Fossil Starck LED Digital
|
|
Bookmark Fossil Starck LED Digital |
About Fossil Starck LED DigitalHere you can find all about Fossil Starck LED Digital like manual and other informations. For example: review.
Fossil Starck LED Digital manual (user guide) is ready to download for free.
On the bottom of page users can write a review. If you own a Fossil Starck LED Digital please write about it to help other people. [ Report abuse or wrong photo | Share your Fossil Starck LED Digital photo ]
Manual
Preview of first few manual pages (at low quality). Check before download. Click to enlarge.
Download
(English)Fossil Starck LED Digital, size: 383 KB |
Fossil Starck LED Digital
User reviews and opinions
| odochartaigh |
4:17pm on Wednesday, September 29th, 2010 ![]() |
| I love the pen pad the size takes abit of getting used as I used the extra large size at work for several years but the medium is the perfect size for... | |
| grumble |
5:28am on Wednesday, August 25th, 2010 ![]() |
| This tablet is fantastic! I had a Bamboo and the Intous4 blows it away! These headphones excel above the average VoIP / Gaming headphones. The microphone is crystal-clear. | |
| danbe |
8:32am on Monday, August 23rd, 2010 ![]() |
| Amazing Simply put, this tablet is amazing. I went from using the Intuos2 to this tablet and I was blown away. Wacom Rocks I have had Wacom tablets for years. This product is great. The drivers are always the easiest to install. Great but... Amazon says that "This pressure-sensitive pen has the same feature set as the Cintiq Grip Pen. | |
| nfsilva |
1:32am on Sunday, August 8th, 2010 ![]() |
| Good deal for the price. The sound is alright, a little better than I expected. Makes fine adjustments a snap. Upgraded from years of mousework and finally see what the big deal was! Good Control","Natural Feel | |
| stirkle |
6:46am on Sunday, June 27th, 2010 ![]() |
| This device its about....10=15% better in feel than a tablet. It will not solve your inability to make quality marks. I have worked on wacom tablets for 10+ years, worked in design for 13+, doing autonmotive and toy design. | |
| Lucio |
11:35pm on Friday, May 21st, 2010 ![]() |
| I am a college student that is heavily into graphic and web design. This is my first pen tablet and I am positive I have made the right decision! This is my first Wacom. It is much nicer than my off-market tablet, and rightfully so, but I suppose I expected more luxury out of the price. | |
| Signe |
9:38pm on Wednesday, May 12th, 2010 ![]() |
| As far as drawing digitally goes, this is by far the best thing out there. When compared to the 6x8 wacom tablet. Absolutely brilliant. I am using the display under MacOSX. Setting it up was a breeze - plug it in and install the drivers. | |
| deepa |
11:12pm on Monday, April 12th, 2010 ![]() |
| "Great size. Not too big and not too small of an area to work with. I use it for touching up photographs on the computer and painting. | |
| Mr.P |
8:35am on Sunday, March 28th, 2010 ![]() |
| Wonderful blue tooth headphones for the price. Great sound quality, keeps sound out and very comfortable Last only about one year if used every day I have been using an Intuos 2 tablet for the ... Spring loaded tip for digital designers looking to reduce hard clicks. I have been using an Intuos 2 tablet for the past 8 years (yes they were sold in 2002). From experience. | |
Comments posted on www.ps2netdrivers.net are solely the views and opinions of the people posting them and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of us.
Documents

Expertise Product quality Close customer contact
Product Leaflet
Tengine STARK DLE
Impressive downlights
Tengine STARK DLE guarantees high-quality light
vengine STARK DLE PREMIUM
SELECT and CLASSIC
The Tengine STARK DLE product series is a complete one-stop downlight system solution. The mechanical, optical and thermal standards of the luminaire industry are all taken into consideration in developing the products. The system consists of three components: LED module, LED converter and ready-made cables for connecting the module and the converter. With just one product type in the CLASSIC, SELECT or PREMIUM version you can cover a very wide range of lighting tasks. This versatile portfolio offers the right solution for any application. You can find the right functionality to meet any requirements from the nondimmable basic version in colour temperatures of 3,000K and 4,000K to fully controllable and dimmable white light (tunable white) in the colour temperature range from 2,700K to 6,500K.
