Biography

William Prescott

William Prescott led colonial forces at the Battle of Bunker Hill, where his strategic defense and command helped inflict heavy British casualties, despite ultimately being forced to retreat.

Title
Colonel
War & Affiliation
Rev War, Patriot
Date of Birth - Death
February 20, 1726 - October 13, 1795
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William Prescott

Reposted from battlefields.org

In 1774, when Massachusetts towns began forming militia companies, Prescott was commissioned to command a company and laid siege to Boston after the Battle of Concord. Prescott was then chosen to lead 1,200 men onto the Charlestown peninsula and erect defenses on Bunker Hill on the night of June 16, 1775.

Prescott is credited with uttering, "Do not fire until you see the whites of their eyes", so that the colonial troops could shoot more accurately and so conserve their limited stocks of ammunition. Prescott's men twice threw back British assaults on the redoubt but when the British made a third attempt on the ammunition-less forces, he ordered a retreat while parrying bayonet thrusts with his ceremonial saber. 

While the British successfully captured Bunker Hill, the poorly organized and untrained colonial forces inflicted significant casualties (50% casualties under General William Howe), and the British were unable to capitalize their victory. Prescott received a colonel's commission, and his unit became the 7th Continental Regiment. The regiment saw service in the 1776 defense of New York.