People of the Revolutionary War | Patriots of the American Revolution | Colonal William Prescott
Colonal William Prescott
William Prescott, soldier, born in Groton, Massachusetts, 20 February, 1726 died in Pepperell,
Massachusetts, 13 October, 1795. His father, Judge Benjamin Prescott, was the grandson of John, of Lincolnshire,
England, an early settler of Lancaster, Massachusetts. The son inherited a large estate and resided at
Pepperell. In 1755 he served successively as lieutenant and captain in the provincial army under General
John Winslow during the expedition against Nova. Scotia. His conduct in that campaign attracted the
attention of the British general, who offered him a commission in the regular army, which he declined,
and after the war he retired to his estate at Pepperell.
In 1774 he was appointed to command a regiment of minute-men, with which he marched, on 19
April, 1775, to Lexington, to oppose the expedition that was sent out by General Thomas Gage. Before Prescott
arrived the British had retreated, and he then proceeded to Cambridge, where he entered the provincial army,
the majority of his officers and men volunteering to serve with him during his first campaign. On 16 June,
1775, he was ordered to Charlestown with 1,000 men, and directed to throw up works on Bunker Hill. On arriving
at the ground, it was perceived that the neighboring elevation, called Breed's Hill, was a more suitable
station, and on it the defenses, consisting of a redoubt and breastwork, were erected during the night. The
following day a large British force commanded by General William Howe attacked the Americans, and, after
the latter had repelled two assaults, and had exhausted their ammunition, succeeded in dislodging them. In
this battle, which owes its importance to the fact that it demonstrated the ability of the provincials
successfully to oppose British regulars, Bancroft says that "no one appeared to have any command but Colonel
Prescott," and that "his bravery could never be enough acknowledged and applauded." He was
one of the last to leave the entrenchments when lie found it necessary to order a retreat, and immediately
offered to retake the position if the commander-in-chief would give him three regiments.
Before the attack Gage, reconnoitering the works, saw Prescott walking on tile parapet, and
asked Counselor Willard who he was, and if he would fight? The latter replied, "That is Colonel Prescott--
he is an old soldier, and will fight as long as a drop of blood remains in his veins."
Early in 1777 he resigned and returned home, but in autumn of that year he joined the
northern army under General Horatio Gates as a volunteer, and was present at Saratoga. After this battle
he returned home and sat in the legislature of Massachusetts for several years. He wrote "A Letter
from a Veteran to the Officers of the Army en-camped at Boston" (Boston, 1774). See Samuel Swett's "
History of Bunker Hill Battles" (Boston, 1827 ; new ed., with notes, 1835). The illustration on page 109
represents the statue by Story erected on Bunker Hill in 1881, on which occasion an oration was delivered
by Robert C. Winthrop.--His brother, Oliver, soldier, born in Groton, Massachusetts, 27 April, 1731; died
there, 17 November, 1804, was graduated at Harvard in 1750, and practiced medicine in his native town.
Before the Revolution he was successively major, lieutenant-colonel, and colonel in the
militia, early in 1776 he was appointed a brigadier-general of militia for the county of Middlesex, and
became a member of the board of war. In 1777 he was elected a member of the supreme executive council of
the state, in 1778 he was appointed third major-general of militia in the commonwealth, and in 1781 he
became second major-general, but soon afterward he resigned. In this year he was commissioned by the
government to cause the arrest and committal of any person whose liberty he considered dangerous to the
commonwealth. From 1779 till his death he was judge of probate for Middlesex county. He was very influential
in suppressing Shay's rebellion.