f At a glance: vengine STARK DLE series
__ Excellent colour rendering (CRI > 90) __ High reproducible colour quality __ Controllable and dimmable white light (tunable white, 2,700 K to 6,500 K)) __ Configuration of individual light colours __ Standardised lumen packages for precise lighting planning (1,100lm, 2,000lm and 3,000lm) __ High system efficiency of up to 65lm/W __ White diffuser for a neutral and uniform appearance __ Integrated interfaces such as DALI, switchDIM, colourSWITCH __ Life of up to 50,000 hours
*Tunable white is based on PI-LED technology. PI-LED is a registered brand of Lumitech.
www.tridonic.com
Typical applications Tengine STARK DLE is perfect in indoor applications as a downlight for general illumination: __ Shop and presentation __ Office and education __ Art and culture __ Hotel and wellness
Components The Tengine STARK DLE system comprises the following components: __Tmodule STARK DLE: available in PREMIUM, SELECT or CLASSIC versions. The properties of the individual modules are given on the following pages. __Tconverter: Suitable LED converters with various functions are available for operating the modules. __Taccessories CONNECT: Appropriate connecting cables are used to connect the modules to the converters. The cables are available in lengths of 1 m and 2 m.
Interfaces __ DALI: Integrated DALI functionality enables colours and colour temperatures to be controlled via a digital control signal. __ switchDIM: The integrated switchDIM function allows a standard momentary-action switch to be connected directly for dimming purposes. __ colourSWITCH: The integrated colourSWITCH function allows a standard momentary-action switch to be connected directly for changing the colour temperature.
One system three versions The Tengine STARK DLE system is available in the following versions:
Characteristics / Features vengine STARK DLE PREMIUM 2.700K to 6.500K tunable white (Controllable and dimmable colour temperatures) 2,000lm or 1,100lm CRI > 90 / MacAdam 3 SDCM 65lm/W Device Type 8 yes yes 220240V/0Hz, 50Hz, 60Hz up to +50 C 65 C Protection class II Protection class III 5 years vengine STARK DLE SELECT 4,000K or 3,000K 3,000lm, 2,000lm or 1,100lm CRI > 90 / MacAdam 3 SDCM 65lm/W Device Type 6 for converters with dimming function for converters with dimming function no V / 50 Hz, 60 Hz up to +50 C 65 C Protection class II Protection class III 5 years vengine STARK DLE CLASSIC 4,000K or 3,000K 3,000lm, 2,000lm or 1,100lm CRI > 90 / MacAdam 4 SDCM 65lm/W Device Type 6 for converters with dimming function for converters with dimming function no V / 50 Hz, 60 Hz up to +50 C 65 C Protection class II Protection class III 5 years
Colour temperature* Luminous flux Colour rendering/colour tolerance System efficiency DALI switchDIM colourSWITCH Power supply Ambient temperature ta Maximum surface temperature for Tmodule STARK DLE Protection class: system solution Protection class: Tmodule STARK DLE Guarantee
*Application-specific changes to the colour temperature are possible. The colour temperature can be fixed or can be varied on the basis of PI-LED technology. PI-LED is a registered brand of Lumitech. PI-LED technology enables the perfect light colour to be set on site for the specific application. Further information on application-specific colours is available on request.
Simple Plugn Play installation
The white diffuser provides a uniform and neutral appearance.
Mounting device for different types of reflector
vmodule STARK DLE PREMIUM The Tengine STARK DLE PREMIUM system is packed with completely new functions such as tunable white. The colour temperature can be changed smoothly between 2,700 K and 6,500 K to meet the specific needs of the relevant application.
Type STARK-DLE-2000-PRE STARK-DLE-1100-PRE Article number Colour temperature 2,700 K to 6,500 K tunable white 2,700 K to 6,500 K tunable white Beam angle Typ. luminous flux* 2,000lm 1,100lm Power consumption typ.* 27.8W 15.3W
*Tolerance range for electrical data: 15%, tolerance range for optical data: 10%
Matching Tconverter:
vmodule STARK-DLE-2000-PRE STARK-DLE-1100-PRE vconverter LCAU 2x020/0048 Art. no. 86459108 f f
Article number 89601165 89601166
Taccessories CONNECT RJ45 U:
Type RJ45/RJ45 1.0m RJ45/RJ45 2.0m Article number Length 1m 2m Colour Grey Grey
h Technical details on this product can be found in our catalogue or on the data sheets (available to download from www.tridonic.com). For information on installing the product see the technical Design-In Guide, available at www.tridonic.com.
vmodule STARK DLE SELECT The Tengine STARK DLE SELECT system is impressive for its high quality light. Tconverter with or without a dimming function are available depending on the application.
