|
See also: American soldier, was See also: born in See also: Roxbury, Massachusetts, on the 2nd of See also: March 1737 (old
See also: style)
.
He was brought up as a See also: farmer and had a passion for military exercises
.
In 1765 he entered the See also: Ancient and Honour-able Artillery See also: Company of See also: Boston, of which he became See also: commander in 1770
.
In the same See also: year he wrote to the Boston See also: Gazette letters signed " A Military Countryman, " urging the See also: necessity of military training
.
He was a member of the Massachusetts General See also: Court from 1770 to 1774, of the provincial committee of safety, and in 1774—1775 of the provincial congress
.
He was commissioned a provincial brig.-general in See also: December 1774, directed the pursuit of the See also: British from Concord (See also: April 19, 1775), was promoted to be provincial major-general on the loth of See also: June 1773, and two days later was commissioned See also: fourth brig.-general in the See also: Continental Army
.
He became major-general on the 9th of See also: August 1776, and was in active service around New See also: York until early the next year
.
In See also: January 1777 he attempted to take Fort Independence, near Spuyten Duyvil, then garrisoned by about 2000 Hessians, but at the first sally of the garrison his troops became panic-stricken and a few days later he withdrew
.
See also: Washington reprimanded him and never again entrusted to him any important operation in the See also: field
.
Throughout the war, however, Heath was very efficient in muster service and in the barracks
.
From March 1777 to
See also: October 1778 he was in command of the Eastern Department with headquarters at Boston, and had See also: charge (Nov
.
1777—Oct
.
1778) of the prisoners of war from Burgoyne's army held at Cambridge, Massachusetts . In May 1779 he was appointed aSee also: commissioner of the See also: Board of War
.
He was placed in command of the troops on the E. See also: side of the Hudson in June 1779, and of other troops and posts on the Hudson in See also: November of the same year
.
In See also: July 1780 he met the French See also: allies under Rochambeau on their arrival in Rhode See also: Island; in October of the same year he succeeded See also: Arnold in command of West Point and its dependencies; and in August 1781, when Washington went See also: south to meet Cornwallis, Heath was See also: left in command of the Army of the Hudson to See also: watch See also: Clinton
.
After the war he retired to his See also: farm at Roxbury, was a member of the See also: state See also: House of Representatives in 1788, of the Massachusetts See also: convention which ratified the Federal Constitution in the same year, and of the governor's council in 1789—1790, was a state senator (1791—1793), and in 1806 was elected See also: lieutenant-governor of Massachusetts but declined to serve
.
He died at Roxbury on the 24th of January 1814, the last of the major-generals of the War of American Independence
.
See See also: Memoirs of Major-General Heath, containing Anecdotes, Details of Skirmishes, Battles and other Military Events during the American War. written by Himself (Boston, 1798; frequently reprinted, perhaps the best edition being that published in New York in 1901 by See also: William Abbatt), particularly valuable for the descriptions of
See also: Lexington and Bunker See also: Hill, of the fighting around New York, of the controversies with Burgoyne and his
See also: officers during their stay in Boston, and of relations with Rochambeau; and his See also: correspondence, The Heath Papers, vols. iv.-v., seventh series, Massachusetts See also: Historical Society Collections (Boston, 1904-1905)
.
|
|
|
[back] BENJAMIN HEATH (1704-1766) |
[next] JOHN HEATHCOAT |
In 1812 he was chosen by the people as Presidential Elector. Information by Fessenden A. Nichols.
Do not copy, download, transfer, or otherwise replicate the site content in whole or in part.
Links to articles and home page are encouraged.