Item Info
Source: Rare Book Department
Notes:
The title of this engraving commemorates Joseph Warren’s heroic role in the Battle at Bunker Hill. The visual representations show the British army attacking Charlestown, a town that lay defenseless and barely protected by the newly formed Continental Army. During the battle, the Continental Army held off the British troops longer than expected even though they were outnumbered and had run out of supplies. The British eventually captured Bunker Hill but at a high price: over 1000 British soldiers died or sustained wounds compared to 400 Americans killed or wounded.
Warren was a Harvard trained physician and active leader in the events leading up to the Revolution. Although he was recently commissioned a Major-General, Warren chose to fight as a solider instead of assuming command in the Battle of Bunker Hill. Warren was shot dead on June 17, 1775 by a British soldier atop Breed's Hill in the Charlestown peninsula in the battle more commonly known as the Battle at Bunker Hill.
In a cartouche on the lower right are nine lettered references which read: "A. West part of Boston B.British works on Cops Hill .C.Charlestown, of fire. D. Sommerset, man of war..E. Mairmaid, man of war .F.Boats with Troops. G. Lively sloop of war. H. British Troops of Advancing." Prominently figured in the middle background is Charlestown on fire surrounded by a number of British ships and a fortified British garrison in the town of Boston on the bottom left foreground. On the bottom right next to the cartouche is a half-naked and bearded merman wearing a crown and holding a flag with the emblem of a tree, perhaps the artist’s attempt at condemning Britain’s role in this battle. The “Mairmaid“was a British man of war, one of the war ships illustrated in the engraving (item E).
John Coles SR. (c. 1749-1809) was a heraldic painter and publisher. He published prints with engravers and artists such as John Norman (c. 1748-1817) and Benjamin Blyth (c. 1746-82). He is also known to have painted some portraits.
Bibliography:
"Joseph Warren." Dictionary of American Biography. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1936. Biography In Context. Web. 4 Sept. 2013.
Document URL
http://ic.galegroup.com/ic/bic1/ReferenceDetailsPage/ReferenceDetailsWindow?query=&prodId=BIC1&displayGroupName=Reference&limiter=&source=&disableHighlighting=false&displayGroups=&sortBy=&search_within_results=&action=2&catId=&activityType=&documentId=GALE%7CBT2310001158&userGroupName=philly_free&jsid=2ad7cf1e5d6958014915dd718a0
Creation Year (Single Year or Range Begin): ca. 1775
Call Number: Elkengravings
Creator Name: Coles, John, 1749 or 1750-1809 - Artist

The Bloody Massacre
A New Display of the United States
A Display of the United States of America
His Excellency General Washington
A New display of the United States
Ye Foil’d, Ye Baffled Brittons.
The True Portraiture of His Excellency George Washington Esqr. in the Roman Dress, as Ordered by Congress for the Monument to Be Erected in Philadelphia, to Perpetuate to Posterity the Man Who Commanded the American Forces Through the Late Glorious...
Lord Cornwallis Surrendering his Sword to Genl. Washington
His Excellency General Washington.
The Late Heroic General Montgomery
A View of Part of the Town of Boston In New England and Brittish Ships of War Landing Their Troops! 1768.
Major General Joseph Warren
Great Warren Commanded, June 17, 1775
The Hon’ble Charles Lee Esqr.
Battles of Lexington and Concord. II.
Battles of Lexington and Concord. IV.
HONBLE. ISRAEL PUTNAM ESQR.
The Hon. John Hancock
The Late Heroic General Montgomery
Great Warren Commanding, June 17, 1775