Type STARK-DLE-3000-940-SEL STARK-DLE-3000-930-SEL STARK-DLE-2000-940-SEL STARK-DLE-2000-930-SEL STARK-DLE-1100-940-SEL STARK-DLE-1100-930-SEL Article number Colour temperature 4,000K 3,000K 4,000K 3,000K 4,000K 3,000K Beam angle Typ. luminous flux* 3,000lm 3,000lm 2,000lm 2,000lm 1,100lm 1,100lm Power consumption typ.* 36.5W 36.5W 27.4W 27.4W 14.8W 14.8W
vconverter with dimming function LCAI 055/1400 Art. no. 86459248 f f f f f f LCAI 050/1050 Art. no. 86459247 vconverter without dimming function LCI 055/1400 Art. no. 86459219 f f f f f f LCI 050/1050 Art. no. 86459218
vmodule
Article number
STARK-DLE-3000-930-SEL STARK-DLE-3000-940-SEL STARK-DLE-2000-930-SEL STARK-DLE-2000-940-SEL STARK-DLE-1100-930-SEL STARK-DLE-1100-940-SEL
89601297 89601296
Taccessories CONNECT 4PIN PLUG/4PIN CRIMP:
Type 4PIN PLUG/4PIN CRIMP 1.0m 4PIN PLUG/4PIN CRIMP 2.0m Article number Length 1m 2m Colour Grey Grey
vmodule STARK DLE CLASSIC The Tengine STARK DLE CLASSIC system is an attractive entry-level solution for general illumination with LEDs. Tconverters with or without a dimming function are available depending on the application.
Type STARK-DLE-3000-940-CLA STARK-DLE-3000-930-CLA STARK-DLE-2000-940-CLA STARK-DLE-2000-930-CLA STARK-DLE-1100-940-CLA STARK-DLE-1100-930-CLA Article number Colour temperature 4,000K 3,000K 4,000K 3,000K 4,000K 3,000K Beam angle Typ. luminous flux* 3,000lm 3,000lm 2,000lm 2,000lm 1,100lm 1,100lm Power consumption typ.* 36.5W 36.5W 27.4W 27.4W 14.8W 14.8W
STARK-DLE-3000-930-CLA STARK-DLE-3000-940-CLA STARK-DLE-2000-930-CLA STARK-DLE-2000-940-CLA STARK-DLE-1100-930-CLA STARK-DLE-1100-940-CLA
89601312 89601311
Taccessories CONNECT 4 PIN PLUG/4PIN CRIMP:
Matching accessories We offer you system solutions in other words matching products from a single source. With regard to controllers, Tridonic offers a comprehensive range of DALI-compatible products. All the devices specified here support DALI Device Type 6 and therefore guarantee effective use of Tengine STARK DLE.
Product name DALI M-Sensor DALI SC DALI MC DALI Touchpanel x-touchBOX x-touchPANEL DALI PS DALI USB Article number 24033444 24138923
h For more information and technical data on the entire T product portfolio go to www.tridonic.com/talexx or see our T catalogue.
Product application matrix Whether you are looking for wide-area lighting or focused accent lighting, our wide range of T products will help you create an individual atmosphere and highlight specific areas exactly as you want. Our product portfolio includes individual light points, round, rectangular and strip versions. Specially matched operating equipment such as converters, amplifiers and sequencers round off the components for a perfect system solution: They guarantee ideal operation and maximum efficiency.
Luminaire application vengine Tengine STARK DLE Tengine STARK SLE Tengine FULMEN Tengine LINE Downlight Spotlight Linear/ rectangular Decorative Surface Outdoor (street)
f f f f f f f f
Luminaire application vmodule Tmodule SPOT Tmodule RECTANGULAR Tmodule EOS Tmodule STRIP Tmodule TAPE Downlight Spotlight Linear/ rectangular Decorative Surface Outdoor (street)
f f f f f
f f f f
Tridonic partners We source heat sinks with active and passive cooling, reflector solutions suitable for Tmodule STARK DLE and heat-conducting foil and pastes from reliable partners. For detailed information on our partners see page 43 of the technical DesignIn Guide. The Guide can be downloaded at www.tridonic.com.
Support and advice from a single source We will help you to create lighting solutions that are unbeatable in terms of economy and functionality, according to our slogan: We devote all our energy to your light. As an international company, Tridonic is represented worldwide by 30 branch offices and partners in 73 countries. The easiest way to find your regional contact is to check our website at www.tridonic.com.
V01, 06/11 Subject to change without notice. Errors and omissions excepted.

