BESIEGED.
Thomas Gage, governor, commanding
his majesty’s forces in America, was sitting
in the Province House, greatly disturbed in mind.
The expedition to Concord had not resulted as he expected.
The troops had marched out bravely, destroyed a few
barrels of flour, disabled half a dozen old cannon,
burned some carriage wheels, but had returned to Boston
on the run like a flock of sheep worried by dogs.
The Tories had informed him that a couple of regiments
could march from one end of the continent to the other,
but the events of the preceding day were opening his
eyes to a far different state of affairs. Till
within a few hours the country had been at peace:
farmers following the plow; blacksmiths hammering
iron; carpenters pushing the plane. All had changed.
Thousands were under arms, gathering at Cambridge and
Roxbury. The Colonies were aflame,-not
only Massachusetts, but New Hampshire, Rhode Island,
and Connecticut. The troops which marched to
Concord so proudly were back in Boston,-not
all: twenty-three had been killed, two hundred
wounded and missing. Eighteen of the officers
had been killed or wounded. Governor Gage could
not gainsay the fact that the citizens were victors.
They had followed the troops to Charlestown till nightfall,
like a swarm of angry hornets. A great army was
closing around him, cutting off his supplies.
No more fresh beef or mutton would be for sale in
the market; no teams would bring potatoes and cabbages
for the soldiers. What would King George say?
What would the ministry think? What would they
do? How would the people of England regard his
administration of affairs? The unexpected had
happened. He had not dreamed of such an uprising.
What course should he pursue? All Boston was
in commotion. People were packing their goods
on carts, loading them on boats to flee from the town.
Women were wringing their hands, children crying, fathers
walking the streets with careworn faces, not knowing
whither to go or what to do. Officers were gathering
at the Province House awaiting orders and talking
of what had happened, and smarting under the thought
that the retreat had been a flight and almost a panic.
It was a humiliating reflection that disciplined soldiers
had been put upon the run by a rabble of countrymen.
Earl Percy, after a sleepless night, weary and travel-worn,
was gladly welcomed by Governor Gage. He told
the story of the retreat.
“If it had not been, your excellency,
for my timely arrival, I fear few of Lieutenant-Colonel
Smith’s troops would have escaped, as they were
completely exhausted, their ammunition gone, and the
men upon the run. I am free to say that I was
completely astonished. I formed my brigade in
hollow square, and his men threw themselves on the
ground with their tongues lolling from their mouths,”
he said.
“It is plain that you marched none too soon,”
the governor replied.
“I cannot account for such a
sudden uprising. I saw very few rebels.
There were no organized bodies of rebels to be seen,-not
more than twenty or thirty in a group; but they were
all around us, firing from fences, rocks, trees, ditches,
houses. If we charged and drove them, they were
back again the moment we resumed our march. I
must admit they were brave and persistent. They
were like so many wasps,” said the earl.
“I learn,” said the governor,
“that several thousand armed men have already
gathered at Cambridge and Roxbury. A loyal citizen
informs me they have been arriving through the night
in great numbers. It seems probable that we are
to be hemmed in by the provincials for the present,
and must make preparations accordingly.”
Fast and far the alarm had gone.
Twenty-four hours and it was one hundred miles away,
and Robert Walden of Rumford with bullet-pouch, powder-horn,
and musket was on his way, as were Colonel John Stark,
Captain Daniel Moore of Derryfield, and hundreds of
others in New Hampshire, Israel Putnam, Thomas Knowlton
of Connecticut, and their fellow-citizens, all animated
by one thought,-to resist the armed aggressions
of the myrmidons of the king. There was a
brave heart behind Rachel’s quivering lips when
she pressed them to Robert’s.
“Roger is sure to be there.
Tell him I think of him every night before I go to
sleep.” Little did they know that he was
being borne to his last resting-place on the banks
of the winding river.
Robert was glad to learn when he reached
Medford that John Stark was to be colonel of the New
Hampshire troops.
Tom Brandon was working day and night
to help people obtain passes from General Gage and
leave the town. More than five thousand closed
their houses and took their departure. The governor
would not allow any one to take their guns or swords,
or anything which would in any way contribute to the
success of the provincials.
The soldiers from Rumford, having
unbounded confidence in Robert Walden, elected him
lieutenant. When General Artemus Ward, commanding
the troops at Cambridge, asked Colonel Stark if he
had a trustworthy young man whom he could recommend
to execute an important order, Lieutenant Walden was
selected and directed to report at general headquarters.