In 1780 he became a fellow of the Academy of arts and sciences, and he was a trustee, patron,
and benefactor of Groton academy.--Oliver's son, Oliver, physician, born in Groton, Massachusetts, 4 April, 1762;
died in Newburyport, 26 September, 1827, was graduated at Harvard in 1783, studied medicine with his father,
and was surgeon of the forces that suppressed the Shays insurrection in 1787. Leaving a large practice in Groton,
he removed to Newburyport in 1811, practicing successfully there till his death. He was often a representative in
the legislature, and was a founder, trustee, and treasurer of Groton academy. He contributed valuable articles
to the New England "Journal of Medicine and Surgery," but is best known by the annual discourse before
the Massachusetts medical society in 1813, entitled a "Dissertation on the Natural History and Medicinal
Effects of Secale Cornutum, or Ergot," which was republished in London, and translated into French and
German.--William's son, William, jurist, born in Pepperell, Massachusetts, 19 August, 1762; died in Boston,
8 December, 1844, was graduated at Harvard in 1783, and taught first at Brooklyn, Connecticut, and afterward
at Beverly, Massachusetts, where he studied law with Nathan Dane, and practiced successfully from 1787 till
1789.
In the latter year he removed to Salem, and after representing that town for several years
in the legislature, he was elected a state senator by the Federal party for Essex county, first in 1806, and
again in 1813. He twice declined a seat on the bench of the supreme court of Massachusetts In 1808 he removed
to Boston, and was for several years a member of the governor's council. He was a delegate to the Hartford
convention in 1814. In 1818 was appointed a judge of the court of common pleas for Suffolk, which post he
soon resigned, and in 1820 was a delegate to the State constitutional convention. He was a member of the
American academy of arts and sciences. The second William's son, William Niekling, historian, born in Salem,
Massachusetts, 4 May, 1796; died in Boston, Massachusetts, 28 January, 1859, was graduated at Harvard in 1814,
and would have devoted himself to the law but for the results of an act of folly on the part of an
undergraduate, who threw at random a large, hard piece of bread, which struck one of Prescott's eyes and
practically destroyed it. His other eye was soon sympathetically affected, and the youthful student was now
obliged to turn his back upon the sun, and at a later period for many months to remain in a darkened room.
"In all that trying season," said his mother, "I never groped my way across the apartment to
take my place by his side that he did not greet me with some hearty expression of good cheer, as if we were
the patients and it was his place-to comfort us."
His literary aspirations were not subdued by the sad results of this misfortune. "I had
early conceived," he wrote to the Reverend George E. Ellis, "a strong passion for historical writing,
to which perhaps the reading of Gibbon's autobiography contributed not a little. I proposed to make myself a
historian in the best sense of the term, and hoped to produce something which posterity would not willingly
let die. In a memorandum-book, as far back as the year 1819, I find the desire intimated; and I proposed to
devote ten years of my life to the study of ancient and modern literatures, chiefly the latter, and to give
ten years more to some historical work. I have had the good fortune to accomplish this design pretty nearly
within the limits assigned. In the Christmas of 1837 my first work, the ' History of Ferdinand and Isabella,
' was given to the world. I obtained the services of a reader who knew no language but his own. I taught
him to pronounce the Castilian in a manner suited, I suspect, much more to my ear than to that of a
Spaniard, and we began our wearisome journey through Mariana's noble history. I cannot even now call to
mind without a smile" the tedious hours in which, seated under some old trees in my country residence,
we pursued our slow and melancholy way over pages which afforded no glimmering of light to him, and from
which the light came dimly struggling to me through a half-intelligible vocabulary. But in a few weeks the
light became stronger, and I was cheered by the consciousness of my own improvement, and when we had toiled
our way through seven quartos, I found I could understand the book when read about two thirds as fast as
ordinary English. My reader's office required the more patience; he had not even this result to cheer him
in his labor. I now felt that the great difficulty could be overcome, and I obtained the services of a
reader whose acquaintance with modern and ancient tongues supplied, as far as it could be supplied, the
deficiency of eyesight on my part. But, though in this way I could examine various authorities, it was not
easy to arrange in my mind the results of my reading, drawn from different and often contradictory accounts.
To do this, I dictated copious notes as I went along, and when I had read enough for a chapter (from thirty
to forty, and sometimes fifty, pages in length), I had a mass of memoranda in my own language, which would
easily bring before me at one view the fruit of my researches. These notes were carefully read to me, and
while my recent studies were fresh in my recollection I ran over the whole of my intended chapter in my mind.