SOME UNFAMILIAR FACTS ABOUT NEW HAMPSHIRE AT THE BATTLE OF BUNKER HILL New Hampshire's participation at Bunker Hill was led by John Stark of Amoskeag. His military career in the Revolution began after Concord and Lexington and found him in the thick of most of the important battles of the conflict. However, his greatest fame, as recorded by Biographer Howard Parker Moore, is that he "Held the line at Bunker Hill" Immediately upon hearing the news of Concord and Lexington, Stark quit his sawmill at Amoskeag and led New Hampshire patriots to Cambridge. He was made Colonel of the first New Hampshire Regiment, which was formed into fifteen companies. Among the New Hampshire patriots who also hurried to Cambridge were: 34 led by Captain Andrew McClary, Innkeeper of Epsom 100 led by Dr. Henry Dearborn of Epping 54 led by Captain Nathan Hale of Rindge 29 led by Lt. Col. Isaac Reed, Innkeeper of Keene 108 led by Captain Joe Hackett of Exeter 78 led by Captains Crosby, Spaulding, and Toune from Amherst.
I. Chelsea Creek
Before June 17th, New Hampshire troops fought the British at Chelsea Creek. This proved to become an important victory for the New Hampshire men on June 17th on the Mystic River shoreline. Stark's Regiment was stationed at Winter Hill (now Somerville) and his headquarters were at the Royal House in Medford. Colonel Reed's 2nd Regiment was camped at Charlestown Neck. On May 27th, Stark led 300 New Hampshire men from Chelsea at ebb tide in shallow water to Noddles Island and Hog Island (now East Boston, Orient Heights, and Logan Airport). Against British fire they drove off cattle and sheep which the British were using for fresh meat. In the fighting, the British Fleet Commander, Admiral Graves, sent into the Upper Chelsea Creek an armed schooner, Diana. She got mired in the shallow water, drifted to the American shore, and was beached. Graves then sent an armed sloop, the Britannia, to save Diana. Britannia also got stuck in the mud, and was only saved by British sailors desperately pulling her off the sandy shallows with rowboats. The Diana was abandoned and the Americans stripped her of rifles, powder, supplies, money, and cannon, then set her afire. The part Stark's New Hampshire men played in this affair had fortunate results for New Hampshire on June 17th. After May 27th, Admiral Graves became obsessed with fear of shallow harbor water. For this reason, on the morning of June 17th, he refused General Howe's request to place a warship in the mouth of the Mystic River to cover the beach. In fact, there was enough deep water. Graves said "No" because he did not have the slightest knowledge of the river's shoals and mud flats. Though Admiral of the American station for over a year, he had failed to take soundings of the river.
2. The British Attack Force The best known of the British regiments in Boston in June, 1775, was the Twenty-third-Royal Welch Fusiliers. They were the heroes of the Battle of Minden in 1759. Then there was the Fourth, or King's Own, today called the Royal Lancasters. Beside this was the Fifth, the Northumberland Fusiliers. Then there were the Tenth, the 38th, the 43rd, and the 52nd. The Forty-third had been in the center of the line under Wolfe at Quebec. There were also the Royal Marines, with one hundred years of proud history behind them. There were other regiments. A regiment was about 350 men. With such unmatched infantry, Gage made plans to wipe out the ignominy of Lexington by fortifying the Hill on Charlestown Neck and then subduing Cambridge. However, on the morning of June 17th, the British discovered that the Americans had already fortified Breed's Hill (Bunker Hill) in Charlestown. Forthwith, General Gage gave orders to Howe to take the Hill by force of arms without delay. As we know, the night before, Colonel Prescott and Colonel Gridley had led 1,000 men from Cambridge up the Hill and set them to work to build an infantry redoubt. The size has been variously stated from 70 to 132 feet square. The map prepared by Lieutenant Page, Howe's engineer, gives the same number in
yards. Suffice it to say the redoubt was well laid out with earthwork, five feet high and three feet across the top. The men worked all night and through the morning sun with shovels and short rations to make it a defendable military entrenchment. At daybreak the British warships opened fire on the redoubt. It soon became clear to the Americans that the British were planning to attack. Aware of this, General Ward, the American Commander in Cambridge, after needless delays, ordered 200 Connecticut troops under Major KnowIron to Prescott's aid. Then he sent orders to the New Hampshire men under Stark and Reed to be in readiness to advance.
