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
(Page 3 of 3)
Philbrick is drawn to a different feature of the park: a statue of what he calls the “wild man” and neglected hero of revolutionary Boston, Dr. Joseph Warren. The physician led the rebel underground and became major general of the colonial army in the lead-up to Bunker Hill. A flamboyant man, he addressed 5,000 Bostonians clad in a toga and went into the Bunker Hill battle wearing a silk-fringed waistcoat and silver buttons, “like Lord Falkland, in his wedding suit.” But he refused to assume command, fighting as an ordinary soldier and dying from a bullet in the face during the final assault. Warren’s stripped body was later identified on the basis of his false teeth, which had been crafted by Paul Revere. He left behind a fiancée (one of his patients) and a mistress he’d recently impregnated.
“Warren was young, charismatic, a risk-taker—a man made for revolution,” Philbrick says. “Things were changing by the day and he embraced that.” In death, Warren became the Revolution’s first martyr, though he’s little remembered by most Americans today.
***
Before leaving Charlestown, Philbrick seeks out one other site. In 1775, when Americans marched past Bunker Hill and fortified Breed’s instead, a British map compounded the confusion by mixing up the two hills as well. Over time, the name Breed’s melted away and the battle became indelibly linked to Bunker. But what of the hill that originally bore that name?
It’s visible from the Bunker Hill Monument: a taller, steeper hill 600 yards away. But Charlestown’s narrow, one-way streets keep carrying Philbrick in the wrong direction. After 15 minutes of circling his destination he finally finds a way up. “It’s a pity the Americans didn’t fortify this hill,” he quips, “the British would never have found it.”
It’s now crowned by a church, on Bunker Hill Street, and a sign says the church was established in 1859, “On the Top of Bunker Hill.” The church’s business manager, Joan Rae, says the same. “This is Bunker Hill. That other hill’s not. It’s Breed’s.” To locals like Rae, perhaps, but not to visitors or even to Google Maps. Tap in “Bunker Hill Charlestown” and you’ll be directed to...that other hill. To Philbrick, this enduring confusion is emblematic of the Bunker Hill story. “The whole thing’s a screw-up,” he says. “The Americans fortify the wrong hill, this forces a fight no one planned, the battle itself is an ugly and confused mess. And it ends with a British victory that’s also a defeat.”
Retreating to Boston for lunch at “ye olde” Union Oyster House, Philbrick reflects more personally on his historic exploration of the city where he was born. Though he was mostly raised in Pittsburgh, his forebears were among the first English settlers of the Boston area in the 1630s. One Philbrick served in the Revolution. As a championship sailor, Philbrick competed on the Charles River in college and later moved to Boston. He still has an apartment there, but mostly lives on the echt-Yankee island of Nantucket, the setting for his book about whaling, In the Heart of the Sea.
Philbrick, however, considers himself a “deracinated WASP” and doesn’t believe genealogy or flag-waving should cloud our view of history. “I don’t subscribe to the idea that the founders or anyone else were somehow better than us and that we have to live up to their example.” He also feels the hated British troops in Boston deserve reappraisal. “They’re an occupying army, locals despise them, and they don’t want to be there,” he says. “As Americans we’ve now been in that position in Iraq and can appreciate the British dilemma in a way that wasn’t easy before.”
But Philbrick also came away from his research with a powerful sense of the Revolution’s significance. While visiting archives in England, he called on Lord Gage, a direct descendant of Gen. Thomas Gage, overall commander of the British military at the Bunker Hill battle. The Gage family’s Tudor-era estate has 300 acres of private gardens and a chateau-style manor filled with suits of armor and paintings by Gainsborough, Raphael and Van Dyck.
“We had sherry and he could not have been more courteous,” Philbrick says of Lord Gage. “But it was a reminder of the British class system and how much the Revolution changed our history. As countries, we’ve gone on different paths since his ancestor sent redcoats up that hill.”
Read an excerpt from Philbrick's Bunker Hill, detailing the tarring and feathering of loyalist John Malcom on the eve of the Revolutionary War, here.
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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