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Historic Pelham Blog Archive
October 26, 2005
350TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION
BOOK: "THOMAS PELL
AND THE LEGEND OF THE PELL TREATY OAK" -- $11.95 (PROCEEDS AFTER
PRINTING COSTS WILL GO TO
BARTOW-PELL MANSION MUSEUM).
CLICK HERE TO BROWSE BEFORE YOU BUY!
LEARN MORE.
Wednesday, October 26, 2005
Remnants of the Battlefield on Which the Battle of Pelham Was Fought on
October 18, 1776
In the last week or so I have been contacted by a number of students in
the Advanced Placement History class at Pelham Memorial High School.
Various members of the class are engaged in research regarding the Battle
of Pelham fought on October 18, 1776. I have tried to respond as helpfully
as possible to each inquiry, but one question keeps coming up: where was
the Battle actually fought?
Local historians continue to this day to argue over precisely where and
how the battle was fought. To put it bluntly, the few first hand accounts
of the battle, including Col. John Glover's letter, are not sufficiently
specific to allow historians to determine exactly where and how the battle
was fought. It seems clear that much of it was fought along portions of
Split Rock Road that still remain within the Split Rock Golf Course in
Pelham Bay Park. Indeed, sunken portions of the ancient road still exist
along a couple of the holes of the golf course (holes 2 and 3, for
example) with remnants of stone walls that likely stood at the time of the
Battle.
Although the Golf Course does not permit visitors who are not golfing onto
the course, I have had the opportunity as part of organized historical
inquiries (and with the permission of the administrators of the Split Rock
Golf Course) to visit the site. I, and others, were able to climb down
into the overgrown and bramble-infested sunken roadway that once was a
Native American trail and later evolved into the old Split Rock Road along
which much of the Battle of Pelham was fought. The photograph below shows
the brush filled sunken roadway near the first hole of the Split Rock Golf
Course.

One year ago on October 18, 2004, the Executive Director of St. Paul's
National Historic Site (used as a field hospital by German troops after
the Battle of Pelham), I and a handful of others who have studied the
Battle extensively met and walked the route of the old road with
full-sized color copies of the Blaskowitz map and the Sauthier map (both
created at about the time of the Battle by engineers involved with the
troops). There was fairly animated disagreement over precisely where the
events described in Col. Glover's letter describing the Battle took place.
Conventional wisdom among most who have studied the battle closely seems
to be that the small "rise" described by Col. Glover where the initial
skirmish (marked with an X on the Blaskowitz map) took place likely is
near the tee box for the third hole on the Split Rock Golf course.
The troops fought for much of the day, moving along the old Split Rock
Road back toward Prospect Hill.
Only a tiny portion of the road still exists, technically, inside Pelham
Manor. The Battle was not necessarily fought immediately along the
roadway, however. Most feel that it is unlikely that the British and
German troops stood in the midst of the narrow roadway while being fired
upon though, of course, that would have been possible. In any event, the
events moved across an area now beneath the New England Thruway and onto
Prospect Hill. (There is a monument to the Battle near the western tip of
the Prospect Hill School playground). Below is a photograph of remnants of
one of the stone walls that once stood next to Split Rock Road. This
particular wall is near the sunken roadway along the fairway of the second
hole on the Split Rock Golf Course.

Portions of the Battle likely were fought between there and further to the
west to what remains of Split Rock road. The rise of Prospect Hill is
likely the hill described by Col. Glover in his letter where the Americans
realized that as they continued their fighting retreat and backed down the
hill, the British would have the advantage shooting from higher ground. It
is from that point that they began their true "retreat" back to what was
left of the bridge across the Hutchinson River where today's Colonial
Avenue crosses the river (see below).
The Americans likely began their retreat in earnest down the remainder of
Split Rock Road and onto Wolf's Lane (which was located slightly
differently in those days -- there was no "Boston Post Road" as we know it
now. (The "Boston Post Road" of those days was actually today's Colonial
Avenue as we know it). The troops continued a fighting retreat along
today's Wolf's Lane to the old Boston Post Road (Colonial Avenue) where
they turned west / left (toward today's Mount Vernon which did not exist
at the time).
They crossed the Hutchinson River where the bridge that now exists on
Colonial Avenue beneath the Hutchinson River Parkway stands. (American
Troops had pulled up the planks of the bridge earlier in the day.) The
British and German troops stopped their pursuit at the river and camped on
the grounds of PMHS and, in effect, on both sides of today's Colonial
Avenue from the Hutchinson River eastward toward New Rochelle. The
Americans set up artillery on the Mount Vernon side of the river. The
British set up artillery on the PMHS side of the river. The two sides
shelled each other without really doing much damage to each other for the
remainder of the evening and into the night. There are monuments to local
events involving the Battle at two nearby locations: inside the chain link
fence on PMHS's Ingalls Field at the corner of Colonial Avenue and Wolfs
Lane; and immediately inside the entrance to Memorial Stadium (by the flag
pole) where Colonial Avenue turns into Sandford Boulevard in Mount Vernon.
The Americans then slipped away eventually to join Washington's retreating
army.
The text of Col. Glover's letter describing the Battle may be found here:
http://www.historicpelham.com/Articles/BellVillagePelham3.htm
The description of the Battle contained in William Abbatt's book, The
Battle of Pell's Point, is considered to be an inaccurate depiction of the
progress of the Battle. The text of the book may be found here:
http://www.historicpelham.com/eBooks/AbbattPellsPoint.htm
A better description of the progress of the battle may be found in Chapter
V of Otto Hufeland's book printed in 1926. The text may be found here:
http://www.historicpelham.com/eBooks/Hufeland1926.htm However, don't
be fooled by the fact that Hufeland -- like Abbatt -- seems so certain of
his conclusions. It truly may never be possible to match the text of Col.
Glover's letter against today's layout of the land, so to speak, in a
fashion that allows us to say with certainty where all the troops were
positioned and how they moved during the Battle.
Another excellent resource, which is not available online because it is
not in the public domain and, thus, remains subject to copyright
restrictions, is a booklet on the battle by Dr. Alfred Franko of Mount
Vernon. There are three versions of the booklet: one printed in 1963,
another revised version printed in 1966 and a reprint issued in 1975. The
1975 version would be the version to use since Dr. Franko made numerous
revisions and corrections by that time. A citation appears below.
Franko, Alfred Michael, Pelham Manor: The Forgotten Battle of the
Revolution: Near Mount Vernon, N.Y. (Pelham Manor, N.Y.: The Bicentennial
Committee of the Town of Pelham, New York Oct. 1975) (republication of
1963 publication, revised in 1966; 67 pp., 12 pp. of plates, ill., 22 cm
with bibliographic references).
The Town of Pelham Public Library has a copy of Sue Swanson's book /
pamphlet entitled The Neutral Ground. It tells a lot about the years
during which the Pelham area was part of the "neutral ground" between the
two warring armies.
Please Visit the
Historic Pelham
Web Site
Located at
http://www.historicpelham.com/
Click here to see a
single index of all Historic Pelham Blog Postings to date.
posted by Blake A. Bell @
5:11 AM
Comment
Click Here To View the Actual Blog Posting for
October 26, 2005.
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