
Maj.
Israel Putnam (January 7,
1718 – May 29, 1790) was an American army general who fought with distinction at the Battle of Bunker
Hill
(1775) during the American Revolutionary War
(1775–1783). Although Putnam never quite attained the
national renown of more famous heroes such as Davy Crockett or Daniel Boone, in his own time his reckless
courage and fighting spirit were known far beyond Connecticut
's borders through the circulation of folk legends
celebrating his exploits.
Early life
Putnam was
born in Salem Village (now Danvers
), Massachusetts
, to Joseph and Elizabeth Putnam, a prosperous
farming family of Salem witch
trials fame. His birthplace, Putnam House
, still exists. In 1740, at the age of
22, he moved to Mortlake (now
Pomfret
) in northeastern Connecticut where land was cheaper
and easier to obtain.

Israel Putnam's birthplace in Danvers,
Massachusetts, USA.
Strong oral tradition in northeastern Connecticut claims that, in
his youth, Putnam—with the help of a group of farmers from
Mortlake—killed the last wolf in Connecticut. The tradition
describes Putnam crawling into a tiny den with a torch, a musket,
and his feet secured with rope as to be quickly pulled out of the
den. While in the den, he allegedly killed the she-wolf, making
sheep farming in Mortlake safe.
There is a section of the Mashamoquet Brook
State Park in modern day Pomfret named "Wolf
Den"
(which includes the 'den' itself), as well as a
"Wolf Den Road" in Brooklyn, Connecticut
.
By the eve of the Revolution he had become a relatively prosperous
farmer and tavern keeper, with more than a local reputation for his
previous exploits. Between 1755 and 1765, Putnam participated in
campaigns against the French and Indians as a member of
Rogers' Rangers, as well as with regular
British forces. He was promoted to
captain in 1756 and to
major in 1758.

