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Tuesday, September 2, 2025

RETRO FILES / BRITS BRING WRONG AMMO TO BUNKER HILL

British Grenadiers attack Breed's Hill in 3 costly waves.
Lose 50% of their 2,200 man force.
Painting by Howard Pyle, 1909.

CELEBRATING 250TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE START OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION 

History loves irony, and few military episodes demonstrate it better than the Battle of Bunker Hill. The clash on June 17, 1775, often remembered as the colonists’ gallant but doomed stand, has acquired a detail that reads like the set-up of a grim joke: the mighty British Army, veterans of empire and drill, marched into Charlestown only to discover their artillery had been issued the wrong ammunition. 

In an age when logistics often determined victory as much as bravery, the mix-up at Breed’s Hill (the real site of the fighting, though history still clings to the misnomer “Bunker Hill”) became a cautionary tale. Guns thundered late, infantry bore the brunt too soon, and the battle that might have been a swift demonstration of imperial strength turned into a day of bloody attrition. 

 By June 1775, tensions between Britain and its American colonies had already erupted at Lexington and Concord. Boston lay under British occupation, but the surrounding countryside seethed with militias. The colonists, under leaders like William Prescott and Israel Putnam, decided to fortify the high ground across the Charles River, threatening both Boston and the British fleet. On the night of June 16, colonial soldiers hastily dug earthworks atop Breed’s Hill, a lower rise closer to Boston than Bunker Hill proper. 

Dawn revealed their work to the redcoats, and General Thomas Gage, the British commander, ordered a direct assault. In theory, the plan was sound: bombard the crude colonial works with naval guns and field artillery, then advance disciplined infantry to sweep away the amateurs. Yet in practice, British preparation stumbled almost immediately. 

 Ten fieldpieces were intended to support the assault, but as the artillerymen wheeled their guns into position, they discovered that the limbers had been packed with the wrong caliber shot. Heavy 12-pound guns had only lighter 6-pound balls available. The mismatch rendered the cannons ineffective; iron spheres rattled in the barrels like pebbles in a drum. Until the correct ammunition could be brought forward, the artillery was little more than dead weight. 

 This miscalculation mattered enormously. Eighteenth-century warfare relied on the hammer-and-anvil effect of artillery softening enemy lines before infantry closed in. Without that support, the British grenadiers and light infantry had to advance against intact defenses. 

The American redoubt and breastworks, though improvised, provided sturdy cover. Colonial muskets waited, barrels steady, powder dry. The first two British assaults up Breed’s Hill turned into meat grinders. Waves of scarlet-clad soldiers struggled uphill through grass, fences, and withering fire. Eyewitnesses recorded that volleys from the colonial line dropped entire files at once. 

Officers in full dress became conspicuous targets. One Massachusetts militiaman later recalled that they fired “until our guns grew hot.” Had the artillery been properly supplied from the beginning, the outcome of those first assaults might have looked different. 

Even a few hours of bombardment could have collapsed the redoubt’s walls or at least shaken colonial morale. Instead, the Americans conserved ammunition and struck at close range, famously ordered to hold fire until they saw “the whites of their eyes.” That phrase, whether literal or apocryphal, captured the frugality forced on men who had powder to spare only sparingly. 

 Only by the third assault did the artillerymen finally receive the correct shot. By then, the infantry had already endured staggering casualties—especially among officers who led from the front, cut down by deliberate colonial aim. The final push succeeded only because the defenders’ powder and ball ran out. Muskets clicked on empty chambers. Some colonists hurled rocks; others fought with the butts of their guns before retreating. 

 British victory on paper looked hollow when measured in blood. Out of some 2,200 troops engaged, the redcoats suffered more than 1,000 killed or wounded—roughly forty percent casualties. The officer corps was decimated, including Major John Pitcairn, remembered for his role at Lexington. 

Early hero of the Battle of Bunker Hill,
Dr. Joseph Warren rallies the American rebel force.
Painting by N.C. Wyeth

By contrast, colonial losses numbered fewer than half that, though among the dead was Dr. Joseph Warren, patriot leader and symbolic martyr. Military historians have long speculated how much the ammunition blunder shaped the day. Some argue that British arrogance mattered more; Gage and his generals underestimated colonial resolve. 

Yet even among professional armies, logistics remains the lifeblood of operations. Mis-sized shot on June 17 meant that the infantry advanced naked to musketry that could have been suppressed. “War,” Napoleon later quipped, “is ninety percent logistics.” 

Bunker Hill, decades earlier, supplied an early proof. For the colonists, retreat from Breed’s Hill did not feel like defeat. The battle demonstrated that farmers and mechanics, when fortified and properly led, could stand toe-to-toe with the empire’s best. 

News of British casualties spread across the colonies like wildfire. The story stiffened spines and inspired further enlistment. George Washington, arriving shortly thereafter to assume command of the Continental Army, found an army heartened rather than cowed. 

 The irony, of course, is that Britain had technically won the ground. Yet victory won at such cost sowed doubt in Parliament about the war’s feasibility. If Boston’s militia could exact such a toll, what awaited in the vast countryside beyond? 