This process I repeated at least half a dozen times, so that when I finally put my pen to paper it ran off
pretty glibly, for it was an effort of memory rather than composition. This method had the advantage of
saving me from the perplexity of frequently referring to the scattered pages in the originals, and it
enabled me to make the corrections in my own mind which are usually made in the manuscript, and which with
my mode of writing, as I shall explain, would have much embarrassed me. Yet I must admit that this method
of composition, when the chapter was very long, was somewhat too heavy a burden on the memory to be
altogether recommended. Writing presented me a difficulty even greater than read-rag. Thierry, the
famous blind historian of the Norman conquest, advised me to cultivate dictation" but I have usually
preferred a substitute that I found in a writing-case made for the blind, which I procured in London forty
years since. It is a simple apparatus, often described by me for the benefit of persons whose vision is
imperfect. It consists of a frame of the size of a sheet of paper, traversed by brass wires as many as
lines are wanted on the page, and with a sheet of carbonated paper, such as is used for getting duplicates,
pasted on the reverse side. With an ivory or agate stylus the writer traces his characters between the
wires on the carbonated sheet, making indelible marks, which he cannot see, on the white page below. This
treadmill operation has its defects" and I have repeatedly supposed I had accomplished a, good page,
and was proceeding in ail the glow of composition to go ahead, when I found I had forgotten to insert a
sheet of writing-paper below, that my labor had all been thrown away, and that the leaf looked as blank
as myself. Notwithstanding these and other whimsical distresses of the kind, I have found my writing-case
my best friend in my lonely hours, and with it have written nearly all that I have sent into the world
the last forty years."
The success of the history of the "Reign of Ferdinand and Isabella the Catholic"
(3 vols., Boston, 1838) was great and immediate. It was published in France, Germany, and Spain in the
languages of those countries, appeared in an Italian version at Florence (3 vols., 1847-'8), and early
in 1858 a translation was announced in Russia. Thus encouraged, Mr. Prescott again resumed his labors,
and in 1843 published a "History of the Conquest of Mexico," and in 1847 a "History of the
Conquest of Peru." These works, the fruits of the most painstaking investigation into manuscript
authorities, procured from Spain, proved that the critics had not been too hasty in assigning a high
place to Mr. Prescott from the day of the publication of the "History of the Reign of Ferdinand
and Isabella." At least one of the Mexican editions of the "Conquest of Mexico" was
garbled by the translator to suit the political and religious atmosphere of the country. The Madrid
edition is complete. To the French translation, by M. Amedee Pichot, a reference by Mr. Prescott will
be found in the preface to the "Conquest of Peru." Mr. Prescott wrote memoirs of John
Picketing and Abbott Lawrence, and in 1845 published, under the title of "Biographical and
Critical Miscellanies," a selection of twelve papers from his articles contributed to the "North
American Review" between 1821 and 1843, and a "Memoir of Charles Brockden Brown,"
originally published in Spark's "American Biography" in 1834. In the edition of the "
Miscellanies" issued since 1851 will be found a valuable paper entitled "Spanish Literature,
" a criticism published in the "North American Review" for January, 1850, of George
Ticknor's admirable "History of Spanish Literature." In the summer of 1850 Mr. Prescott
visited England, and in the autumn spent a short time in Scotland and on the continent. In 1855 he
published the first two volumes, and in December, 1858, the third, of what would have proved, had
it been completed, his greatest work, "The History of the Reign of Philip II., King of Spain.
" A translation of the first two volumes appeared in Russia in 1858. In 1857 Mr. Prescott added
to a new edition of Robertson's "History of the Reign of Charles V." (3 vols., Boston) a
supplement (vol. iii.) entitled "The Life of Charles V. after his Abdication." Early in
1858 he experienced a slight stroke of paralysis, from the effects of which he never entirely
recovered, although he was soon able to resume his usual walks, and to devote some hours daily to
his books and papers. On 28 January, 1859, he received a second stroke, which terminated his life
about two o'clock in the afternoon. Mr.