3. American Response Aware that a major battle was impending, early in the morning Stark had surveyed the area of the Charlestown Peninsula. He returned to Medford and ordered his men at Winter Hill armed for action. They were amply supplied with powder brought over from Cambridge and Fort William and Mary. Each man was dressed in simple homespun, had his musket, one full gill of powder, fifteen musket balls and one flint. Compare, if you will, that equipment with the forty tons of material necessary to put one man in the field today. These men were rugged woodsmen, wearing native homespun, without any issued uniforms. They were, man for man, the best troops in the American Army that day. Stark's military experience divined that the British should plan to surround the Redoubt and storm it from all four sides. This was the method Stark himself later used in capturing 600 German mercenaries at Bennington--and by American Colonel Williams in capturing 1,200 British and Tories under Major Ferguson at King's Mountain, South Carolina, in 1780. To forestall such a plan, Stark planned defenses across the peninsula from the edge of the Redoubt to the Mystic River shore. About 9 o'clock Stark sent 200 New Hampshire men under Lieutenant Colonel Wyman to guard the Redoubt on Prescott's right. In Prescott's command were also 117 New Hampshire men from Hollis under Captain Dow. Connecticut had put 200 men under Major Knowlton on Prescott's immediate left, and about noon Stark sent Colonel Reed's Regiment over the Neck to form beside Knowlton. It was about 1 o'clock in the early afternoon when Stark led the first New Hampshire regiment from Winter Hill down Broadway over Charlestown Neck (now Sullivan's Square). At the Neck, there was gathered a frightened mob. They could hardly be parted. Major Andrew McClary, the fearless giant from Epsom, rode ahead and called out to the mob to let his comrades pass. The crowd opened and Stark led his men with slow measured step across the Neck. Captain Henry Dearborn of Epping and Nottingham, later Secretary of War, by Stark's side, suggested they quicken their step as a British frigate, Symmetry, was landing shells nearby. Stark replied, "Dearborn, one fresh man is worth ten fatigued ones", and he maintained the same measured pace.
4. Colonel Stark's Position Stark took his position along a rail fence between the Redoubt and the river's edge. He ordered his men to take up one fence, pass the rails through another fence, and hang upon them the hay that lay in cocks and haystacks on the ground before them. This small breastwork gave confidence to the men, though it provided little protection except from the view of the enemy. Between the end of the rail fence and the water's edge of the river, which was a lower beach about six yards wide, he ordered the erection of a low stone wall. Behind this wall, he placed Captain John Moore and his men from Amoskeag, the quality of whose courage he knew was as unyielding as the wall itself. It was about 3 o'clock in the afternoon that Howe had formed his wide battle line, across the peninsula from the Mystic to the right of the Redoubt. Just before the British advanced, Stark went out in front of Moore's men on the beach and drove a stake into the ground about 120 feet in front of the stone wall. He turned and said, "There, don't a man fire till the Redcoats come up to that stake. If he does, I'll knock him down." As Stark had foreseen, the pick of the British regiments, the 23rd Royal Welch, followed by the 4th, the King's Own, advanced, first firing high, then with bayonets down. The Americans' long Brown Bess muskets were ready and loaded. The Patriots were three deep, one on his knees, one crouching, and one standing. Stark and Major McClary had brought in the rules of Rogers' Rangers. This produced a steady stream of deadly fire. "Fire low, aim at their waist bands", shouted Major McClary. Two lines were reloading while one line was firing. Stark's men were firing the traditional "buck and ball", four pieces of buckshot to every bullet, making their every shot all the more effective. [t was the nearest thing to a modern machine gun fire. The British Fusiliers were solid, standing moving targets. No troops, even the Royal Welch, could stand such accurate and deadly fire. It came again and again. The Fusiliers advanced, fell in great numbers, halted, wavered and broke. The same with the British 4th (the King's Own) and then the Tenth. Leaving piles of dead and wounded, they retreated in disorder and confusion. All along the battleline, Howe was equally repulsed, (1) by the New Hampshire muskets under Stark and Reed behind the rail fence; (2) by the Connecticut muskets under Putnam and Knowlton; (3) by Prescott's fire from the Redoubt; and (4) by the New Hampshire men opposing the Royal Marines on the right of the Redoubt. Amazed, yet dogged and persistent, Howe reformed and made a second attack, still sending his special force against Moore's stone wall on the beach. Again his regiments were repulsed with great loss. The grenadiers on the beach lost three quarters or as many as nine-tenths of their men. Charlestown was set afire. And again Howe and Pigo, the Marine Major, were repulsed and defeated and, with their few remaining men, left the field. Let us suppose that there had been no Chelsea Creek skirmish in May. In all probability Admiral Graves would have yielded to Howe's request for a warship in the mouth of the Mystic. Had there been, no one knows what effect the close range of these heavy guns would have had. The May Chelsea Creek skirmish had persuaded Graves to keep away, as has been previously indicated. This item was of much
