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Historic Pelham Blog Archive
November 9, 2006
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.
Thursday, November 9, 2006
Accounts of Two Witnesses to Skirmish That Occurred Off the Shores of
New Rochelle and Pelham in the War of 1812
Last June I published to the Historic Pelham Blog a posting about a minor
naval skirmish that occurred in the waters off the shores of New Rochelle
and Pelham during the War of 1812 in the late summer of 1813. Today's
Historic Pelham Blog posting transcribes pages from a history of Pelham
published in 1886 that describes what it says are the accounts of two
eyewitnesses to a minor naval skirmish off the shores of New Rochelle and
Pelham that, according to the account occurred in August, 1814. The
transcription appears immediately below.
"There are two persons still living, one in Pelham who witnessed and the
other in New Rochelle 1 who [Footnote 1 states on page
705 "The Sound opposite New Rochelle and Pelham is a ticklish place, even"
and on page 706 continues "for navigators well acquainted with the
obstructions above and below the surface. It is related that some years
ago one of the Le Counts, who lived upon the shore in New Rochelle, near
the Pelham line, and had been familiar with the navigation of the Sound in
that vicinity from his youth, took a party of friends out for a sail. The
day was fine, the wind fair, and the passengers were delighted until the
boat, under full sail, ran plump upon a large flat rock about a foot under
water, near the mouth of Echo Bay. As the tide was falling, it became
evident that their sail for the day was over. 'Captain,' was the indignant
remonstrance of the party, 'I thought you knew every rock in this Sound.'
'I do,' relied Captain L. C., 'and this here is one of the worst.'
[Paragraph within the footnote.] One of the Schuylers a'so, residing at
Pelham, is said to have been thus upset while sailing in his boat near
City Island. But, more lucky than the Pell who was drowned in the same
manner, he was picked up by a passing vessel while calmly floating, seated
upon the bottom of his boat, and smoking his pipe, which he had managed in
some way to keep lighted. Incredible as this may seem, it is nevertheless
a fact, as I have been assured, and old General Schuyler himself never did
a cooler thing.] [Page 705 / Page 708] heard the sound of the cannonade
between the British men-of-war and the American gun-boats, which took
place off New Rochelle and Pelham in the month of August, 1814. After the
British had bombarded Stonington (August 9th), two of their vessels, a
frigate and a sloop-of war, made their appearance near Mamaroneck. The
government, or perhaps the people of New York, had prepared a fleet of
thirteen gun-boats, each armed with a thirty-two pounder gun, for the
protection of the harbors along the Sound. One sultry morning in August
the ships of war moved down the Sound and attacked these gunboats, which
had been ordered to rendezvous near Huckleberry Island and along the
shores of Long Island. The action continued at long range for about an
hour, and was very exciting to the inhabitants in the vicinity. The
militia of two or three of the towns had been ordered out, and every
height and headland was thronged with spectators. It soon became evident
that the gun-boats were no match for the men-of war. Probably all that
saved them from being sunk or captured was the superior familiarity of the
Americans with the navigation of the Sound. Among so many rocks and reefs,
the heavy war-vessels of the British were afraid to venture, and after a
sharp but distant cannonade, in which but little damage was inflicted, the
gun-boats withdrew in the direction of NewYork, and the ships of war
returned to New London. It was in connection with this bloodless naval
engagement that the panic broke out among the militia on Davenport's Neck,
an account of which is given in the history of New Rochelle. The Rev.
Lewis J. Coutant, 1 [Footnote 1 states "Mr. Coutant has
died since the above was written."] then a boy of ten or twelve years,
distinctly remembered to have heard the echoes of the cannonade upon that
sultry August morning, rolling and reverberating among the hills back of
the town of New Rochelle. Mr. Peter Roosevelt, of Pelham, now in his
ninety-second year, is understood to have witnessed the engagement from
some convenient hill near the shore."
Source: Lindsley, Charles E., Pelham [Chapter XVII] in History of
Westchester County, New York, Including Morrisania, Kings Bridge, and West
Farms, Which Have Been Annexed to New York City, Vol I, pp. 705-06 (Scharf,
Thomas, ed., Philadelphia: L.E. Preston & Co. 1886).
Please Visit the
Historic Pelham
Web Site
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http://www.historicpelham.com/
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single index of all Historic Pelham Blog Postings to date.
posted by Blake A. Bell @
4:57 PM
Comment
Click Here To View the Actual Blog Posting for
November 9, 2006.
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