Historic Pelham

Presenting the rich history of Pelham, NY in Westchester County: current historical research, descriptions of how to research Pelham history online and genealogy discussions of Pelham families.

Wednesday, June 13, 2018

What Was Pelham Like in the 1660s?


What was Pelham like during the 1660s, barely a decade after Thomas Pell acquired the land from local Native Americans on June 27, 1654?  It is possible to tease a little from 17th century records to help piece together an answer to this question.

It seems that today's Pelham Neck on the mainland and City Island in Long Island Sound were the centerpieces of the Manor of Pelham during the 1660s.  We know from an inventory of Thomas Pell's estate at the time of his death in late September, 1669 that Pell had a working farm on today's Pelham Neck, known then as Ann Hook's Neck (various spellings).  See:

Fri., Jun. 24, 2016:  Archival Record of the Last Will and Testament and Estate Inventory of Pelham Founder Thomas Pell.

Wed., Dec. 10, 2014:  Did Pelham Founder Thomas Pell Have a Residence in Pelham?

Mon., Mar. 31, 2014:  Inventory of the Estate of Pelham Founder Thomas Pell Taken Shortly After He Died in Late September, 1669.

Wed., Mar. 07, 2007:  Published Abstract of 1669 Will of Thomas Pell, Followed by Entire Text of Will of Thomas Pell.

Though Thomas Pell never lived in Pelham, he clearly seems to have maintained a farmhouse on Ann Hook's Neck in the Manor of Pelham presumably as a base for when he visited his Pelham property and, perhaps, as a caretaker residence (although records have not yet revealed whether he actually employed a caretaker).

Apart from the fact that the Neck of land at issue (Ann Hook's Neck) has long been known as "Pell's Point," as early as the 18th century, tradition in Pelham also held that Thomas Pell had a farmhouse that stood near the end of Ann Hook's Neck on the site of the old Bowne homestead.  Although the references to such effect are numerous, one example comes from Bolton's 1881 edition of The History of Westchester County. It states: 

"Pelham Neck is terminated by the property of the late Gilbert Bowne. On the site of the dwelling-house, stood the residence of Thomas Pell, Esq., first lord of the manor. Perhaps the finest view of City Island and the adjacent waters are to be had from this portion of the Point." 

Source:  Bolton, Robert, The History of The Several Towns, Manors, and Patents of the County of Westchester, From Its First Settlement to the Present Time, Vol. II, p. 71 (NY, NY: Chas. F. Roper, 1881). 

Thus, it appears that during the 1660s near the tip of Pelham Neck (today's Rodman's Neck) there stood the Pell farmhouse looking out over City Island and the Long Island Sound.  There likely was at least one residence on City Island after about 1668 -- that of Ralph and Mary Hall who had fled from Setauket, Long Island (today's Town of Brookhaven) after being tried for witchcraft and sorcery.  See Drake, Samuel G., Annals of Witchcraft in New England and Elsewhere in the United States from their First Settlement Drawn Up from Unpublished and Other Well Authenticated Records of the Alleged Operations of Witches and Their Instigator, the Devil, pp. 125-27 (NY, NY: Burt Franklin 1869) ("Under these Bonds they continued until the 21st of August, 1668, at which Time 'they were living upon the Great Miniford's Island.'").  See also Tue., Jun. 12, 2018:  Original Records of Witchcraft Trial of Ralph and Mary Hall Who Afterward Fled to the Manor of Pelham (and materials cited therein).

Pelham Neck may well have been used to graze cattle during the 1660s.  Indeed, records of the Court of Assizes suggest that one of Thomas Pell's friends, William Newman of Stamford, Connecticut, may have grazed cattle on the Neck at some time prior to September 1, 1668.  (William Newman was among the Englishmen who witnessed the signing of Thomas Pell's so-called "Indian Deed" on June 27, 1654, and who signed the document as such a witness.)

William Newman appears in the records of the Colony of New Haven as early as February 26, 1640/41.  The next year William Newman became one of the founding settlers of Stamford, together with Richard Crabb, John Finch and Henry Ackerly. In October, 1642 he received two acres of marshland and three acres of woodland in Stamford.

According to one historian, William Newman “was evidently a man of note in the young colony, and once represented the town in the General Court.”  He remained in Stamford for a number of years.  In fact, on July 8, 1652, he and Richard Crabb (another Englishman who signed the Pell Deed) signed as witnesses to the last will and testament of Robert Hussted of Stamford.  The records also suggest that William Newman occasionally acted as an attorney on behalf of Stamford residents.