importance, as it changed the course of battle. Meanwhile, however, General Gage, watching from the Boston side, sent reinforcements of marines under General Henry Clinton. Howe, the emblem of British military courage, wanted "no more", but Clinton persuaded Howe to turn his direct attack, with new artillery he had landed, upon the Redoubt, while making only a reigned attack upon the Stark/Reed New Hampshire rail fences. So as the afternoon was wearing on, the British made a third attack. And for the third time, the stone wall and rail fence under Stark's command remained impregnable. But the results at the Redoubt were different. First the gap between the swamp and upper outer defenses were forced and broken by artillery. In short order the British stormed the north end of the Redoubt with bayonets, once they gained the protection of the outside ramparts. The murderous fire of the Defenders of the Redoubt could not continue without ammunition and the support of reinforcements to match those of the British. Pigat swing into the Redoubt over the rampart from a tree, just as Major Pitcairn was killed shouting to his men to advance. Prescott's men, reduced to about 150, without ammunition and exhausted from their long night's labors, fought courageously with their musket butts and clubs, until they were overwhelmed. The gallant Prescott gave orders for a last volley and retreated. He fought hand to hand for his life with his sword. At the Redoubt at this time, 43 Americans were killed and 46 wounded. Clubbing their way down through the rear of the Redoubt, the Americans yielded their position with great courage. Here the gallant Dr. Joseph Warren, holding back the British to enable his comrades to escape, was killed by a sudden blast of the English musketry. Back on Bunker Hill there were some 500 green troops thrown into chaos from the continuous stream of shot and shell the British ship gunners were pouring across the hilltop. They crouched behind rocks and trees or lay prostrate on the ground. They refused to obey General Putnam's call to go forward. Among these was corpulent, talkative Colonel Samuel Gerrish. He had led his men across the Neck, but now, by example to his men, he lay on the ground moaning that he was too exhausted to advance. His captains also refused to lead forward. On the other side of Charlestown Neck the situation was no better. Colonel Scammons was ordered to lead his regiment across the Neck "to the Hill", but with almost inexcusable stupidity, he marched his men to Cobble Hill, a feeble elevation on the landward side of Charlestown Neck and stayed there, never crossing the Neck to reach Gridley's Redoubt. Meanwhile, at the same spot, Major Scarborough Gridley, Colonel Gridley's older son, was also malingering with his artillery company, refusing to cross the Neck. It was at the very time his father was in desperate need of artillery assistance--and himself loading the last remaining cannon beside the Redoubt. Then, back at Bunker Hill, there was Colonel Masfield with his regiment, ordered to go to Prescott's aid. With Colonel Scammons, the two colonels, with 700 fresh.men with full ammunition pouches, simply sat out the battle watching Major Gridley fire pop shots at the British Symmetry and Glasgow. However, there was Colonel Gardner, who paced up and down on Prospect Hill waiting for orders to advance to Prescott's aid. Finally the order came, and he voluntarily led his men over the Neck on route to Prescott's Redoubt. Unfortunately en route they came over the rear hill, Bunker Hill. Here his men were stopped by General Putnam, who ordered them to lay down their arms and take up shovels for entrenching. In obeying this useless order they never reached Prescott--and in fact, when the British later swept over Bunker Hill, Colonel Gardner received a mortal wound. Beside Colonels Gerrish, Scammons, Mansfield, and Major Gridley, there was also Colonel Jonathan
Ward's regiment from Worcester, who delayed in crossing the Neck and never reached the Prescott battle line.
5. Friends on Each Side Some of the leaders on both sides of the battle had formerly fought together side by side. 1. Stark had fought with General Howe's brother at Ticonderoga. 2. Gridley had fought with General Howe in the capture of Quebec from the French. 3. Colonel Prescott had been offered a commission in the British Army by General Gage because of his services at Louisberg, Nova Scotia. 4. English Major John Small was an old friend of General Putnam. In fact, General Putnam saved his life by calling away fire which would have felled him. 5. Lieutenant Colonel Abercrombie, also British, had served with General Putnam against the French. So among the battle leaders on both sides were friends and comrades fighting each other, as occurred in some instances eighty-nine years later in our Civil War.