 

Detail of Major John Pitcairn, who was
mortally wounded at Bunker Hill.  
Painting by John Trumbull, 1786.
The wrong ammunition at Bunker Hill was not an isolated quirk of military history. Early modern armies constantly struggled with supply. Shot and powder came in varied calibers, with different ball diameters for 3-, 6-, 9-, and 12-pound guns. Without modern standardization, mistakes in loading wagons were easy. A harried quartermaster in Boston may have confused crates in the rush to prepare for the assault. 

Once the boats shoved off toward Charlestown, the error could not be corrected quickly. Nor was the British Army uniquely vulnerable. American forces too often suffered shortages or mis-supplies throughout the Revolution. 

Washington’s winter at Valley Forge turned on supply failures; at Yorktown, British defeat stemmed as much from logistical overreach as from French intervention. 

Bunker Hill thus foreshadowed a war in which material errors repeatedly shaped outcomes. Over time, the ammunition mix-up became one of many anecdotes coloring Bunker Hill’s memory. Artists painted scenes of heroic colonists firing from behind earthworks, of British lines crumpling under musket volleys, of Dr. Warren struck down in tragic dignity. 

Less often depicted were the hapless artillerymen fumbling with mismatched shot. Yet contemporary reports and later research confirm the blunder. To the modern observer, the detail underscores the chaos beneath the pageantry of red coats and drum rolls. 

Wars are not won only by courage or strategy but by whether the right crates arrive on the right battlefield. 

 Looking back, the British mis-ammunition at Bunker Hill seems almost symbolic. An empire priding itself on discipline and precision stumbled in a moment demanding exactly that. 

The colonists, improvisers by necessity, seized the chance to bloody their adversary. A battle remembered for bravery also became a reminder of the mundane—but vital—importance of supply chains. 

 Today, when Boston visitors walk the Freedom Trail and climb the Bunker Hill Monument, the focus often falls on patriot sacrifice. Yet tucked in the footnotes lies this curious twist: the most powerful army in the world lost precious hours and lives because their cannonballs didn’t fit. In that gap of error, the Revolution gained its first legend. 

Monday, September 1, 2025

AMERICANA / ORIGINS OF LABOR DAY

The first official Labor Day parade in Washington, D.C., September 5, 1894, marches along Pennsylvania Avenue past the nearly completed Post Office Building. 

Labor Day in the United States traces its roots to the late 19th century, when the nation was undergoing rapid industrialization. Factories, railroads, and mines relied on long hours of grueling work, often in unsafe conditions, for meager pay. 

In response, labor unions began organizing strikes and rallies to demand better wages, shorter hours, and safer workplaces. The first Labor Day observance took place on September 5, 1882, in New York City, organized by the Central Labor Union. 

Thousands of workers marched in a parade, followed by a picnic and speeches, to demonstrate solidarity and celebrate the dignity of labor. 

Over the next decade, similar events spread to other cities, propelled by union activism and public support for workers’ rights. The push for a national holiday gained momentum after the Pullman Strike of 1894, a bitter railway labor conflict that led to federal troop intervention and violent clashes. 

In an effort to ease tensions and honor the contributions of American workers, Congress quickly passed legislation designating the first Monday in September as Labor Day. President Grover Cleveland signed it into law on June 28, 1894. Today, Labor Day serves both as a tribute to the labor movement’s achievements and as the symbolic end of summer—a day for parades, barbecues, and reflection on the enduring role of workers in shaping the nation. 

The then new Post Office in Washington, D.C., was completed in 1899 after five years of construction, serving as the city’s main post office and headquarters for the U.S. Post Office Department. 

Designed in the Romanesque Revival style by architect Willoughby J. Edbrooke, its 315-foot clock tower made it the tallest structure in the capital at the time. Though its massive granite façade and ornate detailing reflected the grandeur of the era, the building’s location and layout quickly became outdated for postal operations, leading to its eventual decline in use and decades of debate over its preservation--thus it became the Old Post Office building and tower.

NOTES ON THE POST OFFICE TOWER BUILDING:

The now Old Post Office in Washington, D.C., was completed in 1899 after five years of construction, serving as the city’s main post office and headquarters for the U.S. Post Office Department. Designed in the Romanesque Revival style by architect Willoughby J. Edbrooke, its 315-foot clock tower made it the tallest structure in the capital at the time. 

Though its massive granite façade and ornate detailing reflected the grandeur of the era, the building’s location and layout quickly became outdated for postal operations, leading to its eventual decline in use and decades of debate over its preservation.

PRESERVATION UPDATE:
The Old Post Office Building and Clock Tower, a landmark at 1100 Pennsylvania Avenue NW in Washington, D.C., now operates as the Waldorf Astoria Washington DC. The General Services Administration (GSA) leases the historic property for use as a luxury hotel, while the National Park Service manages the clock tower’s public observation deck.  

The building’s high-profile modern chapter began in 2016, when it reopened as the Trump International Hotel Washington, D.C. That venture ended on May 11, 2022, when the Trump Organization sold its lease rights to CGI Merchant Group for a reported $375 million.  

The sale was not a bankruptcy proceeding, but industry analysts pointed to falling revenues and reputational challenges during the COVID-19 pandemic. Public financial filings and media reports showed that the hotel underperformed compared to its luxury competitors, with occupancy rates hit hard by travel restrictions and a decline in corporate and diplomatic events.  

After the sale, the property reopened on June 1, 2022, as part of Hilton’s Waldorf Astoria portfolio, ushering in a new era for one of Washington’s most recognizable addresses.