It is also possible that Newman had some experience at some point as a cobbler or, perhaps, a shoe dealer.  In 1659, after the Colony of New Haven received complaints from residents regarding disputes over the “sizes of shoes” sold to them, the Court turned to William Newman for help.  Court records indicate that Newman had an instrument that he had brought from England that “was thought to be right to determine this question.”  Thus, the Court ordered that the instrument be procured from Newman and used to develop a standard “which shall be the rule between buyer and seller, to which it is required that all sizes be conformed.”

Shortly before signing Thomas Pell’s deed, William Newman was involved in a series of events that shed important light on Thomas Pell’s reasons for moving to acquire the lands in question.

In March, 1653/54, the Magistrates and Deputies of the Colony of New Haven hauled a man named Robert Bassett before the General Court.  At the time, the First Anglo-Dutch War was underway, though there had been no fighting among the Dutch and English colonies in North America.  The Court charged Bassett with carrying on an “insurrection” against the Colony of New Haven by attempting “to raise volunteeres to goe against the Duch . . . wthout any approbation from authority here, so that he hath bine a ringleader in these wayes of disturbance and undermining the gouermt of the jurisidiction, and this hath bine contrary to his oath of fidellitie taken to this jurisdiction.”

The Court demanded that Bassett name his confederates.  He named several Stamford residents including William Newman noting that each was “unsatisfied wth the gouerment of the jurisdiction because they have not their votes.”  The Court ordered Newman and others to appear at its next session.

Newman and the others appeared before the General Court on March 22, 1653/54. The Court charged Newman with being “one of the disturbers of ye peace of Stamford, in pleading for such libertie in votes as would overthrow the foundations of gouerment here laid, wch by his oath hee should have upheld and maintayned”.

The Court found all the parties guilty as charged, but saved the most severe punishments for confederates John Chapman and Jeremiah Jagger.  As for William Newman, the Court directed that he “enter bond to the valew of twenty pound, to attend his oath of fidellitie hereafter and maintayn the foundations laide for gouerment here and the lawes of the jurisdiction, to the utmost of his abillitie, avoyding all wayes of disturbance in this kinde wch he hath formerly gon on in.”  The Court required all of the offenders to execute an agreement promising to post bonds for good behavior and reaffirming their oaths of fidelity to the Colony of New Haven.

Despite such difficulties, William Newman remained in Stamford.  For example, on May 31, 1658, he appeared in court to pursue an unspecified action against Peter Disbrow.  Two years later, Newman testified on October 13, 1660 in a lawsuit over ownership of a horse brought by John Archer of Stamford against Francis Brown of Stamford. In that testimony, he described himself as “aged about 50 yeares”.

Sixteen years later, in 1676, a “William Newman” described as a “planter of Stamford”, sold land to John Austin, a “taylor” of Stamford. Newman’s will, dated “7.9.1673”, names as his legatees a wife named Elizabeth and his children “Thomas, Daniel, John, ---------, Elizabeth, and Hannah”. The will also mentions his brother, John.  (For more on William Newman and citations supporting these references, see Bell, Blake A., The New Englanders Who Signed Thomas Pell's 1654 Agreement Acquiring Much of Today's Bronx and Lower Westchester Counties From Native Americans, The Bronx County Historical Society Journal, Vol. XLVI, Nos. 1 & 2, pp. 25-49 (Spring / Fall, 2009).

William Newman of Stamford, therefore, had known Thomas Pell for many years when, in 1668, he became involved in a dispute with another Stamford resident named William Graves.  Graves brought a lawsuit alleging "Debt and damage" against Newman and, on September 1, 1668, obtained from the Court of Assizes led by the new Governor of the Colony of New York, Francis Lovelace, a warrant "to attach certain cattle found on Anne Hookes Neck and belonging to William Newman of Stamford, Conn."

The warrant directed the Constable of West-Chester "to attach so many of the Cattle or other Goods, as you shall find upon the said neck of Land or within the precincts of your Towne belonging unto the said William Newman, to the value of therty pounds good pay, or that you take sufficient security or sec[ ]rityes for the Appearance of him the said William Newman at the next Generall Court of Assizes, to be helden in this City begin[ ]ing on the first day of October next."  (See transcription and citation below.)