6. The Significance of the Battle While the Stark and Reed regiments remained intact, they covered the retreat of Prescott's men from the Redoubt. The New Hampshire men had thrice repelled the enemy with great slaughter. While the British under Howe, Pitcairn, Clinton, and Pigot were storming the Redoubt, Stark foresaw its fate. His troops wished to abandon their position and attack the enemy in the rear, but Stark had witnessed such scenes before and knew the Redoubt would fall, and that any effort to save it would fail. The Stark/Reed regiments were led off the field by Stark in such order that they were not pursued. Referring to the battle in a letter from a British officer, it was stated, "The work of Stark's neighbors from Amoskeag whom he had placed behind the stone wall to battle Howe's purpose to flank the Redoubt was the most deadly of all the carnage of that bloody day." There were ninety-six dead bodies piled up on the beach besides those who were merely wounded, and these were of the light infantry who were expected to carry off the laurels of victory. A letter from an officer of the Royal Army says: "As we approached an incessant stream of fire poured from the rebel lines. It seemed a constant sheet of flame and fire for twenty minutes. Our light infantry was served up in companies against the grass fence without being able to penetrate. Indeed, how could we penetrate? Most of our grenadiers and light infantry, the moment of presenting themselves, lost three fourths or nearly ninetenths of their men. Some had only eight and nine in a company left, some only, three, four or five." The official figures of losses were 419 patriots and 1054 British killed or wounded. The British had 92 officers killed or wounded. General Howe himself wrote that the success was too dearly bought. Whatever advantage the British had gained from capturing the Redoubt, they could not follow up. Their forces were so completely demoralized that further punishment might easily have been severe. The British also took the entrenchments Putnam had dug out on Bunker Hill, the higher hill behind Breed's Hill. It was here that all further advances of the British ended. The rest of the day and the following weeks the
British sadly devoted to the care of their wounded, dead and dying. As you may know, the figures on the exact number of New Hampshire men engaged in the battle have long been in dispute. On one of the two granite tablets (1975) now facing the north stairs at the monument is engraved "Colonel Stark commanded 900 New Hampshire men at the rail fence and at the stone wall on the Mystic River shore. New Hampshire 1975 Bicentennial Commission." Apparently this figure was taken from a Connecticut writer's biography of General Putnam. The author, Reverend Increase N. Tarbox, wrote, "We conclude Colonel Reed led 442 men to Bunker Hill. We judge it safe to say that Stark and Reed brought 900 men to Bunker Hill," and adds, "We are satisfied that New Hampshire had no less than 960 men in the field. Some would place the number higher." It was General William Howe who led the British troops up the Heights of Abraham to conquer Quebec under General Wolfe in 1760. The same William Howe, the master of light infantry maneuver, found himself engaged in one of the most ghastly frontal assaults in the history of warfare. There was from Stark's stone wall and rail fence a fire more destructive than anything the British veteran officers had seen in Europe's most sanguinary battlefields. There were about 1500 determined American frontiersmen with muzzles loaded, opposing the 2300 British attacking. They used the rapid-loading Brown Bess muskets. Three men kept loading the muskets as fast as they could--quickly--so there was a continuous fire. Howe's losses: 1054 men--226 killed, 828 wounded, almost 50 percent of the attacking force. The shocking British casualties immobilized Gage and Howe. Ninety-two out of approximately 250 officers engaged were lost--over one-third. Americans: 140 dead 271 wounded 30 badly wounded and captured As previously stated, it has been noted that no battle of the Revolution accomplished more for the Patriot cause. We wish to confirm this statement for the following reasons: The undaunted and almost superhuman force of the New Hampshire men under Stark repulsing the worldconquering British regulars, especially the 23rd Royal Welch Regiment, first shook the British Army command and then the mighty British Empire. General Howe, also General Burgoyne, who was watching the battle from a Boston tower, never forgot the deadly havoc and despair the New Hampshire troops wrought upon their officers and men. The grim
impression made upon Howe, Clinton, and Burgoyne lived with each of them throughout the war. They never again led troops against entrenched men. So it was to be found that this first battle, in the terrible lesson it taught, was really the first decisive battle of the war years that followed. It dissipated the fears of those who predicted that untrained countrymen and rough frontiersmen could not stand up against the assault of trained disciplined regulars from Europe, whether British or Hessians. Following the battle, all plans by Gage, Howe, and Burgoyne to break through siege lines in Cambridge, Roxbury, or Dorchester were abandoned. In effect, the rest of New England was protected--and freed. The city of Boston became the barracks for an idle British army. Howe would not storm Dorchester Heights, even before Colonel Knox brought the cannon from Ticonderoga.
