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Scootertrash
04-19-2016, 10:27 PM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aqmTE-ZXsWE&feature=youtu.be

Check out this guys story:

Captain Samuel Whittemore

http://www.badassoftheweek.com/whittemore.html

http://www.revolutionarywararchives.org/whittemore.html

He was 80 when this all happened!


Sam selected a position that gave him a excellent view of the road from Lexington, and sat down to wait. His fellow minuteman from Menotomy pleaded for him to find a safer position, but he choose to ignore them.

His fellow minuteman started firing at the oncoming British Grenadiers of the 47th Regiment of Foot, falling back to reload, then firing again. Sam waited. Finally, when the column was directly in front of him, he stood and fired his musket. A grenadier fell dead.

He drew his two pistols, firing both at almost point blank range. Another grenadier fell dead, a third fell mortally wounded. The British soldiers were on top of him, he had not the time to reload his musket or pistols, so drawing his sword, he . started flailing away at the bayonet wielding soldiers.

A soldier leveled his Brown Bess musket, at point blank range and fired. The .69 calibre ball struck Sam in the cheek, tearing away part of his face and throwing him to the ground. Sam valiantly tried to rise, fending off bayonet thrusts with his sword, but he was overpowered. Struck in the head with a musket butt, he went down again, then was bayoneted thirteen times and left for dead.

Several had seen Sam Whittemore's "last stand" and approached to remove his body. To everyone's astonishment Sam was not only still alive, but conscious and still full of fight. Laying there, he was trying to load his musket!

Using a door as a makeshift stretcher, Sam was carried to Cooper Tavern, which was being used as a emergency hospital. Doctor Nathaniel Tufts of Medford attended to Sam. He cut off his bloody clothes, and exposed the gaping bayonet wounds. Sam's face was horribly injured. Doctor Tufts knew the injuries were fatal, stating it wouldn't do any good to even dress the wounds.

Sam's family and friends insisted and Dr. Tufts did the best he could. He tried to make the old man as comfortable as possible. After his wounds were attended to Sam was carried to his home, to die surrounded by his family. To everyone's utter amazement Captain Sam Whittemore lived! He recovered and remained active for the next eighteen years.

ironchop
04-20-2016, 08:12 PM
Appleseed Shooting events always talk about ol Sam Whittemore. Its part storytelling, mostly teaching you to score rifleman on an abbreviated version of an Army AQT. You should attend one if you never have, Scooter.

Sent from my Z958 using Tapatalk

Scootertrash
04-22-2016, 06:44 AM
I've heard of the Appleseed, but haven't been to one yet. They sound like fun, it's on my bucket list.