Authors:
Historic Era:
Historic Theme:
Subject:
June 1973 | Volume 24, Issue 4
Authors:
Historic Era:
Historic Theme:
Subject:
June 1973 | Volume 24, Issue 4
In the early summer of 1775, when the time came to appoint major generals to serve with George Washington in the Continental Army, Congress voted unanimously that Israel Putnam was to be one of them. Then in his fifty-eighth year and known universally as Old Put, he was five feet six inches tall, powerfully built, and had the face of a cherubic bulldog mounted on a jaw cut like a block of wood. More to the point, he was regarded not simply as a good soldier but as a great one; a reputation won during years of frontier warfare had hung a great fog of legends about him.
Then, as now, it was virtually impossible to distinguish fact from fiction about Putnam, but to cite a few of the exploits credited to him suggests the superman his contemporaries thought him to be. Born near Salem, Massachusetts, in 1718, he had moved in 1739 with his bride to Pomfret, Connecticut, where he purchased a farm and where, three winters later, the saga began. As retailed in awe by an early biographer, the first heroics concerned a ferocious she-wolf that had dispatched seventy of Putnam’s sheep and goats in a nighttime raid. Putnam and a group of neighbors tracked the “pernicious animal” (easily, it appears, since she had lost the toes of one foot in a trap) and drove her into a cave. A series of attempts failed to smoke out the wolf before Put, disregarding the pleas of his companions, fashioned a torch from birch bark, tied a rope around his waist, and was lowered into “the deep and darksome cave.” Crawling about forty feet down a narrow passage, he spotted the “glaring eye-balls” of the beast, heard the gnashing of teeth and a sullen growl as the wolf prepared to spring, and in the nick of time shot her dead and dragged her out by the ears.
He prospered as a farmer, sired ten children, and in 1755—the year of Braddock’s defeat—he joined Major Robert Rogers in skirmishes around the French citadel at Crown Point. For ten years, off and on, he skirted violent death, each time escaping by a hairsbreadth. At Fort Edward in ’56 fire broke out near an ammunition magazine, and Putnam (single-handed, it seems) stood between the wall of a falling building and the magazine, pouring water on the blaze, saving the garrison at the penultimate moment and emerging with hands and face dreadfully burned and his entire body blistered.
Near Fort Miller he was alone in a bateau when surprised by Indians and immediately shot the “foaming rapids” of the Hudson to elude them—a feat, his biographer said, that not only astonished the savages but convinced them that Putnam was so favored by the Great Spirit that “it would be an affront to Manitou to attempt to kill him with powder and ball.” Which, presumably, is why they next tried to do away with him by burning at the stake. It was