The special warrant of attachment was never served on William Newman.  It turned out that no cattle or other goods belonging to Newman were found on Thomas Pell's lands at Pell's Point.  Moreover, as a Stamford resident in the Colony of Connecticut, William Newman resided outside the jurisdiction of the New York Court of Assizes.  

Both the dispute involving William Newman and the inventory of Thomas Pell's estate at the time of his death strongly suggest that cattle grazed on the Pell farm overlooking City Island on Pell's Point in the 1660s.  

At the time, there were two small settlements near Pell's Point:  West Chester and Eastchester, both of which stood on lands sold to the settlers by Thomas Pell from his Manor of Pelham lands.  The roadway from West Chester to the edge of Throgg's Neck and Eastchester Bay existed, but likely as little more than a broad pathway.  There also likely was a Native American path parallel to the shore on the opposite side of Eastchester Bay along the route of today's Shore Road.  See Fri., Oct. 14, 2016:  Early History of Pelham's Ancient Shore Road, Long an Important Pelham Thoroughfare Along Long Island Sound.  

At the time, Native American trails crossed the Manor of Pelham.  Native Americans remained in the area and likely visited (and even planted and hunted on) Thomas Pell's lands.  It is not unreasonable to surmise this since many 17th century records indicate that once Thomas Pell's nephew, John Pell, inherited the Manor of Pelham, Native Americans continued to frequent the lands even during King Philip's War.  See Tue., Mar. 25, 2014:  More 17th Century References to Native Americans in the Manor of Pelham.  

Although the Old Boston Post Road (today's Colonial Avenue) did not exist until later when it was laid out through the Manor of Pelham, in part, by Thomas Pell's nephew, John Pell, an Indian trail followed its route through Pelham.  There likely were edible blackshaw shrubs, starved panicgrass, prairie fleabane, blackberries, blueberries, strawberries, and more.

Apart from the foregoing, the Manor of Pelham during the 1660s likely was mostly virgin, old-growth forest with lush salt marshes along the coast and nearby islands.  There likely were vast old-growth groves of various types of oak trees, beech trees, black-cherry trees, and up to another 150 species of trees.  Seventeenth century wildlife in Pelham likely included white tail deer, wolves, turkeys, rabbits, perhaps a few beavers and bears, plovers, squirrels, snapping turtles, eagles, hawks, ospreys, ducks, songbirds,  and even rattlesnakes.

Yes, our region was very, very different in the 1660s.  Our little Town of Pelham was not yet even a gleam in the eye of anyone then alive.  Look, however, at what it has become nearly four centuries later. . . . . 


Detail from 1776 Map by Charles Blaskowitz Showing Portions of Pell's
Point and Eastchester Bay. Source: Blaskowitz, Charles, A survey of Frog's
(1776) (Library of Congress Geography and Map Division Washington,
D.C. 20540-4650 USA; Digital Id g3802t ar115200; Library of Congress
Catalog Number gm71000648).  NOTE:  Click to Enlarge Image.

*          *          *          *          *

"[162-163]

[CALENDAR:  Sept. 1.  Constable of West-Chester to attach certain cattle found on Anne Hookes Neck and belonging to William Newman of Stamford, Conn., or take security for the appearance of Newman to answer complaint of William Graves.]

[Text:}

[William] Graves Plt.
[William Newm]an Deft.

[. . . several lines lost . . .] being informed that the said Newman hath Cattle within this Government upon Anne Hookes Neck, capable to make satisfaction for the Same; These are in his Majesties name to require you, to attach so many of the Cattle or other Goods, as you Shall find upon the said neck of Land or within the precincts of your Towne belonging unto the said William Newman, to the value of therty pounds good pay, or that you take sufficient security or sec[ ]rityes for the Appearance of him the said William Newman at the next Generall Court of Assizes, to be helden in this City begin[ ]ing on the first day of October next, then [   ] there to make answer unto the complaint [   ] the said William Graves in an Action [   ] Debt and damage:  Whereof you are to [   ] true Returne at the Secretary off [     ] your hand, and for your so doeing th[     ] Speciall warrant.  Given und[     ] Seale this 1st day of [     ]mes in New Yor[     ]

Fra[     ]

[MOULTON:  The first judicial act of Gov. Lovelace on record is a warrant dated 1st Sept. 1668 directed to the Constable of West Chester, commanding him to attach certain cattle belonging to a non resident Debtor in behalf of a resident Creditor to the amount of 30 pounds, or take sufficient security from the owner, for his appearances at the next assize on the 1st Oct. next, to make answer to the complaint of Pltf. in an action of debt and damage, whereof you (the constable) are to make return to the Secretarys office, and for so doing this shall be your 'speciall warrant.']"

