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The Greatest Revolutionary War Battles: The Battle of Bunker Hill
- Narrated by: Keith Peters
- Length: 1 hr and 28 mins
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Publisher's summary
- Discusses some of the famous legends of the battle and whether they are accurate.
- Includes accounts of the fighting written by witnesses and soldiers.
"We have...learned one melancholy truth, which is that the Americans, if they were equally well commanded, are full as good soldiers as ours." (A British officer after the Battle of Bunker Hill)
On April 19, 1775, the "shot heard 'round the world" was fired at Lexington, officially starting the Revolutionary War between the colonists and the British Empire. Though Lexington and Concord were the scenes of the first fighting, contingency plans for war had been made on both sides. Immediately after the Battles of Lexington and Concord, the colonial militia men who had poured in from across the countryside converged on Boston, which at the time was a peninsula with a small neck attaching it to the rest of Massachusetts. With the Charles River surrounding it on three sides, Boston was an ideal city to lay siege to.
Initially, the militias blocked off the land approaches to Boston, but when 4,500 more British soldiers arrived by sea, the American forces fell back to adjacent hills on the Charlestown Peninsula, Breed's Hill, and Bunker Hill. At this time, the colonists and colonial forces were still unclear of their ultimate goals; the Second Continental Congress would not formally declare independence for another year.
During the first few months of the fighting, the British tried on several occasions to lift the siege with force, and the most memorable attempt was what became known as the Battle of Bunker Hill. On June 17, 1775, the British Navy fired on Charlestown from the Charles River and then landed an estimated 3,000 British regulars on the peninsula.
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What listeners say about The Greatest Revolutionary War Battles: The Battle of Bunker Hill
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- F. Leavitt
- 09-09-21
Good info poorly presented
I have no reason to doubt the veracity of what’s told here, but the writing is sometimes lacking, as I’d the performance is very poor. The narrator has one energy level, and fails to modulate either dynamics or pitch to help identify the ends of quotes, for example. I got the feeling he was pretty much reading it “cold” - having never or barely read it in advance. If so, he is at best, competent. If not, he’s worse.
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