He was kindly received and informed he was to negotiate
with the British for an exchange of prisoners.
Mounted upon his horse, Lieutenant
Walden rode to Charlestown Neck, and from thence to
the top of Bunker Hill to obtain a view of Boston
and the harbor. He saw the warships were swinging
at anchor in the stream. Across the river were
the silent streets of the besieged town. He could
distinguish the home of Captain Brandon, and the Green
Dragon Tavern,-its doors closed. It
was not these buildings, however, that most interested
him, but a mansion on the slope of Beacon Hill, with
its surrounding grounds,-the Newville home.
The window of Miss Newville’s chamber was open,
the curtain drawn aside. His spy-glass made it
seem very near. How would she greet him were they
to meet again? Would she be changed by the changing
circumstances? Would she, daughter of a loyalist,
deign to notice him, a rebel? Blessed vision!
A figure in white appeared at the window. It was
she for whom he could lay down his life, if need be.
Oh, if he could but reach out his hand to her,-hear
once more the voice that had thrilled him in the past!
She stood by the window, looking upon the flowers blooming
in the garden. The vision was but for a moment,
for the window was soon closed and the curtain drawn.
He descended the hill, rode through the village to
the ferry landing, displaying a white flag. It
was answered by the waving of another on the deck
of the Lively warship. Then a boat brought a
lieutenant of the fleet to the shore.
“Who are you and what do you
want?” the curt question of the Britisher.
“I am commissioned by the commander-in-chief
of the provincial army to ask if it will be agreeable
to General Gage to make an exchange of prisoners?”
“The rebel army, you mean.”
“I said provincial, but if it
suits you any better to think of the Americans as
rebels, I will not object. We are rebels against
tyranny and oppression, as I trust we always shall
be. We have several officers of the king’s
troops in our hands, and you have some of our men.
If an exchange is desired by General Gage, I am empowered
to arrange the details,” Robert said with calm
dignity.
The Britisher bowed, and the boat
pulled back to the ship, returning again after a time
with an officer commissioned to make arrangements
for the transfer.
The sun was nearing the hour of noon,
three days later, when Lieutenant Walden, accompanied
by General Putnam, Doctor Warren, and a detail of
soldiers, conducted the British officers and men to
the ferry landing, meeting Major Moncrief and other
British officers, with the provincial prisoners in
their keeping. The British soldiers, with tears
upon their faces, thanked Doctor Warren for the kind
treatment they had received. The Americans had
no thanks to give for what they had received on the
strawless floor of the jail, the prison fare for food.
Lieutenant Walden had engaged a dinner in the tavern.
The landlord set forth his choicest wine. Putnam
and Moncrief, being old acquaintances, chatted of
the days at Ticonderoga while partaking of the viands
and quaffing glasses of madeira.
“While the white flag is waving
we will not let our differences mar the pleasure of
the hour,” said Doctor Warren, who delighted
the company with his wit. Dinner over, there
was a shaking of hands, expressions of personal good-will,
and courteous salutes. With the furling of the
white flag they were enemies once more.
Ships were arriving from England bringing
General William Howe, General Henry Clinton, and General
John Burgoyne, with several thousand troops to carry
on the war. Every morning Miss Newville heard
the drums beating the reveille and in the evening the
tattoo. Many officers called at the hospitable
home of Honorable Theodore Newville to enjoy the society
of his charming daughter, who received them with grace
and dignity.
With no fresh provisions in the market,
the dinners given by Mr. Newville to the generals
Howe, Clinton, and Burgoyne was not so elaborate as
that to Lord Upperton, but more appetizing than those
on shipboard while crossing the Atlantic. It
was a pleasure to General Howe to escort Miss Newville
to the dining-room, sit by her side, and listen to
a voice that charmed him by its purity and sweetness.
A lady so highly endowed, and with such grace of manner,
would adorn any home,-even the drawing-room
of her majesty the queen.
The home of Mrs. Martha Duncan, with
its shrubbery and garden neatly kept, was selected
by General Howe as a residence. He hoped it would
not greatly inconvenience her; he would gladly remunerate
her for any trouble he might make. It would be
a pleasure to have her for a hostess. His own
servant would attend to his personal wants.
“Of course, mother,” said
Abraham, “we cannot prevent him from taking
possession of our home; we may as well make the best
of it, accept the inevitable, and spoil the Egyptians
if we can. He seems to be a gentleman, a man
of honor, and will, doubtless, pay us well. Besides,
possibly we may learn something that can be turned
to good account, if we keep our eyes and ears open,
and our wits about us.”
