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CHAPTER
XVII HEIGHTS
REACHED AND KEPT N a forgotten and faded
part of Boston, somewhat away from the center of the city, rises a hill
whose
top is green with grass and thick with elms and lindens, and on whose
highest
point stands a monument of
exceptionally fine design; and this monument marks the spot of a great
victory,
one of the victories of Washington. And although it was a military
victory it
was bloodless; although it was a victory of immense importance to
America it
was won without loss. And the hill is still known as Dorchester
Heights, just
as it was when General Washington made it famous at the time of the
Evacuation
of Boston.
Before the Revolution
the
height was a place of pleasant resort, and John Adams mentions in his
diary
that on one evening in 1769, fifty-nine toasts were drunk at a barbecue
and
feast here to which three hundred guests sat down, and he adds,
evidently
thinking that if fifty-nine toasts were drunk so would many of the
people
naturally be expected to be, that not one person was intoxicated or
near
it." After the
Revolutionary days
this general region was looked upon for a time as holding great
possibilities
of residence, and wealth and aristocracy were expected to come, and a
big hotel
was even built here which, however, failed to succeed, for the district
failed
to attract the expected classes, whereupon the hotel building was taken
over by
the very opposite of a sparkling hotel, an asylum for the blind, an
asylum that
gradually became very famous under the name of Perkins – and it is most
curious
that the wife of the most distinguished of the successive heads of this
blind
asylum was the author of the stirring lines beginning, "Mine eyes have
seen the glory of the coming of the Lord!" – for Mrs. Julia Ward Howe,
early in her life, lived here, for Doctor Howe, her husband, was long
the
superintendent. But even the asylum has moved elsewhere, and just
recently the
building itself, a really good-looking structure, was torn down and its
material all sold. It was a satisfaction, however, to learn that a
beautiful
central stairway was bought by a Bostonian who wished to build it into
a house
of his own, for it is so sadly general that beautiful parts of fine old
buildings are thrown away and burned when the buildings are taken down. The district at
present has
not much to attract a visitor, for the streets and buildings are almost
all
quite commonplace; although even an otherwise commonplace district
deserves
appreciation for such efforts to save its old trees as this district
has made,
even to the extent, in places, of encouraging them to live even when
surrounded
by sidewalk stones. It was early in the
Revolution
that Dorchester Heights became famous. When the British held Boston
they
fortified every place that seemed important to the defense of the city,
and
then settled down to await developments. Meanwhile, with a large
American army
so dispersed as to cover every possible line of approach, it was a
difficult
matter to get needed provisions into the city, and when ships were sent
off on
foraging expeditions it was not safe for them to make landings anywhere
on the
New England coast, for the entire countryside was in arms. All this
caused much
hardship and suffering, for garrison and townsfolk alike, and plan
after plan
was evolved by the British officers for advancing upon the Americans
and
defeating and dispersing them; but always the officers remembered
Bunker Hill,
and put each plan aside in hopes of finding a better one or of
receiving such
powerful reenforcements as would give to an attack the probability of
success.
And as they waited and planned and hesitated, General Washington was
himself
constantly planning and waiting and watching, eager for a chance to
drive the
British away. Slowly advancing here, patiently strengthening a defense
there,
ceaselessly studying and watching, steadily putting into the troops the
discipline and patience that they needed, he came to see where a
possible
opportunity lay. And that opportunity was on Dorchester Heights, for
from that
vantage point he could command the harbor and the city – if he had
proper guns.
And with incredible carelessness, the British had failed to fortify the
spot;
had failed even to place troops there. But although there
was no
British obstacle, there was the obstacle that lay in lack of equipment.
