
250 years later, British ‘troops' retreat again from Salem
More than 300 heavily bundled spectators watched the theatrics Saturday, jeering at the Redcoat reenactors, cheering the Salem militia, and tossing 'huzzah' after 'huzzah' into the chilly air.
Related
:
'It's the Lexington and Concord that almost happened,' said Jonathan Lane, executive director of Revolution 250, a nonprofit group that helps Massachusetts communities tell their stories of rebellion and independence.
Colonists line up with guns at the ready before they confront the British troops.
John Tlumacki/Globe Staff
Advertisement
Similar to the original retreat of Lieutenant Colonel Alexander Leslie and 250 soldiers from the 64th Regiment of Foot, the British reenactors considered their dire options, accepted a face-saving compromise, marched a little farther, and then promptly turned around.
This time, the Redcoats headed to warmth, lunch, and a few nearby pubs. In 1775, they marched to Marblehead and sailed the short distance back to Boston, without the cannon that General Thomas Gage had dispatched them to discover, and without a shot being fired by either side.
'The reason more people don't know about this is that it was an event that ended peacefully,' Lane said. 'A lot of people respond to the events that raise our heart rate.'
Only 51 days later, British troops and Colonial militia exchanged deadly gunfire at the Battles of Lexington and Concord, where yet another North Bridge played a role in the 'shot heard 'round the world.'
But Leslie's Retreat was a tense foreshadowing of those hostilities and showed that Colonials, angered by years of punitive treatment from London, were willing to fight the vaunted British army, and that the spark could occur at any time.
'Something incredible happened right here in Salem,' said Lieutenant Governor Kim Driscoll, a former mayor of the city.
Advertisement
The British troops in 1775 had landed at Marblehead on a quiet Sunday morning when townspeople would be at church services and presumably less likely to notice. But they were discovered, and messengers sped the short distance to Salem to warn its residents that the regiment was afoot.
The drawbridge over the North River in Salem was raised to impede the British advance. Armed colonists gathered on the far side, where they admonished Leslie that he had no right to cross the bridge because it had been privately built and was not the king's property.
Charles Thorland of Salem, playing Leslie in the reenactment, indicated how close the resulting confrontation had come to bloodshed.
'It may be necessary to fire on the mob!' Thorland announced to militia Captain John Felt, portrayed by Jonathan Streff, a history teacher at St. John's Prep in Danvers.
'Fire, and you'll all be going to hell!' Streff angrily replied, standing his ground in the middle of the overpass.
'Do you apprehend the danger you are in?' Thorland asked.
'Do you apprehend the danger
you
are in?' Streff shouted.
According to a contemporary account in the Boston Gazette, Leslie told the Colonial militia that 'he had orders to cross ... and he would cross it if he lost his life with the lives of all of his men.'
Leslie, a Scottish aristocrat, also told the colonists that he would stay a month if necessary. The assembled people of Salem joked that Leslie 'might stay as long as he pleased; nobody cared for that.'
Drummer boy Myles Heinzman, 12, from Exeter, NH marches to the North Bridge with fellow British troops.
John Tlumacki/Globe Staff
As in 1775, the Reverend Thomas Barnard, an Anglican minister portrayed Saturday by the Reverend Maxfield Sklar of Hamilton, helped broker a compromise in which the British would be allowed to cross the bridge, as Gage had ordered, and reverse course after marching a short distance.
Advertisement
The colonists lowered the drawbridge, and the set piece played out as negotiated. 'It's a Solomonesque moment where Leslie achieves the most basic part of his orders,' Lane said.
On Saturday, the British 'lobsterbacks' were booed as they marched away. 'I will see you all in Hades!' said George Weghorst of Litchfield, N.H., dressed in Colonial garb as he taunted the Redcoats.
Although Salem has marked Leslie's Retreat with a small annual ceremony since 2017, the 250th anniversary featured a large commemoration, including reenactor groups such as the Lexington Minute Men and the British 10th Regiment of Foot.
'The story of Leslie's Retreat has been pretty well known within Salem, but it really hasn't escaped from the community. It's our little secret that we want to share with the rest of the world,' said Virginia Cherol, coordinator of Salem 400+, which commemorates the settlement's founding in 1626 and the Indigenous people who preceded them.
Colonist Captain John Felt confronts the British troops on the North Bridge.
John Tlumacki/Globe Staff
'Since we were able to talk everyone off the ledge, we don't have the flash and the pomp of the war starting. It easily gets forgotten and glossed over,' Cherol said.
