Battle of Bunker Hill
\n \n |
\nBunker Hill was a battle of the
American Revolutionary War that took place on
June 17,
1775 during the
Siege of Boston.\nAlthough it is known as Bunker Hill, most of the action was on Breed's Hill.\n
British forces under
General Howe drove the American militia from fortified positions on Breed's Hill and Bunker Hill.\nThe battle was a
Pyrrhic victory for Howe. His immediate objective was achieved, but the attack demonstrated the American will to stand in pitched battle, caused substantial British casualties, and did not change the status of the siege. After the battle, British General
Thomas Gage is said to have remarked that
"One more victory like that will destroy us."\n
Background
\nBoston had been occupied by the British army since 1768\nSince May of 1774 Massachusetts had been under martial law under General Thomas Gage.\nBut after April 19, 1775 his forces had been besieged in Boston by 8,000 to 12,000 militia led mainly by General Artemas Ward.\nIn May, the British garrison was increased by the arrival of about 4,500 additional troops and Major General Howe.\nAdmiral Samuel Graves commanded the fleet elements within the harbor.
General Gage started work with his new generals on a plan to break the grip of besieging forces.\nThey would use an amphibious assault to remove the Americans from the Dorchester Heights or take their headquarters at Cambridge.\nTo thwart these plans, General Ward gave orders to General Israel Putnam to fortify Bunker Hill.
The battleground
\n(For a 1775 map of the battle see: Library of Congress map)
The Charlestown Peninsula extended about 1 mile (1600 meters) toward the southwest into Boston Harbor.\nAt its closest approach less than 1000 feet (300 meters) separated it from the Boston Peninsula.\nBunker Hill is an elevation at the rear of the peninsula, and Breed's Hill is near the Boston end, while\nthe town of Charlestown occupied the flats at the southern end.\nDescription of the battle
\nOn the night of June 16 Colonel William Prescott led 1,200 men onto the peninsula. \nAt first Putnam, Prescott, and their engineering officer, Captain Richard Gridley, disagreed as to where they should locate their defense.\nBreed's Hill was viewed as much more defensible, and they decided to locate their primary redoubt there.\nPrescott and his men, using Gridley's outline, began digging a fortification 160 feet (50 m) long and 80 feet (25 m) wide with ditches and earthen walls.\nThey added ditch and dike extensions toward the Charles River on their right and began reinforcing a fence running to their left.
In the early predawn, around 4 am, a sentry on board the HMS Lively was first to spot the new fortification.\nThe Lively opened fire, temporarily halting the Americans work.\nAdmiral Graves, on his flagship HMS Somerset, woke irritated by gunfire he hadn't ordered.\nHe ordered it stopped, only to reverse himself when he got on deck and saw the works.\nHe ordered all 128 guns in the harbor to open up on the American position.\nThe broadsides proved largely ineffective, since the ships couldn't elevate their guns enough to reach the hilltop.
It took almost six hours to organize an infantry force, gather up and inspect the men on parade.\nGeneral Howe was to lead the major assault, drive around the American left flank, and take them from the rear.\nBrigadier General Robert Pigot on the British left flank would lead the direct assault on the redoubt.\nMajor John Pitcairn led the flank or reserve force.\nIt took several trips in longboats to assemble Howe's forces on the northwest corner of the peninsula. \nOn a warm day, with full field packs of about 60 pounds (30 kg), the British were finally ready about 2 in the afternoon.
The Americans, meanwhile seeing this activity, had also called for reinforcements.\nThe only troops to get to the forward positions were two New Hampshire regiments of 200 men under John Stark.\nStark's men took positions along the fence on the left or north end of the American position.\nSince low tide opened a gap along the Mystic River, they quickly extended the fence with a short stone wall to the north.\nGridley or Stark placed a stake about 30 meters in front of the fence and ordered that no one fire until the regulars passed it.
But Prescott had been steadily losing men.\nHe lost very few to the bombardment, but had ten volunteers to carry every wounded man to the rear.\nOthers took advantage of the confusion to join the withdrawal.\nTwo generals did join Prescott's force, but both declined command, and simply fought as individuals.\nOne of these was Dr. Joseph Warren, the president of the Council and acting head of Massachusetts' revolutionary government.\nThe second was Seth Pomery.\nBy the time the battle started the total involved defenders numbered about 1,400 and they faced 2,600 regulars.
The first assaults both on the fence line and the redoubt were met with massed fire at close range and repulsed, with heavy British losses.\nThe reserve, gathering just north of the town, was also taking casualties due to rifle fire from a company in the town.\nHowe's men reformed on the field and made a second unsuccessful attack at the wall.
The Americans had lost all fire discipline.\nIn traditional battles of the 18th century, companies of men fired, reloaded, and moved on specific orders, as they had been trained.\nAfter their initial volley, the Americans all fought as individuals, and every man fired as quickly as he could reload and find a target.\nThe British withdrew almost to their original positions on the peninsula to regroup.\nThe navy, along with artillery from Crops hill on the Boston peninsula, fired heated shot into Charlestown.\nAll 400 or so buildings and the docks were completely burned, but the snipers withdrew safely.
The third British assault carried the redoubt, due to a number of factors.\nThe reserves were included.\nBoth flanks concentrated on the redoubt.\nThe Americans ran out of ammunition, reducing the battle to a bayonet fight, and most rebels didn't have one.\nAftermath
\nThe British had taken the ground, but at a cost; 1,054 had been shot (226 dead and 828 wounded). and a disproportionate number of these were officers.\nThe American losses were only about 450, of whom 140 were killed (including Joseph Warren), and 30 captured.\nMost American losses came during the withdrawal of General Howe's entire field staff, he was the only one not shot.\nMajor Pitcairn was dead, and Colonel James Abercrombie fatally wounded.\nThe American withdrawal and British advance swept right through to include the entire peninsula, Bunker Hill as well as Breed's Hill.\nBut the number of Americans to be faced in the positions hastily created on by Putnam on the mainland, the end of the day, and the exhaustion of his troops removed any chance Howe had of advancing on Cambridge.
The attitude of the British was significantly changed, both individually and as a government.\nThomas Gage was soon recalled, and would be replaced by General Howe.\nHowe himself lost the daring he had shown at Louisbourg, and was cautious through the rest of his service.\nGage's report to the cabinet repeated his earlier warnings that "a large army must at length be employed to reduce these people" and would require "the hiring of foreign troops."
A famous saying came from this battle: "Don't fire till you see the whites of their eyes". However, we are not certain who said it, since various writers attribute it to Stark, Prescott, and Gridley.\nAnother reporting uncertainty concerns the role of African-Americans.\nThere were certainly a few involved in the battle, but we don't know their exact numbers.\nOne of these was Salem Poor, who died at the redoubt saving Prescott's life.\nBut accounts crediting him with Pitcairn's death are highly doubtful.
See also: Royal Welch Fusiliers
External links
\n* Library of Congress discussion\n* Bunker Hill national park web site\n* The Leonard P. Zakim Bunker Hill Bridge web site
Additional reading:\n*Peter Doyle; "Bunker Hill"; (young peoples book); 1998, Providence Foundation; ISBN 1887456082.\n*John R. Elting; "The Battle of Bunker's Hill"; 1975, Phillip Freneau Pres (56 pages), Monmouth, New Jersey; ISBN 0912480114\n*Howard Fast; "Bunker Hill"; 2001, ibooks inc., New York; ISBN 0743423844\n*Richard Ketchum;"Decisive Day: The Battle of Bunker Hill"; 1999, Owl Books; ISBN 0385418973 (Paperback: ISBN 0805060995)\nCategory:Freedom Trail