Salem Poor
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Salem Poor (c. 1747–1802) was an enslaved African-American man who purchased his freedom in 1769, became a soldier in 1775. He was involved in the American Revolutionary War, particularly in the Battle of Bunker Hill.
Early lifeEdit
Salem Poor was born in 1747 into slavery on a farm in Andover in the Province of Massachusetts Bay.<ref name="davis">Template:Cite book</ref> The farm was owned by John Poor and Rebecca Poor and his son John Poor Jr.<ref name="notable">Template:Cite encyclopedia</ref> His first name may be derived from the Arabic word "salaam", meaning peace.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Other sources explain that his name may have been derived from his place of birth.Template:Citation needed He bought his freedom on July 10, 1769, from John Poor Jr. for £27, a year's salary for an average working man at the time.<ref name="notable"/><ref name="nps">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> This would be equivalent to about $5,600 in 2019 dollars.<ref name="crowder">Template:Cite book</ref>
Military careerEdit
In May 1775, Poor enlisted in the militia when he was about 28 years old.<ref name="crowder" /><ref name="sutherland">Template:Cite book</ref> He served under Captain Benjamin Ames in Colonel James Frye's regiment. Colonel Frye's command consisted of Lieutenant-Colonel James Bricket, Major Thomas Poor, Adjutant Daniel Hardy, and Surgeon Thomas Kittredge.<ref>Richard Frothingham, Battle of Bunker Hill (Boston: Little, Brown, and Company, 1890), 80.</ref> His regiment, with two others, totaled 850 soldiers. They marched from Cambridge to Charlestown,<ref name="herschel">Template:Cite book</ref> Massachusetts, where the officers decided to fortify Breed's Hill.<ref>"Template:Cite book</ref> At Breed's Hill, the regiments built a fort on the top of the hill using pick axes and shovels. The men worked quickly and quietly to ensure the British army occupying Boston did not know they were there.
Salem Poor was one of three dozen African Americans who fought on Bunker Hill. As many as 5000 soldiers,<ref name="gray">Template:Cite book</ref> both free and enslaved African Americans fought for the Patriots. Meanwhile, about twenty to thirty thousand black soldiers fought for Britain. The British had an army twice the size of the Americans. They would assault Breed's Hill on June 17, 1775. The Americans would push the British back in two assaults but would run out of ammunition and retreat during the third assault.<ref name="wilkes">Template:Cite book</ref>
Poor is remembered for his actions during the Battle of Bunker Hill on June 17, 1775, where he was credited with mortally wounding British Lieutenant Colonel James Abercrombie,<ref name="notable"/><ref name="nps"/> as he jumped onto the redoubt and yelled, "Surrender, you rebels."<ref name="wilkes" /> While Abercrombie suffered multiple wounds in the battle, he managed to compose reports in the two days following the incident. Fellow officers who visited and spoke with him noted that the fatal shot that ultimately killed him came from friendly fire behind his position.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> John Pitcairn's army had previously fired on the patriots at Lexington and Concord.<ref name="gray" /><ref name="herschel" /> John Trumbull would create his famous series of paintings, The Death of General Warren at the Battle of Bunker's Hill, June 17, 1775, depicting the death of American rebel General Joseph Warren and British Lieutenant Colonel James Abercrombie.<ref name="sutherland" />
Poor's valor and gallantry at the Battle of Bunker Hill prompted 14 officers, including Colonel William Prescott and Colonel Jonathan Brewer, <ref>Template:Cite book</ref> to cite him for heroism and petition the General Court of Massachusetts with the following statement:
The Reward due to so great and Distinguished a Character. The Subscribers beg leave to Report to your Honorable. House (Which We do in justice to the Character of so Brave a man) that under Our Own observation, we declare that A Negro Man Called Salem Poor of Col. Frye's Regiment, Capt. Ames. Company in the late Battle of Charleston, behaved like an Experienced Officer, as Well as an Excellent Soldier. to Set forth Particulars of his Conduct would be Tedious, We Would Only beg leave to say in the Person of this Negro Centers a Brave & gallant Soldier.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
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There is no evidence that Poor received a reward.<ref name="sutherland" />
On July 10, 1775, George Washington ended the recruitment of African Americans.<ref name="notable"/> On November 12, he issued orders prohibiting all black men from serving in the Continental Army. Despite the ban on recruitment, those who had already been serving for some time were allowed to stay until this point. On hearing of this, Lord Dunmore, who at the time was Governor of Virginia, offered freedom to all enslaved people willing to serve with the British. Washington, sensing the disaster that would almost surely result, immediately changed his position, at once ordering all recruiters to enlist any black men who wanted to fight.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
He is known to have retreated to the winter camp at Valley Forge and fought in the Battle of White Plains, Battle of Saratoga and Battle of Monmouth.<ref name="notable"/><ref name="crowder" /><ref name="wilkes" /> He also served at Fort George.<ref name="wilkes" /> Salem Poor served in New York in 1776 under General Benedict Arnold. He would eventually re-enlist for three years and spend his time in Saratoga. In 1777–1778, he was at Valley Forge and fought in the Battle of White Plains. Poor immediately re-enlisted in the militia and fought with the Patriot forces until March 20, 1780, when he was discharged in Providence, Rhode Island.<ref name="crowder" />
Personal lifeEdit
In August 1771, Poor married Nancy Parker, "a part Indian servant in the family of Capt. James Parker", according to papers in the Charlotte Helen Abbot Collection of the Andover Historical Society.<ref name="notable"/> Lois Kerschen, in the Encyclopedia of African American History, lists her as a "free African American".<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> They had a son, Jonas, who was baptized on September 29, 1776.<ref name="notable"/> In 1780, he married his second wife, Mary Twing, a free African American. The couple moved to Providence but were ordered to leave that city, presumably because they could not support themselves.<ref name="boston">Template:Cite news</ref> In 1785, he placed an advertisement in the Boston Gazette to disown Mary's debts and "forewarn all Persons from trusting MARY, the Wife of the Subscriber".<ref name="boston"/>
Poor then married Sarah Stevens, a white woman, in 1787, and 1793 he spent several weeks in the Boston Almshouse.<ref name="boston" /> He was briefly jailed for "breach of peace" in 1799, married for the fourth and final time in 1801, and died in 1802.<ref name="boston" /> Details of his life after the Revolutionary War were not widely known until research by genealogist David Lambert, a descendant of Poor's former enslavers; an article about this research appeared in The Boston Globe in 2007.<ref name="boston" /> He was interred at Copp's Hill Burying Ground near Boston, Massachusetts.Template:Citation needed
HonorsEdit
The petition sent by Col. Prescott and the other 13 officers suggested the Continental Congress offer Poor "The Reward due to so great and Distinguish a Character." This memorial was dated at Cambridge on December 5, 1775.<ref name="herschel" /> While the battle is thought to have been fought on Bunker Hill, it was fought on Breed's Hill. A monument commemorates the battle on Breed's Hill when General Warren fell on June 17, 1775. Daniel Webster gave two speeches at the 1843 ceremony, later known as the Bunker Hill Orations, commemorating soldiers like Salem Poor who fought in the battle. The monument's cornerstone was laid by Lafayette in 1825.<ref>Template:Cite bookTemplate:Page needed</ref>
In 1876, in a speech at the time of the United States' centennial celebration, George Washington Williams commemorated Poor and other African-American soldiers who fought at Bunker Hill. For the 1976 United States Bicentennial, Poor was honored in 1975 with a stamp in the "Contributors to the Cause" series.<ref name="notable"/> Poor Street in Andover was named after him.Template:Citation needed