Born in 1695, just 75 years after the first
Pilgrims landed on Plymouth Rock, the stone-cold hardass who would be made a
state hero of Massachusetts was first unleashed on colonial America in the
1740s while serving as a Captain in His Majesty’s Dragoons – a badass unit of
elite British cavalrymen much-feared across the globe for their ability to
impale people on lance-points and then pump their already-dead bodies full of
gigantic pistol ammunition that more closely resembled baseballs than the sort
of rounds you see packed into Beretta magazines these days. Fighting the French
in Canada during the War of Austrian Succession (a conflict that was known here
in the colonies as King George’s War because seriously WTF did colonial
Americans care about Austrian succession), Whittemore was part of the British
contingent that assaulted the frozen shores of Nova Scotia and beat the shit
out of the French at their stronghold of Louisbourg in 1745. The 50 year-old
cavalry officer went into battle galloping at the head of a company of
rifle-toting horsemen, and emerged from the shouldering flames of a thoroughly
ass-humped Louisbourg holding a bitchin’ ornate longsword he had wrenched from
the lifeless hands of a French officer who had, in Whittemore’s words, “died
suddenly”. The French would eventually manage to snake Louisbourg back from the
Brits, so thirteen years later, during the Seven Years’ War (a conflict that
was known here in the colonies as the French and Indian War because WTF we were
fighting the French and the Indians, and also because it lasted nine years
instead of seven), Whittemore had to return to his old stomping grounds of
Louisburg and ruthlessly beat it into submission once again. Serving under the
able command fellow badass British commander James Wolfe, a man who earned his
reputation by commanding a line of riflemen who held their lines against a
frothing-at-the-mouth horde of psychotic, sword-swinging William Wallace
motherfuckers in Scotland (this is a story I intend to tell at a later date),
Whittemore once again pummeled the French retarded and stole all of their shit
he could get his hands on. He served valiantly during the Second Siege of
Louisbourg, pounding the poor city into rubble a second time in an epic
bloodbath would mark the beginning of the end for France’s Atlantic colonies –
Quebec would fall shortly thereafter, and the French would be chased out of
Canada forever. So you can thank Whittemore for that, if you are inclined to do
so.
Beating Frenchmen down with a cavalry saber at the
age of 64 is pretty cool and all, but Whittemore still wasn’t done doing
awesome shit in the name of King George the Third and His Loyal Colonies. Four
years after busting up the French for the second time in two decades he led
troops against Chief Pontiac in the bloody Indian Wars that raged across the
Great Lakes region. Never one to back down from an up-close-and-personal
fistfight, it was during a particularly nasty bout of hand-to-hand combat he
came into possession of another totally sweet war trophy – an awesome pair of
matched dueling pistols he had taken from the body of a warrior he’d just finished
bayoneting or sabering or whatever.
After serving in three American wars before America
was even a country, Whittemore decided the colonies were pretty damn radical,
so he settled down in Massachusetts, married two different women (though not at
the same time), had eight kids, and built a house out of the carcasses of bears
he’d killed and mutilated with his own two hands. Or something like that.
Now, all of this shit is pretty god damned
impressive, but interestingly none of it is actually what Samuel Whittemore is
best known for. No, his distinction as a national hero instead comes from a
fateful day in mid-April 1775, when the British colonies in the New World
decided they weren’t going to take any more of King George’s bullshit and
decided to get their American Revolution on. And you can be pretty damn sure
that if there were asses to be kicked, Whittemore was going to be one of the
men doing the kicking.
So one day a bunch of colonial malcontents got
together, formed a battle line, and opened fire on a bunch of redcoats that
were pissing them off with their silly Stamp Acts and whatnot. The Brits
managed to beat back this militia force at the Battles of Lexington and
Concord, but when they heard that a larger force of angry, rifle-toting
colonials was headed their way, the English officers decided to march back to
their headquarters and regroup. Along the way, they were hassled relentlessly
by American militiamen with rifles and angry insults, though no group harassed
them more ferociously than Captain Sam Whittemore. When the Redcoats went
marching back through his hometown of Menotomy, this guy decided that he wasn’t
going to let his advanced age stop him from doing some crazy shit and taking on
an entire British army himself. The 80 year old Whittemore grabbed his rifle
and ran outside:
Whittemore, by himself, with no backup, positioned
himself behind a stone wall, waited in ambush, and then single-handedly engaged
the entire British 47th Regiment of Foot with nothing more than his musket and
the pure liquid anger coursing through his veins. His ambush had been
successful – by this time this guy popped up like a decrepitly old rifle-toting
jack-in-the-box, the British troops were pretty much on top of him. He fired
off his musket at point-blank range, busting the nearest guy so hard it nearly
blew his red coat into the next dimension.
Now, when you’re using a firearm that takes 20
seconds to reload, it’s kind of hard to go all Leonard Funk on a platoon of
enemy infantry, but damn it if Whittemore wasn’t going to try. With a company
of Brits bearing down in him, he quick-drew his twin flintlock pistols and
popped a couple of locks on them (caps hadn’t been invented yet, though I think
the analogy still works pretty fucking well), busting another two Limeys a
matching set of new assholes. Then he unsheathed the ornate French sword, and
this 80-year-old madman stood his ground in hand-to-hand against a couple dozen
trained soldiers, each of which was probably a quarter of his age.
…[I]t didn’t work out so well. Whittemore was shot
through the face by a 69-caliber bullet, knocked down, and bayonetted 13 times
by motherfuckers. I’d like to imagine he wounded a couple more Englishmen who
slipped or choked on his blood, though history only seems to credit him with
three kills on three shots fired. The Brits, convinced that this man was
sufficiently beat to shit, left him for dead kept on their death march back to
base, harassed the entire way by Whittemore’s fellow militiamen.
Amazingly, however, Samuel Whittemore didn’t die.
When his friends rushed out from their homes to check on his body, they found
the half-dead, ultra-bloody octogenarian still trying to reload his weapon and
seek vengeance. The dude actually survived the entire war, finally dying in
1793 at the age of 98 from extreme old age and awesomeness. A 2005 act of the
Massachusetts legislature declared him an official state hero, and today he has
one of the most badass historical markers of all time.
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