The
Americans had no cannon except some minor field-pieces. They had no
siege guns
of sufficient range and caliber to sweep the harbor even if the height
were
seized. And there was the further consideration that heavy guns would
be needed
even in holding the height, for the British could not be expected to
make over
again the mistake of Bunker Hill and send lines of practically
unsupported
troops against American entrenchments; the British would so combine
heavy
cannonading with assault that, unless the Americans should have proper
artillery, the heights would be untenable and the Americans would be
compelled
to retreat; the hill would then be thoroughly entrenched, by the
British,
against attack from the American side, and the capture of the city
would be
almost hopeless. So Washington knew that he must wait for big guns
before he
could dare to seize the heights, and meanwhile he could only hope that
the
British would continue to be so confident of his getting no big guns
that they
would not themselves take possession of that vantage point. It seems
incredible, looking back at it, that this prominent hill, just at the
edge of
the city (it is now included within the city limits), should have
escaped
occupation by either side, when there were thousands of British
soldiers within
the city and thousands of Americans hemming the city in. From the first, even
before
the ultimate seizure of Dorchester Heights was decided upon, the
possession of
heavy guns had been recognized as of the highest importance
to the besiegers. The guns were got; and their getting
was a remarkable achievement, one of the most remarkable of any war in
history. The man to whom the
task was
entrusted was young Henry Knox, afterwards to become the famous General
Knox;
and his fame and advancement, as the trusted artillery officer, the
trusted
friend and helper of Washington, began with his selection for this
task. Not
much of a soldier, one might in those early days have thought, for his
occupation had been the peaceful one of bookseller! He had begun
business for
himself in Boston, in the early 1770's, with an initial importation of
books to
the value of three hundred and forty pounds, which total was steadily
increased
until it was over two thousand pounds, and his business became
flourishing and
his shop was known as a popular meeting-place for the best men and
women of the
city. Then financial trouble came to him as it came to all the business
men of
Boston, through the threatened break with England, the closing of the
port, and
the general disorganization of trade. When the war actually began, Knox
put his
ruined business aside and promptly joined the American forces.
Throughout the
war he forgot all about his books – he was General Knox, the great
master of
artillery. And it is pleasant to know that when the war was at length over, and he might fairly have repudiated
all of his debts to English publishers because his financial altogether
– from
the British Government and because his shop was robbed and looted by
British
soldiers, he did not like to hold the English publishers
responsible, and continued to make payments on
these
pre-Revolutionary debts long after the war was over. Knox was extremely
handsome
and likable as well as capable. In fact, his capacity was recognized
from the
beginning. He had married the daughter of an aristocrat, in spite of
the
opposition of her family, and was so highly thought of that strong
efforts were
made to attach him to the English before he could join the
Revolutionists. That
he was an active member of the handsomely uniformed local organization
known as
the Grenadier Guards, and second in command, made him of practical
promise as a
soldier; and when it was learned that he would not fight for England,
General
Gage peremptorily forbade him to leave Boston. But his wife quilted his
sword
into the lining of his cloak and he escaped from the city in disguise
and
reached the American lines. From the first,
Washington
liked him and he liked Washington. Washington needed a man who could be
trusted
to get cannon. Here was Henry Knox, than whom no man was more
dependable. It
was a supreme opportunity for both. Crown Point and Ticonderoga had
been
captured ("In the name of Jehovah and the Continental Congress!"),
and there were many cannon, at those two adjacent forts, ready to be
used; and
Knox was told to go and get them. And although it was a tremendous
undertaking
he started off without a doubt of success. On his way to
Ticonderoga
there was one of the curious meetings of history, for on a stormy
winter night,
on the border of Lake George, Knox met Major Andre, who was on his way
as a
prisoner to Lancaster, Pennsylvania – this being, of course, an earlier
capture
than the later fatal one. The two young men spent a pleasant evening
together,
for they had tastes in common and were alike bright and agreeable, and
in the
morning they parted – only to meet again when Andre was once more a
prisoner.
