Papers of John Adams, volume 3
1775-06-20
I Received the Letters, with which you were pleased to favor me per Mr. Fessenden on Saturday last being the 18th Instant,1 at a Critical Time for the Army posted at Cambridge. The Evening preceeding Orders were Issued in Consequence of a Consultation between the General Officers and Committee of Safety to take possession of Dorchester Hill and Bunkers hill in Charlestown which I must confess gave me most sensible Pain on hearing more especially as it had been determined about Ten Days before by the same Council and a junction of the Committee of Supplies by their desire, that it would be attended with a great expence of Ammunition by Ordinance and that therefore it was inexpedient and hazardous.2
As soon as it was discovered by the Enemy on Saturday Morning a firing began from the Lively in Charlestown River and also from the Batteries in Boston, which was returned against the Latter by the American Forces untill it subsided on the side of the Enemy and only one Man was lost in the Morning. Our Forces exerted themselves in getting entrenched and soon discovered that a Warm engagement must take place; not withstanding which Care was not taken to place a sufficient Number of Artillery and Cannon on the Hill to defend it. At Noon the Enemy bro't in Two or Three Ships of the Line with which, the Lively, and Batteries at Boston, they endeavoured to Dislodge our Forces, soon after they landed about 3000 Regulars and a 40warm Engagement began, in which our Forces in the Intrenchment behaved like Heroes, but were not sufficiently provided with Artillery nor timely reinforced from Cambridge. They soon found it necessary to Abandon an intrenchment on a Hill to the Eastward of Bunker Hill and made a stand at the Lines on the Hill last mentioned. The Forces then being put in Flames by the Enemy the Enemy advanced and a Furious Fire was kept up for some time on both sides untill the Enemy Forced the Lines and depended on pushing their Bayonets. Our Forces after being overpowered in the Intrenchments left them to the Enemy who are now posted there, and retreated about 3 Quarters of a Mile toward Cambridge where they have four
General Lee must be provided for and heartily engaged in the service without being Commissioned at present. He is a stranger and 41cannot have the Confidence of a Jealous people when strugling for their Liberty. He will soon become familiar and be courted into office, I revere him as an Officer and wish he had been born an American.
It affords Consolation that the Congress have or
Medicine is much wanted and Doctor Church has given us an Invoice of necessary Articles which we beg may be ordered here from Philadelphia as soon as possible. I notice what is said relative to powder, no Exertions has been wanting of in the Committee of Supplies since I have been acquainted with it, to procure this Article. Colo. Bower9 was depended on for 200 half Barrels and were disappointed, and the plan of fortifying lines with heavy Cannon was not then in Contemplation. We must hold our Country by Musketry principally untill supplies can be got to expel the Enemy. I rejoice to hear of the Flour ordered to the army. We have an Instance of the Humanity of the Enemy after they had obtained the Hill; not satisfied with burning the other part of Charlestown they proceeded to set Fire to Houses on the Road to Winter Hill.
The Newhampshire and Connecticut Forces as well as the Massachusetts in the Heat of Battle suffered much. I suspect some of our
The copyist's inadvertence for the 17th, which was a Saturday.
The proceedings of the Committee of Safety on 15 June, when it was recommended that Bunker Hill “be securely kept and defended,” are in Mass. Provincial Congress, Jours.
, p. 569. No record of a meeting with the Committee of Supplies has been found, but see the call on 3 June for such a meeting (same, p. 561).
Word editorially supplied.
That is, the Powder House in present-day Somerville.
Allen French, citing Frothingham, gives the total American casualties as 441, but see his note citing the varying figures given by contemporary sources, which give the highest number killed as 139 (
First Year
, p. 263).
DAB
).
DAB
; Mass. Provincial Congress, Jours.
, p. 370, 378). Heath's commission as first major general, dated 21 June, is given in Wroth and others, eds., Province in Rebellion
, p. 2291.
Ward did function as second in command to Washington.
For a brief sketch of Col. Jerathmiel Bowers, a member of the Provincial Congress, see same, p. 2834–2835.
Actually two artillery officers were charged with misconduct, Capt. Samuel Gridley and Capt. John Callender. The former was cashiered but later got himself reinstated, and Callender was finally exonerated, his false accuser being cashiered instead (French, First Year
, p. 244 and note).
Stephen Hall III. See the brief sketch in
Province in Rebellion
, p. 2862.
The enclosure, Job Bradford's report, has not been found, but it was printed in the Pennsylvania Gazette, 28 June.
On 21 June the Provincial Congress appointed a committee composed of Joseph Hawley, Elbridge Gerry, Samuel Thompson, Noah Goodman, Benjamin Lincoln, and Nathaniel Freeman to “inquire into the reason of the present want of discipline in the Massachusetts army, and to report to this Congress what is the most proper way to put said army into proper regulation” (Mass. Provincial Congress, Jours.
, p. 370).
The donations were contributions made from all over the colonies for the benefit of the Boston poor when the Boston Port Act closed the town's harbor. What Hancock proposed to the Committee of Supplies regarding duck cloth has not been determined.