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Historic Pelham Blog Archive
February 1, 2007
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, February 1, 2007
An Account of Operations in the "Neutral Ground" that Included the Area
in and Around Pelham During the Revolutionary War
During the Revolutionary War, the area in and around Pelham became known
as "The Neutral Ground" because it stood between two warring armies. The
area was subject to devastating depredations by both armies.
In 1862, Hurlbut, Williams & Company published a military journal prepared
by James Thacher, M.D., a surgeon in the American Revolutionary Army. That
journal included a heart-wrenching account of operations within the
Neutral Ground that included Pelham and surrounding areas. The pertinent
excerpt appears immediately below.
"November . . . 3d [1780]. - A soldier has been executed to-day
for desertioin and persuading others to follow his example.
A large detachment of troops has been ordered by General Heath to be in
readiness, with two days' provisions cooked, to march on a foraging
expedition, under command of Brigadier-General Stark. The detachment
crossed the Hudson on the 21st instant, and paraded on [Page 236 / Page
237] Nelson's point, where they were reviewed by the Marquis de Chastellux,
one of the generals of the French army at Newport. It is understood that
the object of the expedition is to procure a quantity of forage from the
farms on the neutral ground, between the two armies, towards
King's-bridge. After the review, the marquis crossed over to West Point,
where his arrival was announced by the discharge of thirteen cannon. The
detachment marched about ten miles, and took lodgings on the ground in the
woods, beside large fires. In the night a severe storm of rain came on,
that drenched our troops, and becoming more violent the next day, rendered
the roads extremely bad, and our march very uncomfortable; we reached
North Castle, seventeen miles, and lodged in the woods, where our fires
did not secure us from suffering much by wet and cold.
23d. - Marched to West Farms, near West Chester, within eight
miles of the enemy's works at King's-bridge. Here we kindled numerous
fires in open view of the enemy, and in the evening the troops were
ordered to leave the fires and retire back about two miles, and remain
under arms prepared for battle; but the enemy made no advances.
24th. - Another severe storm of rain, which continued through the
day; we, however, began to march at sun-rise, on our return, but soon
halted, and took shelter under the bushes near White Plains. In this
comfortless situation, we continued through the day and night. The next
day, the storm continuing, I was so fortunate as to crowd into a house
with some officers for shelter. 26th and 27th, marched twenty miles each
day, and reached our former station at this place before night.
The country which we lately traversed, about fifty miles in extent, is
called neutral ground, but the miserable inhabitants who remain, are not
much favored with the privileges which their neutrality ought to secure to
them. They are continually exposed to the ravages and insults of infamous
banditti, composed of royal refugees and tories. The country is rich and
fertile, and the farms appear to have been advantageously cultivated, but
it now has the marks of a country in ruins. A large proportion of the
proprietors having abandoned their farms, the few [Page 237 / Page 238]
that remain find it impossible to harvest the produce. The meadows and
pastures are covered with grass of a summer's growth, and thousands of
bushels of apples and other fruit are rotting in the orchards. We brought
off about two hundred loads of hay and grain, and ten times the amount
might have been procured, had teams enough been provided. Those of the
inhabitants of the neutral ground who were tories, have joined their
friends in New York, and the whigs have retired into the interior of our
country. Some of each side have taken up arms, and become the most cruel
and deadly foes. There are within the British lines banditti consisting of
lawless villains, who devote themselves to the most cruel pillage and
robbery among the defenceless inhabitants between the lines, many of whom
they carry off to New York, after plundering their houses and farms. These
shameless marauders have received the names of Cow-boys and
Skinners. By their atrocious deeds they have become a scourge and
terror to the people. Numerous instances have been related of these
miscreants subjecting defenceless persons to cruel torture, to compel them
to deliver up their money, or to disclose the places where it has been
secreted. It is not uncommon for them to hang a man by his neck till
apparently dead, then restore him, and repeat the experiment, and leave
him for dead. One of these unhappy persons informed me that when suffering
this cruel treatment, the last sensation that he recollects, when
suspending by his neck, was a flashing heat over him, like that which
would be occasioned by boiling water poured over his body; he was,
however, cut down, and how long he remained on the ground insensible, he
knows not. A peaceable, unresisting Quaker, of considerable
respectability, by the name of Quimby, was visited by several of these
vile ruffians; they first demanded his money, and after it was delivered,
they suspected he had more concealed, and inflicted on him the most savage
cruelties, in order to extort it from him. They began with what they call
scorching, covering his naked body with hot ashes, and repeating
the application till the skin was covered with blisters; after this, they
resorted to the halter, and hung the poor man on a tree by his neck; then
took him down, and repeated it a second, and even a third time, and
finally left him almost lifeless."
Source: Thacher, James, Military Journal of the American Revolution from
the Commencement to the Disbanding of the American Army; Comprising a
Detailed Acount of the Principal Events and Battles of the Revolution,
with Their Exact Dates, and a Biographical Sketch of the Most Prominent
Generals, by James Thacher, M. D., Surgeon in the American Revolutionary
Army, pp. 236-38 (Hartford, CT: Hurlbut, Williams & Co. 1862).
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 @
4:41 AM
Comment
Click Here To View the Actual Blog Posting for
February 1, 2007.
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