And it was severe suffering for Knox, long afterward, remembering this
pleasant
winter meeting beside Lake George, to sit as a member of the court
martial that
found it inevitable to condemn Andre to death. Knox reached
Ticonderoga and
Crown Point and found the cannon there. And we still may read his
fascinating
inventory. There were 14 mortars and cohorns, brass and iron, from 4 ½"
to
13" diameter of bore; there were two iron howitzers; there were 43
cannon,
from 3-pounders to 18-pounders. There was thus the formidable number of
59 guns
in all, with a total formidable weight of 119,900 pounds! And some of
the
18-pounders weighed as high as 5000 pounds each. This enormous weight
of
artillery Knox was to convey to Boston without the loss of a single
unnecessary
hour. He was to take it through miles and miles of wild wilderness, by
a rough
road which was practically no road at all, in mid-winter; he was to go
right
across the Berkshires; and those who have motored over those splendid
hills in
summer on perfect roads, and know what heights and grades there are,
will some
what appreciate how gigantic was the task confronting Knox, of dragging
one
hundred and twenty thousand pounds of cannon over the mountain trails,
through
snow and ice and storm. And it would be hard to find words more brave
and
confident than those he wrote to Washington; not over-confident, not
boastful,
for he merely "hoped"; but we may be sure that Washington, reading
the message, felt no doubts; Knox wrote, telling of finding the guns,
and said:
"I hope in sixteen or seventeen days' time to be able to present to
Your
Excellency a noble train of artillery." And his use of the word
"noble" – what a touch it gives! That word, alone, would show the
bravely
romantic strain in Knox. He did not say "big" or "heavy" or
"important" or "much-needed," but instinctively used the
delightful word "noble" – "a noble train of artillery!" Knox had been
instructed by
Washington as to how many horses to use, but there on the spot he gave
up all
idea of horses, being the kind of man who could assume the
responsibility of
altering instructions when it seemed advisable to do so, and he wrote
to
Washington that he had procured eighty yoke of oxen instead. He wrote
from
Albany on January 5th, eagerly impatient of a delay through a "cruel
thaw" which made it temporarily impossible to cross the Hudson – which,
to
our amazement, we find had to be crossed "four times from Lake George
to
this town!" And from the Hudson he at length struck across the country,
and over the great heights, from Kinderhook to Great Barrington and
thence to
Springfield, from which place he went triumphantly on to Boston. It was
an
amazing achievement. Day by day Washington
had
feared that the British would seize the heights of Dorchester. All he
could do,
as he waited, was to put in readiness bales of screwed hay and fascines
of
white birch, ready for the making of redoubts – the white birch that
even now
springs up so freely all over the untillable parts of eastern
Massachusetts.
The weather continued so cold, and the ground so deeply frozen, that
there
seemed no chance to intrench on Dorchester, and surface redoubts were
therefore
all that could be prepared for. And there was moral severity as well as
the
severity of winter, as shown by General Orders of a winter day early in
1776
positively forbidding not only the soldiers, but the officers as well,
to play
cards or other games of chance, for "At this time of public distress,
men
may find enough to do in the service of God and their country, without
abandoning themselves to vice and immorality." With the arrival of
Knox and
the cannon the military situation was changed. It was now but a matter
of
bravely and cautiously making the final move. And on the night of March
4, the
move was made. It was a moonlight
night.
The British were unwatchfully asleep, refusing to let more than their
pickets
and patrols be disturbed by a severe cannonading which was kept up by
the
Americans from various points about the city to draw attention from the
sending
of a large number of men and wagons and guns to Dorchester, where the
steep
height was mounted and defensive preparations instantly begun. It was a
literal
proving that "the heights by great men reached and kept are not
attained by
sudden flight," but that they, while their opponents slept, were
toiling
upward in the night. Throughout the night the Americans worked with
intense
energy, and when morning came there was a redoubt-crowned hill, with
soldiers
and guns. The British gazed at it in amazement and soon realized that
Washington had decisively outwitted them, for they quickly discovered
that his
position commanded the harbor and the city. It has never, I
think, been
sufficiently understood, in regard to Washington's siege of Boston,
that he
came to the task, not as a stranger to that city but with a close
knowledge of
Boston localities. As a young officer, fresh from the campaign of
Braddock, a
great military movement with whose every detail he had been familiar,
he had
been sent to Boston, in 1756, on military matters and to tell Governor
Shirley
the circumstances of the death of Shirley's son on the Monongahela. At
that
time, Washington stayed ten days in Boston, and not only mingled with
the best
society of the town, but made it a point, with his military experience
and
ambitions, to see Boston thoroughly, even to the extent of visiting
Castle
William, out in the harbor. He could not well have had any definite
premonition, twenty years before the Revolution; but none the less,
born soldier
that he was, he acquired such local knowledge as made Boston and its
defenses
familiar ground. And, too, he came to
the
siege with full understanding of British officers and soldiers, of
British
methods and ways of thought, of a certain blundering and unwatchful
bravery
which marked their methods; he had learned all this from his close
association
with Braddock and his officers, and the knowledge thus gained gave him
such an
insight into the workings of the English military mind as made it
possible for
him to plan with success for Dorchester; counting, first, on British
inaction,
and next on his own preparations to meet their belated activity. Washington fully
expected an
attack on his vital position at Dorchester. General Howe fully expected
to make
one, and Lord Percy was hurried toward Dorchester with twenty-four
hundred men.