Still, Leslie's Retreat can resonate in these contentious times, she said, showing 'how important it is to to be able to come together during periods of heightened emotions ... and actually listen and come to middle ground and compromise.'
'People were able to come together and see the benefits of diplomacy and tact.'
Colonial reenactors stopped for a photo before the start of the confrontation.
John Tlumacki/Globe Staff
Feathers graced the caps of British troops as they retreated down Federal Street after the confrontation with colonists on the North Bridge.
John Tlumacki/Globe Staff
Brian MacQuarrie can be reached at
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Boston Globe
a day ago
- Boston Globe
The Battle of Bunker Hill rages again -- in Gloucester
Spectators also will be able to interact with the military reenactors, as well as hundreds of 'civilian' interpreters who will depict the hardships of everyday life in the besieged town of Boston at the time of the battle. Organizers chose The spectators 'will get a very good look at what Advertisement Narrators using a sound system will describe the events in context for the audience as they unfold. A slightly compressed version of the reenactment will be staged Sunday from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. 'We'll follow the script of what already happened historically,' said Dietzel, 37, of Bridgewater. 'We have people coming from all over the country, a few coming from Canada, and a few British coming from the UK' to portray the combatants. Advertisement Although Bunker Hill technically was a British victory, the Colonial troops inflicted massive casualties on the British, who were forced to mount three assaults on the Americans' hilltop fortifications before the rebels ran out of ammunition and retreated. The British lost 1,054 killed and wounded in the battle, the first pitched conflict of the American Revolution. The Colonials suffered 450 casualties, but gained the morale-boosting confidence that they could stand and fight a disciplined army with superior numbers. 'Reenactments make history come alive in a way that you don't really get from the textbooks,' said Annie Harris, chief executive officer of the Essex National Heritage Area, one of the event's organizers. 'It was a more significant battle than many of us realize,' Harris said. 'You think about the Battle of Bunker Hill, and you see the obelisk [in Charlestown], and you don't really think much about it.' The reenactment includes what Dietzel described as a series of battle vignettes interspersed throughout the day, beginning with the approach of several ships posing as troop-bearing British naval vessels toward Half Moon Beach in Gloucester beginning about 8 a.m. Saturday. From 9 to 10 a.m., the rebels will build their redoubt, or hilltop fortification, with period hand tools. Spectators are encouraged to join the soldiers as they assemble their defenses, and to learn about their 18th-century backgrounds and motivation to take up arms against the British. From 10 to 11 a.m., British reenactors will land on Half Moon Beach. From about 1 to 2 p.m., they are scheduled to make a flanking attack on Cressy Beach. British commanders ordered this flanking move as their marines made a frontal assault on the redoubt. Advertisement The coordinated attacks were unsuccessful, as was a following frontal assault. Only on the third assault, which will be staged about 4 p.m. Saturday, did the British break through and claim victory atop Breed's Hill, the Charlestown summit where the battle actually occurred. 'If we wanted to keep this exactly right, we'd have to burn a city,' which the British did to Charlestown, 'but we can't do that,' Dietzel said with a chuckle. Dietzel said he feels honored to be able to portray Warren, a key Revolutionary figure whom he has researched extensively. 'I've been reading biographies, letters from the Massachusetts Historical Society, and attending lectures. I've been in the weeds with this man for quite some time,' Dietzel said. The goal of the reenactment, which has been years in the making, is to convey the relevance of the battle to 21st-century Americans. 'We want to make sure we do justice to this event and help share a story that's important to us all,' Dietzel added. 'I told my third-grade teacher I wanted to be a Minute Man. It's been a passion of mine for as long as I can remember.' Brian MacQuarrie can be reached at


UPI
a day ago
- UPI
On This Day, June 21: 7.7-magnitude earthquake in Iran kills nearly 50,000
