The True Story of the Battle of Bunker Hill
Nathaniel Philbrick takes on one of the Revolutionary War’s most famous and least understood battles
- By Tony Horwitz
- Smithsonian magazine, May 2013, Subscribe
The last stop on Boston’s Freedom Trail is a shrine to the fog of war.
“Breed’s Hill,” a plaque reads. “Site of the Battle of Bunker Hill.” Another plaque bears the famous order given American troops as the British charged up not-Bunker Hill. “Don’t fire ’til you see the whites of their eyes.” Except, park rangers will quickly tell you, these words weren’t spoken here. The patriotic obelisk atop the hill also confuses visitors. Most don’t realize it’s the rare American monument to an American defeat.
In short, the nation’s memory of Bunker Hill is mostly bunk. Which makes the 1775 battle a natural topic for Nathaniel Philbrick, an author drawn to iconic and misunderstood episodes in American history. He took on the Pilgrim landing in Mayflower and the Little Bighorn in The Last Stand. In his new book, Bunker Hill, he revisits the beginnings of the American Revolution, a subject freighted with more myth, pride and politics than any other in our national narrative.
“Johnny Tremain, Paul Revere’s Ride, today’s Tea Partiers—you have to tune all that out to get at the real story,” Philbrick says. Gazing out from the Bunker Hill Monument—not at charging redcoats but at skyscrapers and clotted traffic—he adds: “You also have to squint a lot and study old maps to imagine your way back into the 18th century.”
***
Boston in 1775 was much smaller, hillier and more watery than it appears today. The Back Bay was still a bay and the South End was likewise underwater; hills were later leveled to fill in almost 1,000 acres. Boston was virtually an island, reachable by land only via a narrow neck. And though founded by Puritans, the city wasn’t puritanical. One rise near Beacon Hill, known for its prostitutes, was marked on maps as “Mount Whoredom.”
Nor was Boston a “cradle of liberty”; one in five families, including those of leading patriots, owned slaves. And the city’s inhabitants were viciously divided. At Copp’s Hill, in Boston’s North End, Philbrick visits the grave of Daniel Malcom, an early agitator against the British identified on his headstone as “a true son of Liberty.” British troops used the patriot headstone for target practice. Yet Malcom’s brother, John, was a noted loyalist, so hated by rebels that they tarred and feathered him and paraded him in a cart until his skin peeled off in “steaks.”
Philbrick is a mild-mannered 56-year-old with gentle brown eyes, graying hair and a placid golden retriever in the back of his car. But he’s blunt and impassioned about the brutishness of the 1770s and the need to challenge patriotic stereotypes. “There’s an ugly civil war side to revolutionary Boston that we don’t often talk about,” he says, “and a lot of thuggish, vigilante behavior by groups like the Sons of Liberty.” He doesn’t romanticize the Minutemen of Lexington and Concord, either. The “freedoms” they fought for, he notes, weren’t intended to extend to slaves, Indians, women or Catholics. Their cause was also “profoundly conservative.” Most sought a return to the Crown’s “salutary neglect” of colonists prior to the 1760s, before Britain began imposing taxes and responding to American resistance with coercion and troops. “They wanted the liberties of British subjects, not American independence,” Philbrick says.
That began to change once blood was shed, which is why the Bunker Hill battle is pivotal. The chaotic skirmishing at Lexington and Concord in April 1775 left the British holed up in Boston and hostile colonists occupying the city’s surrounds. But it remained unclear whether the ill-equipped rebels were willing or able to engage the British Army in pitched battle. Leaders on both sides also thought the conflict might yet be settled without full-scale war.
This tense, two-month stalemate broke on the night of June 16, in a confused manner that marks much of the Revolution’s start. Over a thousand colonials marched east from Cambridge with orders to fortify Bunker Hill, a 110-foot rise on the Charlestown peninsula jutting into Boston Harbor. But the Americans bypassed Bunker Hill in the dark and instead began fortifying Breed’s Hill, a smaller rise much closer to Boston and almost in the face of the British.
The reasons for this maneuver are murky. But Philbrick believes it was a “purposeful act, a provocation and not the smartest move militarily.” Short on cannons, and the know-how to fire those they had with accuracy, the rebels couldn’t do much damage from Breed’s Hill. But their threatening position, on high ground just across the water from Boston, forced the British to try to dislodge the Americans before they were reinforced or fully entrenched.
On the morning of June 17, as the rebels frantically threw up breastworks of earth, fence posts and stone, the British bombarded the hill. One cannonball decapitated a man as his comrades worked on, “fatigued by our Labour, having no sleep the night before, very little to eat, no drink but rum,” a private wrote. “The danger we were in made us think there was treachery, and that we were brought there to be all slain.”
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Comments (6)
Somehow, I am not at all surprised by the history found by Philbrick. Yes the British were well meaning "civilized men" caught supporting the wrong "regime" of loyalists. We have been in their shoes in the Vietnam, Iraq and Afghanistan and other countries we have forgotten about. History is the writings of the victors - but not by the soldiers that actually fought the wars. What actually happened is a common story that we all have experienced. It's about people fighting for freedom. Who decides what freedom is? When we write the history we decide who the "Freedom Fighters" are and who are the terrorists.
Posted by Jim on May 10,2013 | 07:29 PM
At long last the truth about the Ballad of Breed's Hill. I lived in Newton Center and Roxbury in 1927-8 (Dad was taking a Master's at Boston College) and was informed of the story of Breed's Hill a few years later (I was 2-3 years old) by my parents. I spent years in Grade school, Junior High and High School correcting the 'History Book' version of Bunker Hill. Also the real ride of Paul Revere, actually completed by John Dawes, one of three who actually started the ride. Revere was captured. Dawes was the only one who made it. HH
Posted by Hobart Hill on May 10,2013 | 07:14 PM
Over time, Brahmin Charlestown turned Irish and working class [. . .] [b]ut today the obelisk stands amid renovated townhouses, and the small park surrounding it is popular with exercise classes and leisure-seekers. Well thank heaven they got rid of all those poor people and managed to gentrify the neighborhood a bit. I'm sure glad we got rid of the English and their class system.
Posted by aidian holder on May 1,2013 | 03:36 PM
A US Army officer visited a British regiment sometime in the 1960s and was shown a flag in a display case that was supposedly captured at the Battle of Bunker Hill, which The British correctly call Breed's Hill. "And you see, old boy." the hosting officer remarked, "We still have the flag!" "True enough," the American replied, "But we still have the hill!"
Posted by Jeb Raitt on May 1,2013 | 03:00 PM
"Most don’t realize it’s the rare American monument to an American defeat." ... To the contrary, I think most people do know. I know it's fashionable to accuse Americans of being ignorant of everything but maybe, just maybe, we are not.
Posted by Robert on April 27,2013 | 11:55 PM
As General Nathanael Greene said, "I wish we could sell them another hill at the same price." It was a victory in defeat for the Americans and a key factor in changing us from British subjects to American rebels.
Posted by JohnD on April 24,2013 | 09:27 AM