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A veteran long before the War for
Independence, Sam Whittemore was America's oldest, bravest soldier.
By Patrick J. Leonard
On April 19, 1775, approximately 1,800 British troops marched from
Boston to Concord to capture a reported store of Colonial munitions and
hopefully to bag such advocates of rebellion as John Hancock and Sam
Adams. At Lexington Green, they were confronted by about 50 haphazardly
garbed militiamen carrying a variety of weapons, some decades old, some
manufactured by village blacksmiths and gunsmiths, some as modern as the
guns carried by the Redcoats, but all in working order and capable of
killing. When ordered to disperse, the Minutemen did not obey, and firing
began that resulted in eight Americans killed; the rest hastily left the
scene as ordered by their officers. The British then reformed their ranks
and continued marching to Concord.
On their arrival in Concord, where alerted citizens watched their every
move, the British troops searched for but did not locate any of the
munitions, which were cleverly concealed in a variety of ingenious hiding
places. Hancock and Adams were miles away, fully aware of the British
column, thanks to Paul Revere and his assistants.
Learning that the Minutemen were swarming toward them from as far away
as Worcester, and realizing that the munitions were too well secreted to
be found without a lengthy search, the British began an orderly retreat
toward Boston. Soon, guerrilla bands were firing from the woods and stone
walls at the beleaguered marching troops. As British casualties increased,
their ranks became somewhat disorganized. The Americans then struck even
harder at their hated red-coated foes.
While all that excitement was going on, 80-year-old farmer Sam
Whittemore was placidly working in his fields at Menotomy (now Arlington),
Mass. He knew nothing of the British invasion and the deaths at Lexington.
In younger days, Whittemore had been a soldier, and a good one. He became
a captain in His Majesty's Dragoons stationed in America, and fought
against the French, the Indians, and renegades of all types. He even spent
a brief period on board a ship that was hunting for a pirate. He was
always ready to drop his farming tools, pick up his weapons and march off
to battle.
Most men below the rank of general have had their fill of war by the
time they reach their 50th year. Not Whittemore! In 1745, he was among the
forces that stormed the French fortress at Louisburg, Nova Scotia, where
he captured a fine, albeit gaudy and overdecorated, French saber that he
would treasure the rest of his long life. As legend has it, taciturn Sam
said that the former owner of the saber had "died suddenly," but
furnished no further details.
For some inexplicable reason, Britain returned Louisburg to the French,
who diligently spent years and a fortune rebuilding and rearming the
fortifications. Then, in 1758, the British decided to retake and forever
demolish Louisburg. Whittemore, now a hearty 64, buckled on his French
saber and, as peppy as ever, joined the expedition. The fort was conquered
again, and he remained with the wrecking crew until Louisburg was leveled.
A year later, Sam marched away again, this time winding up in Quebec,
where he fought for General James Wolfe against the French General
Louis-Joseph, marquis de Montcalm.
In 1763, Ottawa Chief Pontiac led an uprising in the wild, distant
lands that would one day become Michigan, Ohio and Pennsylvania.
Whittemore was then 68 and still looking for action.
The sons and grandchildren were ordered to stay home and work on the
farm. With his saber and other weapons, Whittemore rode creakingly away on
a rickety horse. He returned in triumph months later, astride one of the
best stallions ever seen in Menotomy, and carrying a matched pair of
ornate dueling pistols. The former owner of the dueling pistols, an enemy
officer, had "died suddenly" according to laconic Sam.
Throughout his lengthy life, "Captain Sam" was as active in
civilian life as he was in his military career. He served on important
town committees as an assessor, a selectman, and in other capacities.
As a young married man Sam built his own home, which he and his wife
Elizabeth (Spring) soon filled with three sons and five daughters. The
Whittemore home still exists, on Massachusetts Avenue in Arlington.
Whittemore proved to be just as aggressive in private life as in war.
During a heated election contest in January 1741, he loudly declared that
one of the contestants for public office, the proud and haughty Colonel
Roderick Shipley Vassal, was no more fit for the office than Sam's elderly
horse, Nero, whose value he assessed at less than 5 pounds.
