Peter Salem (October 1, 1750 – August 16, 1816)[1] was an African-American from Massachusetts who served as a U.S. soldier in the American Revolutionary War. Born into slavery in Framingham, he was freed by a later master, Major Lawson Buckminster, to serve in the local militia. He then enlisted in the Continental Army, serving for nearly five years during the war. Afterwards, he married and worked as a cane weaver. A monument was erected to him in the late 19th century at his grave in Framingham.
Salem's last name may have been given to him by his original enslaver Belknap, who may have chosen the name after Salem, Massachusetts, where he once lived.[5] His last name may also be derived from the Arabic word "salaam", meaning peace.[7]
Military service
Salem took part in the war's first battles at Concord on April 19, 1775. He is on the roll of Captain Simon Edgell's militia company from Framingham as having served four days from April 19, 1775.[8] On April 24, he enlisted in Captain Drury's company of Colonel John Nixon's6th Massachusetts Regiment.[9]
Battle of Bunker Hill
Salem, another hero of this event, fought with his company in the Battle of Bunker Hill. According to Samuel Swett, who chronicled the battle, Salem had mortally wounded Royal Marines officer John Pitcairn who died from a musket shot.[10] This has been disputed.[5][11] About a dozen other free African Americans took part in the battle, including Phillip Abbot of Andover Mass †,[12]Barzillai Lew, Salem Poor, Titus Coburn,[13] Alexander Ames, Cato Howe, and Seymour Burr.
Salem reenlisted for another year in the 4th Continental Regiment on January 1, 1776. When that enlistment expired, he signed up for three years in the 6th Massachusetts Regiment of Colonel Thomas Nixon, a brother of Colonel John Nixon. He was honorably discharged on December 31, 1779, having served a total of four years and eight months.[14]
Salem apparently extended his enlistment for two months and served with Captain Claye's Company of Colonel Nixon's Regiment from January 1 to March 1, 1780.[14]
Salem spent the rest of his life living peacefully. He married Katy Benson in Salem, Massachusetts in September 1783,[9] and he later built a cabin near Leicester, where he worked as a cane weaver.[1]
Peter Salem died on August 16, 1816, aged 65.[1] He was buried in the Old Burying Ground in Framingham, and the town spent $150 to erect a monument in his memory in 1882.[9]
The Freedman's Bank of Boston for many years commemorated Salem's deeds by printing his picture on their bank notes.[16]
^ abc"Salem, Peter". American National Biography Online. Oxford University Press. Retrieved 24 March 2017. The identification of the black soldier in Trumbull's painting has since been widely disputed, and other African Americans in the colonial forces have been proposed as models for the figure.
^ abMassachusetts Soldiers and Sailors of the Revolutionary War. Vol. 13, pp. 743–744.
^Sidney and Emma Nogrady Kaplan, The Black Presence in the Era of the American Revolution, Amherst, MA: University of Massachusetts Press, 1989 revised edition.
^Greene, Robert Ewell (1974). Black Defenders of America, 1775–1973. Johnson Publishing Company. ISBN0874850533. [page needed]
^David Barton,Setting the Record Straight: American History in Black & White, WallBuilder Press; 1st edition (September 1, 2004), p.5