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Bunker Hill is located in southern Macoupin County in the eastern part of Bunker Hill Township. Carlinville , the Macoupin county seat , is 19 miles (31 km) to the north, Alton on the Mississippi River is 20 miles (32 km) to the southwest, and downtown St. Louis is 37 miles (60 km) to the south-southwest.
A historic map of Bunker Hill featuring military notes Sketch of the Battle of Bunker Hill, printed in August 1775. The colonial regiments were under the overall command of General Ward, with General Putnam and Colonel Prescott leading in the field, but they often acted quite independently. [99]
Svenska: Skiss över slaget vid Bunker Hill på halvön Charlestown den 17 juni 1775. Graverad av Jeffrys & Faden. London ... 1 aug. 1775. Dokumentet var en bilaga till von Asps depesch 1775 4/8 (finns i Riksarkivet: SE/RA/2102/I/36/383).
Map of the Battle of Bunker Hill Map showing Lake Champlain and Lake George Woodbridge house, 'Sycamores', a former dormitory for Mount Holyoke College. Benjamin Ruggles Woodbridge (March 5, 1739 – March 8, 1819) [1] was an American physician, lawyer, farmer, and military officer who served as a colonel in the Massachusetts militia during the American Revolutionary War. [2]
Battle of Bunker Hill Asa Pollard (November 15, 1735 – June 15, 1775) was an American soldier. He was the first soldier to be killed at the Battle of Bunker Hill in the American Revolutionary War .
Battle of Bunker Hill † Andrew McClary (1730 – June 17, 1775) [ a ] was an Irish soldier and major in the Continental Army during the American Revolution . McClary was born in Ulster, Ireland and came to colonial America with his parents at age sixteen where they lived on a farm in New Hampshire .
An Account of the Battle of Bunker's Hill. Munroe & Francis, Boston. Biographical Directory of the United States Congress, 1774-2005: The Continental Congress, September 5, 1774, to October 21, 1788. Government Printing Office. 2005. ISBN 9780160731761. Cray, Robert E. (2001). Bunker Hill Refought: Memory Wars and Partisan Conflicts, 1775-1825 ...
The controversy began in 1818, 43 years after the Battle of Bunker Hill, [39] when Henry Dearborn, who at the time was a Major General, published an account of his experience as a young captain at Bunker Hill in the April 1818 edition of The Port Folio, a Philadelphia-based publication and leading political journal.