Monday, August 18, 2014

Miracles Causing the British Retreat from Boston

With the upcoming winter of 1775-76, the outlook around Boston was discouraging for the fledging American army.  The previous April, the Patriots had had won battles at Lexington and Concord, in May they had sieged Fort Ticonderoga, and in June they had lost the Battle of Bunker Hill.  General Washington had arrived on July 2nd to take charge of all colonial forces but there had been many changes in leadership with lower generals bickering and jockeying for position.  General Howe and the bulk of the British Army and Royal Navy were entrenched in and around Boston.  There had been multiple scuffles and skirmishes with the British, but no decisive battles.  As the harsh winter set in, Americans lacked the men, cannons, guns, powder and fortifications to take Boston!
What would happen in the next few months would show the new nation some of history’s most dramatic interventions of divine providence.  Indeed, the Master Orchestrator of the Universe would bring all the pieces together, leaving General Howe only one viable option….a complete retreat and withdrawal from Boston.   
First and foremost, the Continental Army lacked men.  What they had was volunteer farmers and shopkeepers.  Those lacking Washington’s vision of “the glorious cause” preferred spending the New England winter in the warmth of their own homes rather than a freezing army tent.  So many troops had one or two month enlistments that Washington rarely knew how many men he would have from month to month.  Many of the enlisted men had gone home and taken their army-issued rifles with them.  But beginning in January, a miraculous spirit of freedom settled over New England and thousands of men from New Hampshire and Massachusetts began to arrive with their own muskets and powder.  By February, the army had grown to over 10,000 troops.  Washington now had men and guns
During one of many discussions about the need for artillery, someone remembered the cannons that had been abandoned at Fort Ticonderoga the previous year.  Initially, the idea of bringing the artillery to Boston had been discarded because of the difficulty of the 300-mile journey.  Washington turned the challenge over to bookseller and amateur engineer Henry Knox, a plump but determined twenty-five-year-old man whose only knowledge of cannons came from a book he had once sold in his shop. 
Knox’s task was to bring 58 pieces of artillery (three weighing 2,000 lbs. each and one weighing 5,400 lbs.) across lakes, rivers, and mountains to Boston in the dead of winter.  What Knox lacked in experience, he made up for in creativity and inspiration.  In their 2-month trip, Knox’s bizarre little caravan was provided with a miraculous warm thaw when their boats needed to cross Lake George, unusually thick ice when their ox carts needed to cross the Hudson River, fresh deep snows when their 40 sleds needed to cross the Berkshire Mountains, fresh animals when their oxen and horses were exhausted, and patriots in every village to feed and shelter them.  Knox’s “noble train of artillery” entered Cambridge on January 24, 1776.[1]  Washington now had cannons
Bunker Hill and Dorchester Heights were the only hills above Boston that had enough elevation to offer the possibility of an effective bombardment of both city and harbor.  Washington set his sights on Dorchester Heights.  The problem was that in the middle of a bitter New England winter, the ground was so frozen that effective barricades could not be dug.  Without these entrenchments, the men and artillery would be fully exposed to enemy guns.  Here again, God’s hand was seen in the solution. 
On the same night Washington presented the problem to his officers, young Rufus Putnam happened to casually open a book on field engineering written by Professor John Muller and noticed a diagram and description of a “chandelier” – a French solution to their fortification problem.   The chandelier was a wooden fortification that could be prefabricated, quickly assembled, and then filled with sticks and twisted bales of hay.  Joined with other chandeliers, it made above-ground fortifications as effective as a trench.  Construction started immediately on hundreds of chandeliers with a slight American touch…. Hundreds of barrels, filled with earth and rock were placed in front of the barricade which could be rolled down on advancing troops.[2]  Washington now had fortifications.
Powder was now the only lacking ingredient, but supplies steadily build to there were 30 loads per soldier; less than half the British combat issue; but it would have to do.  Washington ordered the attack. 
On the night of March 3rd, Americans commenced a heavy bombardment of British strongholds; British cannons responded.  Throughout the day and next evening, the exchange continued with little damage being done, except that the British attention was diverted away from the 2,000 men, busily working behind the hills at Dorchester Heights. 
The book, The Light and the Glory brilliantly describes the night of preparation.  “The Continental Army could have waited a year and not experienced more ideal weather conditions than those that occurred on the night of March 4: a ground mist completely covered their operations at the base of Dorchester Heights, while the weather was perfectly clear on the top of the hill, well lit by a nearly full moon.  The final touch was a breeze blowing inland to carry the noise of their work away from the British.  Some eight hundred soldiers labored to place the preassembled chandeliers in position and load them with fascines [bundles of sticks], all of which were brought up the hill by three hundred amazingly quiet teams and drovers.  Silently these soldiers worked hour after hour through the moonlit darkness, following plans that Knox had laid out with such precision that the whole line fit together as if it had been set up that way many times before.”[3]  Cannons were moved into place, including several logs that were painted to look like cannons.    
At dawn, the British were amazed!  Captain Stuart wrote that the fortifications “appeared more like magic than the work of human beings.”  British Chief Engineer Captain Robertson called it “a most astonishing night’s work that must have employed from 15,000 to 20,000 men.  Vice-Admiral Shuldham informed General Howe that he “could not possibly remain in the harbor under the fire of the batteries from Dorchester Neck.”  General Howe was also amazed, “These fellows have done more work in one night than my whole army will do in three months.”  Howe ordered a suicidal attack on the hill, but a hurricane-force storm came up out of nowhere, driving back the assault.  Howe reluctantly ordered a complete evacuation of the city and surrounding towns.  Within days, the entire British army, navy, and many of the townspeople loyal to England had left Boston - without the loss of a single life on either side.

Today, many people wonder if America can still be saved.  The answer lies in the miracles of the past.  God has saved America before, and He can do it again.  We don’t have to do it alone; the God of Heaven will save this country when enough citizens recognize His hand in the building of our nation and live worthy of the blessings of freedom. 



[1] Mass Moments; Henry Knox Brings Cannon to Boston; http://www.massmoments.org/moment.cfm?mid=29
[2] David McCullough; 1776; pp. 82-99
[3] Peter Marshall and David Manuel; The Light and the Glory 1492-1793; pp. 374-379