Publisher's Weekly Review
The strengths and weaknesses of the early Revolutionary War effort are illuminated in this stimulating history (the second this season, after Thomas Nelson's The Fire and the Sword) of the first engagement-and of the 1775 American siege of Boston. Historian Lockhart (The Drillmaster of Valley Forge) skillfully explains the factors that shaped it: the American blunder of fortifying Breed's Hill instead of the more defensible Bunker Hill; the British blunder of halting under fire instead of pressing home their bayonet charges; the ammunition shortfall on the American side that decided things; and the horrific British casualties. He sets the battle against a vivid portrait of the American army, a fractious, panicky, ill-disciplined force some of whose soldiers often walked off at the drop of a hat, but still managed to stand up to the vaunted Redcoats. (His account closes with an appalled George Washington taking over a camp that was the antithesis of Valley Forge.) Lockhart's shrewd, well-judged interpretation corrects myths about the battle and the men who fought it while doing full justice to their achievement in creating an army-and a nation-out of chaos. 17 b&w photos; 2 maps. (June) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
Kirkus Review
Lockhart (History/Wright State Univ.; The Drillmaster of Valley Forge: The Baron de Steuben and the Making of the American Army, 2008, etc.) suggests that conventional Fourth of July hyperbole about the Battle of Bunker Hill "confuses history with heritage, conflates fantasy and patriotic sentiment."The author compares the British and American forces and find them both made up of poorly trained raw recruits, led by generalsThomas Gage and Artemas Wardwho had profited from the lessons of the French and Indian War, in which they had fought side-by-side. The American militiamen were settled farmers, not hardy frontiersman, and the British army was not the finest in the world. Gage had gained respect for American militiamen and recognized the need for marksmanship, while Ward recognized the importance of drill and light infantry tactics. The Massachusetts Provincial Congress and the Committee of Safety were prepared to respond quickly and decisively when Gage moved his army into Concord and Lexington to quell the incipient rebellion. However, the militiamen who responded enthusiastically to the call to protect their colony were not prepared for a war, and Ward faced the problem of establishing even rudimentary discipline in camp. Lockhart explores how the militant Massachusetts leadershipWard, Samuel Adams, Joseph Warren, General Ward and Israel Putnamwere spoiling for a decisive battle. For six weeksuntil British forces were reinforcedthe militia commanded the heights surrounding Boston. Ironically, the actual battle on June 17 was not fought on Bunker Hill as planned, but on the less defensible, neighboring Breed's Hill; the author calls the battle a "triumphant defeat." Yet this was a mixed blessing because it obscured the need for a disciplined and trained army in order to defeat the British.Nonetheless, as the author ably demonstrates, the actual story is "about ordinary people who, when put to the test, did extraordinary things."]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Booklist Review
If Lexington and Concord were the shot. heard 'round the world. then Bunker HIll was the first full-fledged battle of the Revolutionary War. Actually fought on adjacent Breed's Hill, it has been the subject of considerable mythmaking, the portrait of tough American frontiersmen standing firm against disciplined, well-trained British regulars being quite appealing. According to Lockhart, it is also false. In fact, Lockhart asserts, the battle was the gruesome result of a series of blunders by inexperienced troops and commanders on both sides. Breed's Hill was less defensible than Bunker Hill. The British charges up the hill were tentative and disorganized, and some Americans panicked and ran rather than standing firm. Still, Lockhart pays tribute to the courage shown by most soldiers on both sides, and he recognizes that the battle was an essential step in the formation of an effective American fighting force. In conclusion, Lockhart brings George Washington onto the scene as he begins the task of assembling a command structure.--Freeman, Ja. Copyright 2010 Booklist