National Historical Park
Boston                                                                National Park Service
                                                                      U. S. Department of the Interior
                                   SALEM POOR:
                        “A Brave and Gallant Soldier”
                 In the Massachusetts State Archives is a petition to the General Court of the
                  Massachusetts Bay Colony, stating that in the “late Battle at Charlestown,” a
                  man from Colonel Frye’s Regiment “behaved like an experienced officer” and
                   that in this man “centers a brave and gallant soldier”. This document, dated
                     December of 1775, just six months after the Battle of Bunker Hill, is signed
                        by fourteen officers who were present at the battle, including William
                          Prescott. Of the 2,400-4,000 colonists who participated in the battle,
                          there is no other man singled out in this manner.
                          This hero of the Battle of Bunker Hill is Salem Poor of Andover, MA.
                          Although documents show that Poor, along with his regiment and two
                          others, were sent to Bunker Hill to build a fort and other fortifications on
                          the night of June 16, 1775, we have no details as to exactly what Poor
                          did to earn the accolades of these officers. The petition simply states,
                           “to set forth particulars of his conduct would be tedious”. Perhaps his
                           heroic deeds were too many to mention. One can only speculate.
                            Few details of this hero’s life
are available to us. Born a slave from birth in the late
1740s, he managed to buy his freedom for the price of
twenty-seven pounds in 1769, a year’s salary for many
a working man at that time. He married Nancy, a free
black woman, and they had a son. Salem Poor left his
wife and child behind in May of 1775 and fought for the
colonists’ cause at Bunker Hill, Saratoga, Valley Forge
and Monmouth, among others. There are many reasons            In 1975 Salem Poor was honored
why this man may have chosen to undertake these ac-           by the U.S. Postal Service.
tions. Was it his patriotism, or the possibility of a new
and better life that led him to risk his life in battle? The Battle of Bunker Hill was a daring and
provocative act against authority and oppression. This black man, who had literally bought his
freedom, may have been fighting for another kind of freedom—equality with whites. In 1776 the
Declaration of Independence stated that “all men are created equal”, but that equality did not
extend to Poor’s race. As a man of African descent, he could not sit with whites on the main floor
of his church, but had to sit in the balcony. He could work, but would find many jobs closed to
those of his race. He could be taxed, but he could not vote, no matter how much money he had.
Salem Poor is but one of some three dozen blacks who fought at Bunker Hill. As many as 5,000
African-Americans, both freemen and slaves, fought on the patriot side, while many more, tens of
thousands, aided the British in this war. Neither Loyalist nor colonist affiliation afforded any ad-
vantage, for at the end of the War for American Independence blacks found themselves far from
the freedom and equality for which they had hoped.
Many questions remain about this forgotten hero. We know little of his life, his death, his work, and
his family. Why did this free black man choose to risk himself, fighting alongside men, some of
whom owned slaves? And most important, why was this hero forgotten?
                                          The Petition
  The subscribers begg leave, to Report to your Honorable House (which wee do in justice to the
  caracter of so Brave a Man), that, under Our Own observation, Wee declare that a Negro Man,
  called Salem Poor, of Col. Fryes regiment, Capt. Ames company, in the late Battle at Charlestown,
  behaved like an Experienced officer, as well as an Excellent Soldier, to set forth Particulars of his
  conduct would be tedious, Wee Would Only begg leave to say in the Person of this said Negro
  Centers a brave and gallant soldier. The Reward due to so great and Distinguisht a Caracter, Wee
  Submit to the Congress.
  Cambridge, Dec. 5, 1775
                                               Jona Brewer, Col.
                                               Thomas Nixon Lt. Col
                                               Wm. Prescott Col.
                                               Ephm Corey Lieut
                                               Joseph Baker Lieut
                                               Joshua Read Lieut
                                       To the Honorable General Court of the Massachusetts Bay
                                               Jonas Richardson Capt
                                               Eliphalet Bodwell Left
                                               Josiah Foster Lieut
                                               Ebenr Varnum Lt
                                               Wm Hudson Ballard Capt
                                               William Smith Capn
                                               John Martin           S___of a ___
                                               Lieut Richard Welsh
                                       In Council Decr 21 1775
                                           Read and Sent Down
                                                                      Perez Morton Sec’y
      The actual petition
      with signatures                  Recommendation of Salem Poor a free Negro for his Bravery
                                       at Battle of Charlestown
                                       leave to withdraw it
  To the Honorable General Court of the Massachusetts Bay