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Historic Pelham Blog Archive
July 16, 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.
Monday, July 16, 2007
Mention of the Battle of Pelham on October 18, 1776 in Revolutionary War
Diary of David How
There is a very brief reference to the Battle of Pelham that occurred on
the 18th of October, 1776 in a diary kept by David How, a private in Col.
Paul Dudley Sargent's Regiment of the Massachusetts Line. The brief entry
sheds light on the perceptions of the battle among enlisted men who did
not witness it firsthand. The entire entry, with footnotes as they
appeared in a published version released in 1865, appears below among
those entries between October 12 when the British landed on Throggs Neck
and October 23 when the author arrived in White Plains in preparation for
the Battle of White Plains.
"[October] 12 [1776] This morning the Enimy Landed at Frogg's point ‡
[Footnote ‡ reads as follows: "Throgg's Point, Westchester County, New
York. The landing and its consequences are described in HEATH's
Memoirs, October 12."] We ware all a larmd and March d Down Almost
there And [Page 32 / Page 33] Staid all Day the Enimy Did not offer to
March any Distance from there Ships.* [Footnote * reads as follows: "*
'The British encamped on the neck.' -- HEATH's Memoirs, October 12."]
STEPHAN BARKER Died Att Rhie † this Day with the putered feavour [Footnote
† reads as follows: "† 'Att Rhie' -- at Rye."]
B 13 STEPHAN BARKER was Buried this Day I Cooked this Day
14 There has ben two Brigades Marchd By hear This Day Towards forgg's
point ‡ [Footnote ‡ reads as follows: "‡ 'As two or three brigades have
moved this day beyond WILLIAMS'S, you will not march over to support the
regiments near Frog's Point without further orders, as this post may be
left too bare.' General HEATH to Colonel SARGENT,
Kingsbridge, October 14."]
15 I have [been] on guard at fort Independant § [Footnote § reads
as follows: "§ Fort Independence, on Tetard's Hill, in the town of
Yonkers, Westchester County, New York."] C - Sign Bolton.
16 Our Regt all went to frogg Point on gard Day
17 I have Ben on the Quarter Guard this day C - Sign Liberty.
18 The Regulars Landed above Frogg's point on the main Land. Our people
fought Them Killed a great many Both sides we have not The Particulars as
yet [Footnote reads as follows: " The action at Pelham, which is here
referred to, was one of the best-fought battles of that eventual campaign,
both officers and men acting with great coolness and determination.
General HEATH has well described the action in his Memoirs,
(October 18); but by far the best account is that contained in a letter
written by Colonel READ, which has been copied in The Retreats
through Westchester County in 1776."]
19 Nothing New this Day
B 20 This Day our Regt all Went Frogg's point to Guard there. At
Night I went with a party of men To get all the oxen and the Horses that
we Could find And got home to our Barruks At Day brake [Page 33 / Page 34]
21 This morning we ware all Ordered to fix all our things For a march & we
marchd one mile and ware ordered Back to out Camps
22 This morning we set out For the White Plains * [Footnote * reads as
follows: "* White Plains, the county seat of Westchester County, New York,
was, as the roads then ran, about thirty miles from New York and about
fifteen from the camp referred to."] With all our Baggage. I went with the
Sick and got with in 6 miles of the plains at Night
23 This morning I set out with The Sick & got to the plains † [Footnote †
reads as follows: "† 'the plains' -- the usual name given to the
village of White Plains by the old inhabitants who resided in that
vicinity."]"
Source: Diary of David How, A Private in Colonel Paul Dudley Sargent's
Regiment of the Massachusetts Line, in the Army of the American Revolution
from the Original Manuscript with a Biographical Sketch of the Author by
George Wingate Chase, and Illustrative Notes by Henry B. Dawson in Dawson,
Henry B., Gleanings From the Harvest-Field of American History,
pp. 32-34 (Morissania, NY, 1865).
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posted by Blake A. Bell @
4:38 AM
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