p 131 Frothingham p 19 Hubbard Robert Ernest Major General Israel Putnam Hero of the American Revolution p 87 McFarland amp Company Inc Jefferson North Carolina 2017 ISBN 978 1 4766 6453 8 a b Frothingham p 155 Frothingham pp 158 159 French pp 274 276 Frothingham p 153 French pp 263 265 Frothingham p 156 French p 277 Frothingham p 148 Frothingham pp 152 153 Jackson p 20 Ferling 2015 p 127 129 Lewis John E ed The Mammoth Book of How it Happened London Robinson 1998 Print P 179 Hubbard Robert Ernest Major General Israel Putnam Hero of the American Revolution p 97 McFarland amp Company Inc Jefferson North Carolina 2017 ISBN 978 1 4766 6453 8 Joannis Schefferi Memorabilium Sueticae Gentis Exemplorum Liber Singularis 1671 p 42 R Reilly The Rest to Fortune The Life of Major General James Wolfe 1960 p 324 Anderson p 679 Winsor p 85 French pp 269 270 Abbatt p 252 Ketchum pp 132 165 Woodson p 204 Ketchum p 260 Richards p 95 Ketchum p 257 Melville Biographical Directory of the United States Buford 1895 Preface Marvin p 425 436 Massachusetts Coppers 1787 1788 Introduction University of Notre Dame Archived from the original on November 8 2007 Retrieved October 9 2007 e pluribus unum FAQ 7 www treas gov Retrieved September 29 2007 permanent dead link Wheeler O Keith January 30 2002 Individual Summary for COL GEORGE CLAGHORN Retrieved October 10 2012 HMS Victory is the oldest commissioned vessel by three decades however Victory has been in dry dock since 1922 HMS Victory Service Life HMS Victory website Archived from the original on September 24 2013 Retrieved October 14 2012 Bunce p 336 Hayward p 322 Clary MTA Bridges Bunker Hill Museum McKenna Album Archive Picasaweb google com Retrieved November 19 2017 Samuel Langdon Harvard University Archived from the original on January 1 2013 Retrieved 2013 12 31 Committee of Safety American Revolution Harvard University Campus Map Map harvard edu Archived from the original on January 6 2013 Retrieved November 19 2017 MA List of legal holidays Somerville Environmental Services Guide University of Massachusetts Boston observed holidays Bunker Hill Day closings Commonwealth of Massachusetts FY2011 Budget Outside Section 5 Mass gov July 14 2010 Retrieved August 6 2010 See the Centennial Book for a complete description of the events Sesquicentennial celebration New York Times June 15 1975 Scotts 2008 United States stamp catalogueBibliographyMajor sources Most of the information about the battle itself in this article comes from the following sources Brooks Victor 1999 The Boston Campaign Conshohocken PA Combined Publishing ISBN 1 58097 007 9 OCLC 42581510 Chidsey Donald Barr 1966 The Siege of Boston Boston MA Crown OCLC 890813 Frothingham Richard Jr 1851 History of the Siege of Boston and of the Battles of Lexington Concord and Bunker Hill Second Edition Boston MA Charles C Little and James Brown OCLC 2138693 French Allen 1911 The Siege of Boston New York Macmillan OCLC 3927532 Ketchum Richard 1999 Decisive Day The Battle of Bunker Hill New York Owl Books ISBN 0 385 41897 3 OCLC 24147566 Paperback ISBN 0 8050 6099 5 Nelson James L With Fire and Sword The Battle of Bunker Hill and the Beginning of the American Revolution 2011 excerpt Philbrick Nathaniel Bunker Hill A City a Siege a Revolution New York Viking 2013 excerpt Minor sources Specific facts not necessarily covered by the major sources come from the following sources Buford Mary Hunter 1895 Seth Read Lieut Col Continental Army Pioneer at Geneva New York 1787 and at Erie Penn June 1795 His Ancestors and Descendants Boston Mass pp 167 Pages on CD in PDF Format Bunce Oliver Bell 1870 The romance of the revolution being true stories of the adventures romantic incidents hairbreath escapes and heroic exploits of the days of 76 Philadelphia Porter amp Coates p 337 OCLC 3714510 Abbatt William ed 1883 The Magazine of American History with Notes and Queries volume 8 A S Barnes OCLC 1590082 Alden John R 1989 A History of the American Revolution Da Capo ISBN 0 306 80366 6 Anderson William 1863 The Scottish Nation Or The Surnames Families Literature Honours and Biographical History of the People of Scotland volume 2 Fullarton OCLC 1290413 Bardwell John D 2005 Old Kittery Arcadia Publishing ISBN 978 0 7385 2476 4 Clinton Henry 1954 Willcox William B ed The American Rebellion Sir Henry Clinton s Narrative of His Campaigns 1775 1782 Yale University Press OCLC 1305132 Graydon Alexander 1846 Littell John Stockton ed Memoirs of His Own Time With Reminiscences of the Men and Events of the Revolution Philadelphia Lindsay amp Blakiston OCLC 1557096 Ferling John 2015 Whirlwind The American Revolution and the War That Won it Bloomsbury Press New York London ISBN 9781620401736 Hayward John 1854 A Gazetteer of the United States of America self published OCLC 68756962 Jackson Kenneth T Dunbar David S 2005 Empire City New York Through the Centuries Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0 231 10909 3 Melville Herman 1855 Israel Potter his fifty years of exile G Routledge OCLC 13065897 Richards Leonard L 2003 Shays s Rebellion