thumb|William Heath (
March 7,
1737 –
January 24,
1814) was an American farmer, soldier, and political leader from
Massachusetts who served as a
major general in the
Continental Army during the
American Revolutionary War.
Heath made his home for his entire life at his family’s farm in
Roxbury, Massachusetts (present day
Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts, part of the city of Boston). He was born on a farm that had been settled in 1636 by his ancestors. He became active in the
militia, and was a
captain in the
Suffolk County militia in 1760. By 1770 he was a
colonel and its leader.
In December 1774 the revolutionary government in Massachusetts named him a
brigadier general. He commanded Massachusetts forces during the last stage of the
Battle of Lexington and Concord in April 1775. As the
siege of Boston began, Heath devoted himself to training the militia involved in the siege. In June of that year, Massachusetts named him a major general in the state troops, and the
Continental Congress made him a brigadier general in the new national army, the Continental Army.
In 1776 Heath participated in the defense of
New York City, and was one of those who urged
General Washington not to abandon the city. He saw action at
Long Island,
Harlem Heights, and
White Plains. In August 1776 he was promoted to major general in the Continental Army, but Washington had doubts about Heath's abilities and posted him where no action was expected. In November he was placed in command of forces in the Hudson River Highlands. In January 1777, Washington instructed Heath to attack Fort Independence in New York in support of Washington's actions at
Trenton and
Princeton, but Heath's attack was botched and his troops were routed. He was censured by Washington and thereafter was never given command of troops in action.
General Heath was placed in charge of the
Convention Army of
John Burgoyne’s surrendered troops after the
Battle of Saratoga. In 1780 he returned to command the
Highland Department after
Benedict Arnold’s treason.
After the war, Heath was a member of the Massachusetts Convention that ratified the
United States Constitution in 1788. He served in the state Senate 1791–1792, and as a probate court judge. In 1800 he was elected the
Lieutenant Governor of Massachusetts, but declined the office.
He died at home in Roxbury on
January 24,
1814, and was buried nearby in
Forest Hills Cemetery The town of
Heath, Massachusetts, is named in his honor.