The infuriated colonel promptly but illegally had Whittemore jailed,
and while Sam was fuming in his cell, Vassal sued him for defamation of
character. The ensuing trial was a heated and well-attended one. Dauntless
Whittemore, who made an admirable witness for himself, won his case. He
then promptly sued the arrogant colonel for false arrest; after another
sterling performance, the court awarded Whittemore the equivalent of
$6,000 to soothe his pride.
After Pontiac's War, Whittemore tended to his endless chores on the
farm, but he also became interested in the prospect of the 13 Colonies
gaining independence from Britain. He believed that his descendants should
have their own country, be able to enact their own laws and not be subject
to the whims of a distant king and government.
Whittemore somehow learned about the British action at Lexington at
midday on April 19 (the sound of distant gunfire may have alerted the aged
warrior), and he immediately stopped working and hastened to his house.
There, before the eyes of his astonished family, Sam methodically loaded
his musket and both of his famed dueling pistols, put his powder and ball
inside his worn and well-traveled military knapsack, strapped his French
saber around his waist, squared his grizzled jaw and, as he strode briskly
out the door, simply informed his worried family that he was "going
to fight the British regulars" and told them to remain safely indoors
until he returned.
Whittemore walked to a secluded position behind a stone wall on Mystic
Street, near the corner of what is now Chestnut Street in Arlington, and
calmly settled in. Some of the Minutemen pleaded with Whittemore to join
them in their safer positions, but he ignored their admonitions. Soon the
47th Regiment of Foot, followed by the main body of British troops,
appeared in view. On both sides of Whittemore, Minutemen were shooting at
the approaching Redcoats and then sprinting away to where they could
reload in safety.
Waiting until the regiment was almost upon him, Whittemore stood up,
aimed his musket carefully and fired, killing a British soldier. He then
fired both dueling pistols, hitting both of his targets, killing one man
outright and mortally wounding another. Not having time to reload his
cumbersome weapons, he grabbed his French saber and flailed away at the
cursing, enraged Redcoats who now surrounded him. Some of those infuriated
soldiers were probably less than one quarter of Sam's 80 years; few, if
any, were even half his age.
One Englishman fired his Brown Bess almost point-blank into
Whittemore's face, the heavy bullet tearing half his cheek away and
knocking him flat on his back. Undaunted, Whittemore attempted to rise and
continue the fight, but received no less than 13 bayonet wounds from the
vengeful Redcoats. They also mercilessly clubbed his bleeding head and
drove their musket butts into his body as they ran by.
When the last Britisher had left the scene and was far enough away for
them to come out in safety, the villagers who had seen Whittemore's last
stand walked slowly toward the body. To their astonishment, he was still
alive and conscious--and still full of fight! Ignoring his wounds, he was
feebly trying to load his musket for a parting shot at the retreating
regiment.
A door was used as a makeshift stretcher and Whittemore was carried to
the nearby Cooper Tavern. Doctor Nathaniel Tufts of Medford stripped away
Sam's torn, bloody clothing and was aghast at his many gaping bayonet
wounds, the other numerous bruises and lacerations, and his horrible
facial injury. According to every medical text Tufts had ever studied and
all of his years of experience treating injured people, the old man should
have bled to death from internal injuries.
Tufts sadly remarked that it was useless to even dress so many wounds,
since Whittemore could not possibly survive for very long; the deep
bayonet thrusts must have pierced many of his vital organs. The horrified
bystanders, however, persuaded the reluctant doctor to do his best, and
Tufts bandaged Whittemore. He did what he could with the frightful facial
wound in an age when plastic surgery was unknown. When the bandaging was
finally finished, old Sam was tenderly carried back to his home to die
surrounded by his grieving family.
To the surprise of everyone but indomitable Captain Samuel Whittemore,
he lived! And continued active for the next 18 years, dying on February 3,
1793, at age 98, proud that he had done his part and more in America's
fight for independence. When asked if he ever regretted his heroic deed,
which had left him disfigured and somewhat lame, Whittemore would proudly
reply in ringing tones, "No! I would take the same chance
again!"
One might question Captain Whittemore's tactical military skill and his
judgment in his last battle, but certainly not his sheer courage and
bravery. *
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