The American Revolution s Final Battle University of Pennsylvania Press ISBN 978 0 8122 1870 1 Scheer George F Rankin Hugh F 1987 Rebels and Redcoats The American Revolution Through the Eyes of Those Who Fought and Lived It Da Capo Press ISBN 978 0 306 80307 9 Winsor Justin Jewett Clarence F 1882 The Memorial History of Boston Including Suffolk County Massachusetts 1630 1880 Volume 3 James R Osgood OCLC 4952179 Wood Gordon S 2002 The American Revolution A History Modern Library ISBN 0 8129 7041 1 Woodson Carter Godwin Logan Rayford Whittingham 1917 The Journal of Negro History Volume 2 Association for the Study of Negro Life and History OCLC 1782257 Cray Robert E 2001 Bunker Hill Refought Memory Wars and Partisan Conflicts 1775 1825 PDF Historical Journal of Massachusetts Archived from the original PDF on May 5 2016 Retrieved April 14 2016 Congressional bio of John Patterson Biographical Directory of the United States Commemorations Various commemorations of the battle are described in the following sources Charles River Bridges Massachusetts Turnpike Authority Archived from the original on September 28 2007 Retrieved November 26 2008 Massachusetts List of Legal Holidays Massachusetts Secretary of State Retrieved December 16 2008 Environmental Guide 2008 PDF City of Somerville Massachusetts Archived from the original PDF on March 4 2009 Retrieved February 26 2009 UMass Boston Holidays observed University of Massachusetts Boston Archived from the original on February 25 2009 Retrieved March 16 2009 Bunker Hill Day Closings Boston Globe June 18 2007 Retrieved March 16 2009 Winsor Justin 1875 Celebration of the centennial anniversary of the battle of Bunker Hill Boston MA Boston City Council OCLC 2776599 Celebration of the sesquicentennial anniversary of the Battle of Bunker Hill June 17 1925 Boston MA City of Boston 1925 OCLC 235594934 Bunker Hill Museum National Park Service Archived from the original on April 3 2009 Retrieved March 17 2009 Clary David 2007 Adopted Son Washington Lafayette and the Friendship that Saved the Revolution New York City Bantam Books pp 443 448 ISBN 978 0 553 80435 5 OCLC 70407848 Kifner John July 15 1975 Not Unusual Occurrence British Take Bunker Hill The New York Times a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty url help McKenna Kathleen June 10 2007 On Bunker Hill a boost in La Fayette profile Boston Globe Archived from the original on February 20 2009 Retrieved March 17 2009 Further readingAxelrod Alan 2007 The real History of the American Revolution Sterling Publishing Company New York ISBN 9781402768163 Beck Derek W 2016 The War Before Independence 1775 1776 Sourcebooks Inc ISBN 9781492633105 480 pages Doyle Peter 1998 Bunker Hill Charlottesville VA Providence Foundation ISBN 1 887456 08 2 OCLC 42421560 Drake Samuel Adams 1875 Bunker Hill the story told in letters from the battle field by British Officers Engaged Boston Nichols and Hall Elting John R 1975 The Battle of Bunker s Hill Monmouth Beach NJ Phillip Freneau Press ISBN 0 912480 11 4 OCLC 2867199 Ferling John 2007 Almost a Miracle Oxford University Press ISBN 9780199758470 Fast Howard 2001 Bunker Hill New York ibooks inc ISBN 0 7434 2384 4 OCLC 248511443 Lanning Michael Lee 2008 The American Revolution 100 Source Books Naperville Illinois ISBN 9781402252808 O Brien Michael J 1968 The Irish at Bunker Hill Evidence of Irish Participation in the Battle of 17 June 1775 Irish University Press ISBN 9780716505020 Philbrick Nathaniel 2013 Bunker Hill A City a Siege a Revolution Viking ISBN 978 0670025442 Ristow W Walter 1979 Cartography of the Battle of Bunker Hill Swett S 1826 History of Bunker Hill Battle With a Plan Second Edition Boston MA Munroe and Francis OCLC 3554078 This book contains printings of both Gage s official account and that of the Massachusetts Congress Commager Henry Steele Morris Richard B 1958 The Spirit of 76 Harper amp Row Publishers New York London ISBN 0306806207 eBook Vol 2External links Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Bunker Hill Wikimedia Commons has media related to Battle of Bunker Hill Boston National Historical Park official website Bunker Hill Museum websiteAbout the battle Library of Congress page about the battle Bunker Hill Web Exhibit Archived December 23 2008 at the Wayback Machine of the Massachusetts Historical Society SAR Sons of Liberty Chapter list of colonial fallen at Bunker Hill SAR Sons of Liberty Chapter description of the battle The Battle of Bunker Hill Now We Are at War a National Park Service Teaching with Historic Places TwHP lesson plan TheAmericanRevolution org description of the battle BritishBattles com description of the battle Animated History of the Battle of Bunker Hill Archived October 8 2012 at the Wayback Machine Bunker Hill The American Cyclopaedia 1879 About people in the battle Israel Putnam Website Genealogy of Captain Samuel Cherry who fought at Bunker Hill Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Battle of Bunker Hill amp oldid 1144669311, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.