1 of 4 | A concrete building is damaged in Walls, Iran, after a 7.7-magnitude earthquake struck the region June 21, 1990. File Photo by M. Mehrain, Dames and Moore/NOAA On this date in history: In 1788, the U.S. Constitution became effective when it was ratified by a ninth state, New Hampshire. In 1942, German forces, led by Gen. Erwin Rommel, took control of Tobruk, Libya, in an assault on British forces. The North African city was a key port on the Mediterranean Sea. In 1945, Japanese defenders of Okinawa surrendered to U.S. troops. In 1964, Ku Klux Klan members killed three civil rights activists -- James Chaney, Andrew Goodman and Michael Schwerner -- and hid their bodies in unmarked graves. An informer led the FBI to the three men's graves 44 days later. In 1982, John Hinckley Jr. was found not guilty by reason of insanity in the March 1981 shootings of U.S. President Ronald Reagan and three other people who were also wounded. Hinckley has been in a hospital in Washington, with permission in recent years to spend time outside the institution with his family. UPI File Photo In 1985, international experts in Sao Paulo, Brazil, conclusively identified the bones of a 1979 drowning victim as the remains of Dr. Josef Mengele, a Nazi war criminal, ending a 40-year search for the "angel of death" of the Auschwitz concentration camp. In 1990, an earthquake measuring 7.7 on the Richter scale struck northwestern Iran, killing up to 50,000 people. In 1997, Cambodia announced the capture of former Khmer Rouge leader Pol Pot. In 2005, a Mississippi jury convicted 80-year-old former Ku Klux Klan leader Edgar Ray Killen of manslaughter in the 1964 killings of three civil rights workers. He was sentenced to 60 years in prison and died in 2018. In 2008, nearly 1,400 people, most of them on a ferry that capsized, were killed in Typhoon Fengshen in the Philippines. In 2011, a RusAir passenger plane flying from Moscow to Petrozavodsk in rain and fog crashed on a highway near an airport and broke apart in flames. Forty-four people died, eight survived. In 2020, the acoustic guitar Nirvana frontman Kurt Cobain used during the band's 1993 MTV Unplugged special sold for more than $6 million. It set a new record for highest auction price for a guitar in history. In 2021, Las Vegas Raiders defensive lineman Carl Nassib became the first active NFL player in league history to come out as gay. File Photo by Kyle Rivas/UPI In 2021, Laurel Hubbard made history as the first openly transgender athlete to be selected to compete in an Olympic Games, qualifying for a spot on New Zealand's weightlifting team. In 2023, the Food and Drug Administration granted approval for GOOD Meat, the meat division of Eat Just, and UPSIDE Foods, to sell cultivated poultry in the United States. It was the first approval by the regulatory body for companies to produce meat by growing cells extracted from an animal's body.


American Military News
2 days ago
- American Military News
Captain Cook's lost ship found off Rhode Island coast
The Australian National Maritime Museum recently announced the discovery of Captain James Cook's iconic shipwreck off the coast of Rhode Island, bringing a conclusion to a 250-year-old mystery. In a report published on June 3, the Australian National Maritime Museum explained that historical and archaeological evidence collected as part of an extensive project that spanned over two decades has led researchers to conclude that the RI 2394 shipwreck site in Newport Harbor, Rhode Island, is Cook's 'HMS Endeavour,' which was later renamed the 'Lord Sandwich' when the ship was used by the British. 'This final report is the culmination of 25 years of detailed and meticulous archaeological study on this important vessel,' Australian National Maritime Museum Director Daryl Karp said. Karp described the report as a 'definitive statement' regarding the search for the HMS Endeavour, which the Australian National Maritime Museum launched in 1999. The museum's director added that the search has 'involved underwater investigation in the US and extensive research in institutions across the globe.' According to The New York Post, the HMS Endeavour became famous for becoming the first European ship to circumnavigate New Zealand and land in the eastern part of Australia as part of an expedition that took place between 1768 and 1771. READ MORE: Pics: Two shipwrecks confirmed as slave ships by archaeologists Fox News reported that the iconic ship was later intentionally sunk off the coast of Newport, Rhode Island, in an effort to prevent attacks by America and France. The outlet noted that while researchers have known that the shipwreck of the HMS Endeavor was located off the coast of Rhode Island, the exact location of the shipwreck remained a mystery for roughly 250 years. According to the report, the shipwreck, which is located between 39 and 43 feet underwater, features a 'linear stone ballast pile, the eastern periphery of which features a line of partially exposed frame ends that are closely spaced and of substantial size.' 'Four iron cannons are also present on the site,' the museum added in the report. 'Two are largely exposed above the seabed and lie immediately adjacent to one another on the western side of the site.' The museum's report explains that by 2019, an investigation of the different shipwrecks located in the region led researchers to believe that RI 2394 was the 'most likely candidate' for the HMS Endeavour shipwreck. According to the report, the shipwreck's location satisfies 10 criteria previously agreed upon by different experts. According to the report, the measurements of the RI 2394 shipwreck also match the measurements recorded in a 1768 survey of the iconic ship.