Rescue of Major Israel Putnam near
Glens Falls, 1758
As the
commander of the Connecticut force in 1758, Putnam was sent to
relieve Pontiac’s siege of Detroit
.
He was
captured by the Caughnawaga Indians
during a New
York
State campaign, and was saved from being roasted
alive, after being bound to a tree, only by the last-minute
intervention of a French
officer.
In 1759,
Putnam led a regiment in the attack on Fort Ticonderoga
and later at Montreal
. In 1762, he survived a shipwreck during the
British expedition
against Cuba that led to the capture of Havana
. It
is believed that Major Putnam returned to New England from Cuba
with Cuban tobacco seeds that he planted in the Hartford area
resulting in the development of the renowned Connecticut Wrapper
agricultural product.
Putnam
was outspoken against British
taxation policies and
around the time of the Stamp Act
crisis in 1766, he was elected to the Connecticut General Assembly
and was one of the founders of the Connecticut Sons of Liberty.
In the fall of 1765 Putnam threatened
Thomas Fitch, the popularly elected
Connecticut Governor, promising that Fitch's house "will be leveled
with the dust in five minutes" if Fitch did not turn over the stamp
tax paper to the Sons of Liberty.(Colonel David Humphreys, Aid De
Camp to Gen. Washington,
The Life and Heroic Exploits of Israel
Putnam, Major- General in the Revolutionary War. Hartford:
Silas Andrus and Son. 1847. pp.68
Stanford University
Library
The American Revolution
On April
20, 1775, when Putnam received news of the Battle of Lexington that
started the day before, he left his plow in the field and rode 100
miles in eight hours, reaching Cambridge
the next day and offering his services to the
Patriot cause. He joined the Continental Army and was
appointed colonel of the
3rd
Connecticut Regiment and subsequently, brigadier of the
Connecticut militia.
Shortly after the Battle of Lexington,
Putnam led the Connecticut militia to Boston
and was
named major general, making him second
in rank to his Chief in the Continental Army. He was one of the
primary figures at the Battle of Bunker Hill
, both in its planning and on the
battlefield. During that battle Putnam may have ordered his
troops "Don't fire until you see the whites of their eyes" (It is
debated whether Putnam or Colonel William Prescott uttered these
words). This command has since become one of the American
Revolution's more memorable quotes. This order was important,
because his troops were low on ammunition. He progressed to
temporary command of the American forces in New York, while waiting
for the arrival of the
commander-in-chief, Lieutenant General
George Washington, on
April 13 1776.
The Battle of
Bunker Hill
must count as the greatest achievement in Putnam’s
life, for thereafter, his fortunes took a downturn at the Battle of Long Island (1776), where he
was forced to effect a hasty retreat. Washington did not
blame Putnam for this failure as some in the
Second Continental Congress did.
However, Washington reassessed the abilities of his general and
assigned him to recruiting activities. In 1777 Putnam received
another, though lesser, military command in the
Hudson Highlands. With future
Vice-President
Aaron Burr in his charge,
Putnam abandoned
Fort Montgomery and
Fort Clinton to the British, and was
brought before a court of inquiry for those actions. However, he
was exonerated of any wrongdoing.
During the winter of 1778-1779, Putnam
and his troops were encamped at the present-day site of the
Putnam
Memorial State Park
in Redding, Connecticut
. In December 1779, Putnam suffered a
paralyzing
stroke, which ended his military
service.
Epilogue
Putnam
died in Brooklyn,
Connecticut
in 1790, and was buried in an above-ground tomb in
Brooklyn's South Cemetery.
Within a
few years, however, so many people visited Putnam's tomb that the
badly-mutilated marble marker was removed for safe keeping to the
Connecticut
State Capitol
in Hartford
. In 1888, Putnam's remains were removed from
the Brooklyn cemetery and placed in a
sarcophagus built into the foundation of a
monument, newly erected on a plot of ground near the Brooklyn town
green.
In the early days of the war, Putnam was regarded by Washington as
one of America's most valuable military assets, but this view was
probably based primarily upon earlier exploits from his colorful
past. In the War for Independence, however, Putnam proved to be
incapable of commanding complex campaigns, which sharply reduced
his value to the cause.
Today there are many
places named for Israel
Putnam.
Eight Putnam Counties, including
Putnam
County, New York
, which embraces the east bank of the Hudson
Highlands he once held command over, bear his name, as does a
Brooklyn,
New York
elementary school. Only miles north of his
monument in Brooklyn, CT, is the town and city of Putnam, named
after this famous hero.
There is also an East Putnam Avenue in
Greenwich,
Connecticut
which is named after the path in which he retreated
from British forces; Putnam's cottage
, an eighteenth century residence that may have
served as a tavern at the time of Putnam's escape, is located on
this avenue. There is also Putnam State Park, located in
Redding,
Connecticut
, and a Putnam County Tennessee.
General Putnam is an ancestor to famed 20th century newsman and
former Marine Corps Officer
George
Putnam.
Mural "The Life and Times of General Israel Putnam of
Connecticut"
Recently a mural depicting General Putnam was to be returned to the
newly renovated Hamilton Avenue School in Greenwich, CT. An article
of April 1, 2006, entitled "Mural deemed too violent for school",
explains the mural's reception:
After a debate that divided members largely along the
lines of generation and gender, the Chickahominy Neighborhood
Association voted unanimously yesterday not to bring a
controversial Revolutionary War mural back to Hamilton Avenue
School because its content is too violent.
Instead, the group agreed to leave the mural, "The Life and Times
of General Israel Putnam of Connecticut," at its current location
at Greenwich Library.
Painted by James Daughtery of Weston as part of the Works Progress
Administration program in 1935, the mural depicts Putnam,
Greenwich's war hero, aiming his musket at snarling wolves while
all around him Native Americans hurl tomahawks and men armed with
guns and knives tussle.
It hung high in the gymnasium of Hamilton Avenue School for nearly
60 years, often knocked by errant basketballs, before it was
removed in 1998 and restored with $54,145 donated by the Ruth W.
Brown Foundation. It is located in Maine.
References

"Old Put" escaping from the
British at Horseneck
from "Old Put" The Patriot
* (a biography by
Frederick Albion
Ober)
External links