The assembling of this force was witnessed not only by the American
army, but
by the people of the city, who gathered in massed throngs on the
neighboring
hills. It was a steep ascent
to the
American position; it is steep even now, although much of the ground
round
about has been graded and leveled; it was too steep for the successful
depression of artillery in those early days, and so the Americans made
ready,
not only with their rifles, but with barrels of stone and sand to roll
down on
Percy’s men as they should come up the hill. But only a few of Percy’s
men
reached even the foot of the hill, for a heavy rain and storm came on,
with so
high a wind and such rough water and dangerous surf that the landing of
the
English troops to make an attack became impossible. The storm continued
all
that day, and all the following night and the next day, and when it
ceased the
Americans had made their position so strong that it was absolutely
useless to
attack it. And Washington could now at any moment cannonade Boston. Washington had been
specifically authorized by Congress to attack Boston even though the
town might
thereby be destroyed. General Howe, appreciating to the full the new
gravity of
his position, frankly threatened to burn the town if an attack should
be made.
But Howe knew that his position had suddenly become hopeless; he was
trapped
and was ready for an accommodation; and Washington, for his part, could
not
bear to have the loyal city destroyed. There was some difficulty in
reaching an
agreement between the two leaders, for, such being sometimes the
absurdities of
practical affairs, Howe would not address Washington in those early
days as an
acknowledged. General, and Washington would not permit himself to be
addressed
in any other way. However, what may be called a gentlemen's agreement
was
unofficially arranged, by which Howe was promptly to evacuate the city
and
Washington was to refrain from using his guns. There was almost two
weeks of
preparation for the departure, with the Americans watchfully waiting,
and on
March 17th the British fleet sailed away, dropping out of the harbor in
long
procession, bearing eleven thousand troops and one thousand Boston
refugees;
going to Halifax, these refugees, self-condemned and unhappy exiles;
and ever
since has "Go to Halifax" been an opprobrious term in most of
America, just as I have noticed the word "Hessian" still used
opprobriously down in Virginia. What a spectacle must
the
sailing of the British fleet have been. There were as many as one
hundred and
seventy ships, so some of the descriptions have it, and soldiers and
civilians,
men and women and children, crowded every vantage point, every housetop
and
hill, to see the ships move sullenly away and watch the white sails
disappear
in the distance. And that was how
Washington
won Boston; won it with superbness of victory, completeness of success;
won it
without loss of life except such as now and then had come from the
clashing of
outposts; won it, in the final analysis, through discerning the
capacity of
Henry Knox and the importance of Dorchester Heights. And that is why
this hill,
situated amid what are now commonplace surroundings, takes on the high
aspect
of romantic and vital history. But even as thoughts came to me of the
contrast
between the romantic past and the commonplace present, the picturesque
appeared, for, as I walked about the hill, two Roman Catholic nuns
suddenly
appeared, passing slowly by, each wearing her headdress of white and
her kirtle
of blue, each with the great, plain, starched-linen headdress pinned
tightly
about the lines of the face. It was as if they had serenely walked out
of
Normandy only to walk serenely around the corner into Normandy again,
on this
American hill. The height is topped
by a
shapely, impressive, fitting monument, of white marble, with a
steeple-like
marble top that in shape is like the steeple of some admirable old
American
meeting-house; an admirable idea admirably executed. And this hill,
with its
space of greenery about the monument carefully preserved, is in itself
a noble
monument to American genius and patriotism. It is seldom seen by
Bostonians,
although it can readily be reached in less than half an hour from the
center of
the city, and the reason for neglect is probably that the victory of
Dorchester
was won without the bloodshed that seems to be needed to make a
picturesque
appeal to most people. It was a victory of brains, not blood. There is a splendid portrait of Knox, by Gilbert Stuart, that is proudly preserved in Boston in the Museum of Fine Arts. Few things are better for a country than the possession of admirable paintings of those of its citizens who have done great deeds; and here is the real Knox. As you look at him you see at once that of course he would get those guns! Of course he would do whatever he set out to do. Here he stands, alive and alert, one hand on his hip and the other resting upon a cannon, and thus cleverly, as Stuart meant it, concealing the absence of two fingers, lost not in battle, but in a gunning accident before the war. Knox looks out of the canvas as if still alive; masterful, capable, good-humored, firm, self-controlled, efficient; a handsome man, too, with high and heavy eyebrows and florid face; and he wears his uniform, of the mellowest of buff and the deepest of blue, with an air! Boston is fortunate indeed in her mementoes of Dorchester Heights, for not only has she the Heights themselves, but she has Gilbert Stuart's paintings of the two men to whom the victory was owing – she has his most famous Washington, and this superb portrait of Knox. |