Prescott left a widow, two sons, and a daughter It is not to be denied
that the portion of history selected by Prescott for illustration in
his '" Reign of Ferdinand and Isabella" had been neglected
by the scholars of Germany, France, and England, and only
superficially touched by Italian writers; it is equally certain that
at an earlier date no faithful narration of the events of this reign
could have been given to the world. Prescott had the advantage of the
tragic annals of Llorente, the political disquisitions of Mariana,
Sempere, and Capmany, the literal version of the Spanish-Arab
chronicles by Conde, the invaluable illustration of Isabella's reign
by Mr. Secretary Clemencin, many rare works and curious manuscripts
purchased by his friend George Ticknor, in Spain, for his own library,
and, unpublished documents of priceless value, collected from all
available quarters, under the directions of the historian by the
zealous agency of Alexander H. Everett, Arthur Middleton, and the
learned bibliophile, Obadiah Rich. His " History of the Conquest
of Mexico" is founded upon about eight thousand folio pages of
unpublished duplicate of manuscripts in the collections of Don Martin
Fernandez de Navaretta, other original authorities, and such printed
works on the subjects discussed as had previously been given to the
world In the preparation of his "History of the Conquest of
Peru" Prescott used a portion of the manuscript collections that
were used for the "Conquest of Mexico," a part of the
unpublished documents formerly in the possession of Lord
Kings-borough, and other original materials collected at great expense
in England and on the continent. In the preparation of the
"History of the Reign of Philip II." He is said to have
employed six years.
A letter written by him from Brussels in the summer of 1850 shows the
enthusiasm with which he entered into the spirit of the age of Charles
V., and will probably remind the reader of the " musings" of
the historian of tile "Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
amidst the Ruins of the Capitol, while tile Barefooted Friars were
singing Vespers in the Temple of Jupiter." Volumes i, and ii.
bring down the story to the execution of Counts Egmont and Hoorn in
1568, and to the imprisonment and death of Don Carlos. In the
collection of materials for this history Mr. Prescott spared neither
time, cost, personal labor, not' the services of willing friends.
Public and private collections were freely opened to his use, and the
long-closed doors of the ancient archives of Simancas and of other
secret depositories flew open at the name of the magician whose genius
had reanimated the glories of the Old World, and depicted with a vivid
pencil the sorrows and desolation of the New. The reign of Charles V.
is the intermediate link between the reigns of Ferdinand and Isabella
and Philip II., and completes an unbroken period of 150 years of the
Spanish annals. To the life of the emperor subsequent to his
abdication six or seven pages only are devoted by Dr. Robertson, and
these contain many errors. Robertson was unable to obtain the
information then 1, raked up in the archives of Simancas. Of this
information and of the labors of his predecessors, Stifling, Piehot,
Gaehard, and Nigher, Mr. Prescott freely availed himself Prosper
Merimee says of Prescott: "Of a just and upright spirit, he had a
horror of paradox. He never allowed himself to be drawn away by it,
and often condemned himself to long investigation to refute even the
most audacious assertions. His criticism, full at once of good sense
and acuteness, was never deceived in the choice of documents, and his
discernment is as remarkable us his good faith. If he may be
reproached with often hesitating, even after a long investigation, to
pronounce a definite judgment, we must at least acknowledge that he
omitted nothing to prepare the way for it, and that the author, too
timid perhaps to decide, always leaves his reader sufficiently
instructed to need no other guide." Professor Cornelius C. Felt
on wrote: " It is a saying that the style is the man ; and of no
great author in the literature of the world is that saying more true
than of him whose loss we mourn. For in the transparent simplicity and
undimmed beauty and candor of his style were read the endearing
qualities of his soul, so that his personal friends are found wherever
literature is known, and the love for him is co-extensive with the
world of letters, not limited to those who speak our Anglo-Saxon
mother language, to the literature of which he has contributed such
splendid works, but co-extensive with the civilized languages of the
human race."
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