“It will be only a plain table,
my lord, I can provide. Since the provincials
have closed around us, the market has been bare of
provisions,” said Mrs. Duncan.
“I am aware of it, madam, but
I doubt not you will be able to furnish appetizing
food, possibly a joint of roast mutton from the flocks
of sheep accessible to us on the islands in the harbor,
a fresh mackerel or cod. We are not yet shut
in from the sea, and possibly we may soon have free
access to the surrounding country, for I hear there
is much discontent among the provincials, and
their numbers are rapidly melting away, now that the
first excitement is over,” responded Lord Howe.
“Possibly I may be able to provide
early vegetables,-lettuce, dandelions,
greens, asparagus, and water-cresses, my lord, if you
will allow my negro servant, Cato, to pass the patrol
to Charlestown,” said Mrs. Duncan.
“I will give him such permission,”
he replied, writing a pass, directing the sentinels
along the wharves, and the marine patrol in the harbor,
to pass the negro servant, Cato.
Not only Cato, but Mrs. Duncan and
her son, Abraham, ship-carver and artist, were attentive
to the wants of General Howe, receiving shining guineas
in return. It was a pleasure to the British commander,
just arrived from England, to talk with a young gentleman
so well informed and of such attainments as the son
of his hostess.
“I dare say, Mr. Duncan, you
are quite well acquainted with the country around
Boston?” said his lordship.
“I have been up the Charles
and Mystic by boat many times, my lord, and visited
Cambridge to enjoy the festivities of Class Day, and
the orations of graduates at Commencement. I
have rambled the Roxbury fields and pastures for strawberries,
and am pretty well acquainted with the various localities.”
General Howe spread out a map and
asked many questions in regard to the surrounding
hills, valleys, woods, and cleared lands. He was
surprised to see how well Mr. Duncan could sketch them
in with his pencil upon the map which Ensign De Berniere
had drawn. Lord Howe introduced him to Generals
Pigot and Clinton, who were pleased with the intelligent
replies to their questions.
There came a day in June when Abraham
heard General Howe say to the other commanders that
the Charlestown Hills ought to be occupied at once,
for fear the rebels might seize them. Were they
to do so, Boston might be bombarded, and the ships
driven from their anchorage.
“Doctor Warren and General Ward
ought to know that,” Abraham said to himself.
There were only a few words in the
letter which Abraham Duncan tucked under the cuff
of Cato’s coat-sleeve the next morning, when
he stepped into his boat to cross the river and gather
young asparagus and water-cresses for General Howe’s
dinner. Cato was directed to hand the slip of
paper to Deacon Larkin’s negro, Jim, who would
know what to do with it.
Faithful and true to their kind-hearted
masters were Cato and Jim, passing the letter from
hand to hand, till it reached Doctor Joseph Warren
in consultation with General Artemus Ward and the committee
of safety in Cambridge.
“Bunker’s Hill is to be occupied at once."
That was all, except an ink blot.
“It is authentic,-from
a trustworthy Son of Liberty,” said Doctor Warren.
“It has no signature,” said General Ward.
“Therefore is not treasonable.
Besides, it does not state who is to occupy Bunker’s
Hill,-the British or ourselves,” the
doctor replied.
“How do you know it is genuine-from
the writing?”
“No; the hand is disguised.
Nevertheless, I know the writer. He informs me
that the British intend to take possession of Charlestown
Heights."
“Are you sure it is authentic information?”
“I have no doubt of it.
The writer is in position to learn what they intend
to do. He is a very quiet man, but has his eyes
and ears open. It is not the first time he has
shown his devotion to our cause. You say he has
not signed it; true he has not written his name, not
even the initials, yet his signature is upon the sheet,-the
insignificant ink-blot. It would not be accepted
as testimony in a court-martial, but it is sufficient
for me,” said Doctor Warren.
With the letter came a copy of a proclamation
issued by General Gage. No longer were the selectmen
of any towns in the Province of Massachusetts to have
anything to say. Martial law was to supersede
civil authority. The provincial soldiers were
rebels and traitors who must lay down their arms at
once and go home, if they would hope for pardon; but
there was no pardon for Samuel Adams and John Hancock,
who must pay the extreme penalty of the law for inciting
the people to rebel against their kind and lenient
king.
“We ask no favor of King George;
he began the war, we will end it,” said the
soldiers as they read the proclamation.