7. Effect Upon General Howe's Later Battle Strategy After General Howe left Boston in March 1776, his army first again in August opposed Washington at Brooklyn Heights. Though Howe, far outnumbering Washington's men, could probably have broken through Washington's defenses, he refused to try--and Washington saved his army by bringing them across the East River under cover of night. Likewise, in October 1776, at White Plains, Howe would not attack. In the fall of 1777, Howe captured Philadelphia. During Washingtons subsequent winter hardships at Valley Forge, again Howe refused to attack. Furthermore, when Burgoyne was stopped at Saratoga, to his sorrow, he learned that Stark's New Hampshire frontiersmen were on a river bluff to block his retreat. Rather than direct a frontal attack of Stark, in the line of his retreat, he surrendered. Following Bunker Hill, the colonists began receiving munitions and supplies from France, notably through the port of Portsmouth, New Hampshire--about three years later, in February 1778, Franklin arranged the American alliance with France. It is reported that when Franklin first heard the story of the battle and the repulse of the British, he exclaimed, "The King has lost his colonies." We can suppose Franklin had Bunker Hill in mind as well as Saratoga when he negotiated the treaty with France. In 1843 in Charlestown at the completion of the Bunker Hill Monument, New Hampshire's noted statesman and orator, Daniel Webster, whose father fought in the Revolution, said "The consequences of the Battle of Bunker Hill are greater than any ordinary conflict. It was the first great battle of the Revolution and not only the first blow, but the blow that determined the contest--and one thing is certain; that after the New England troops had shown themselves able to face and repulse regulars, it was decided that peace could never be established but on the basis of the independence of the colonies." Although General Stark was to take a foremost part in later important battles such as Trenton, Princeton, Bennington, Saratoga, the Canadian Expedition, the Northern Department Command, and the last sortie of the British from New York--Springfield, New Jersey--it is said that his greatest contribution to the
success of the American Revolution was that He held the line at Bunker Hill! In this accomplishment, there was hardly a 1775 town of New Hampshire which did not have some native son participating.
Return to Index of Essays
Tags
KB-320 CZ7600MCX PS50C550g1F FP757 V2 WF8500NMW B-1445S DV-515 DVD-S325 Omen 2 SKD-EW1288W 42LG60FD FS-SD9 S44E33n0EU Nx-p500 32PF7520D Supreme 1994 K-521 GT-C3060 SV-SD570V F1415 Majesty250-2002 NV100HD EY0225 Frontier-2006 DCR-HC36 RT-06 CLP-315 J3500 KH 3461 PSX-1 TC-21S3RC VP-MX10 CCD-TR517 Powershot S400 Nokia E55 DEH-P800BT AV-29WX11 Adapter 663 CD HT-BD1255W Fostex XR-5 DD66000 Review PC-1421 DVD-SH893 NVX-DV9 Series Motorola W362 KC-300 Hasbro Clue EW-7711UMN VSA-D802S Contour-1996 CMT-DV2D HMX-H100P Spectra Sp65 DH404E Uc 200B LP755 Contax Aria LF-B1 SC-EH780 Premium HD7600 II P-touch 65 DMC-TZ3 PT-LB51U Neobio 40 CT-7005 SD KX-TGA800EX CLP-320 Watch C LE32A756r1F MDR-F1 Benq-siemens E71 Orca 205 410-HPC FBX-M S-DVR9SW Video-208PCI-128TV Samsung F400 DP43TF DVD 20 EMP-1825 Dimage E223 NV-EX1EG DVP5160 12 S2000 Tv 38F RDZ-D900A GT-S8000 20PF4110 Kodak Z710 Audio VTC CD3000XL Sharan ESL46010 PRO 11 Nfl 2004 GR-DVL105 N1050V
manuel d'instructions, Guide de l'utilisateur | Manual de instrucciones, Instrucciones de uso | Bedienungsanleitung, Bedienungsanleitung | Manual de Instruções, guia do usuário | инструкция | návod na použitie, Užívateľská príručka, návod k použití | bruksanvisningen | instrukcja, podręcznik użytkownika | kullanım kılavuzu, Kullanım | kézikönyv, használati útmutató | manuale di istruzioni, istruzioni d'uso | handleiding, gebruikershandleiding
Sitemap
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101