Source:  Christoph, Peter R. & Christoph, Florence A., eds., New York Historical Manuscripts: English -- Records of the Court of Assizes for the Colony of New York, 1665-1682, p. 74 (Baltimore, MD: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc. 1983).

"[178]

[CALENDAR:  William Graves vs. William Newman.  Not tried, because no goods of defendant were found nor does the defendant live within the jurisdiction of the court.  Speciall warrant of attachment never served.]

[TEXT:]

William Graves Plt.
William Newman Deft.

This Cause came not to a hearing or Tryall  The Plt. having not found any goods of the Deft. within this Government And the Deft. living in another Jurisdiction, was not summoned nor was the Speciall Warrant of Attachment ever served."

Source:  Christoph, Peter R. & Christoph, Florence A., eds., New York Historical Manuscripts: English -- Records of the Court of Assizes for the Colony of New York, 1665-1682, p. 82 (Baltimore, MD: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc. 1983).

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Friday, April 27, 2018

Who Was Sidney Phillips and Why Did He Receive a Medal in Pelham Bay Park on August 1, 1918?


It is fun (and fascinating) to watch eBay for items related to Pelham history.  Each such item typically has a fascinating story behind it although sometimes it is difficult to uncover that story.  For example, see the fascinating story behind Bill Kilgour golf clubs that recently popped up on eBay, among many examples.  Fri., Feb 16, 2018:  What Do Bill Kilgour Golf Clubs Have to Do With Pelham History?

Currently, there is a beautiful, engraved, gold-filled medal offered for sale on eBay.  Engraved on the back is the following:


"-----
PELHAM NAVAL
-----
TRAINING CAMP
-----
HOME TALENT NIGHT
-----
1ST PRIZE
-----
AWARDED TO
-----
SIDNEY PHILLIPS
-----
AUG. 1ST 1918

-----"

Images of the obverse and reverse of the medal appear immediately below.  Obviously the engraving suggests a story that is simply too interesting to allow to pass. . . . . . Hence, today's Historic Pelham Blog article.



Obverse of Sidney Phillips Medal.  Dimensions:  1-1/2" Long
x 1-3/8" Wide.  Weight:  13.6 Grams.  NOTE:  Click on Image
to Enlarge.


Reverse of Sidney Phillips Medal.  Dimensions:  1-1/2" Long
x 1-3/8" Wide.  Weight:  13.6 Grams.  NOTE:  Click on Image
to Enlarge.

Few in Pelham may realize that there once was a massive U.S. Navy training base only steps away from the Pelham Manor border in Pelham Bay Park.  The facility opened during World War I on Rodman's Neck (also known as Pelham Neck) adjacent to City Island Road looking out over Long Island Sound and City Island.  Known as the Pelham Bay Naval Training Station, it opened on a 280-acre site that formerly was a National Guard base.  

The Naval Training Station featured a ninety-acre hospital, housing units and barracks, mess facilities, a station library, a steam laundry, a training ship (the USS Idalis), a host of training facilities, and -- important for purposes of this article -- major entertainment facilities provided by the Knights of Columbus, the Y.M.C.A. and other organizations (see below).

 The camp remained in operation until early 1919 (months after the War ended).  The curriculum involved up to four major aspects:  (1) a Probation Camp where new arrivals were held for 21 days in isolation -- particularly important during the influenza pandemic of 1918 when the camp suffered 2,399 cases of flue with 145 deaths; (2) a one-month "seamanship course"; (3) if qualified, three weeks of one of the following:  Petty Officer's School, Radio School, Quartermaster School, Gunnery School, or Boatswain Mate School; and (4) if qualified, two months of either Officers' Material School or Naval Auxiliary School.  See "Pelham Bay Naval Training Station" in Wikipedia:  The Free Encyclopedia (visited Apr. 21, 2018).  



High Resolution Image of Sanborn Map Company Map
of Facilities Located at the Pelham Bay Naval Training
Station.  NOTE:  Click on Image to Enlarge.

After the Naval Training Station closed, there was a movement to use the facility as a housing center for drug addicts.  Residents of City Island, among others, successfully fought the initiative which never came to fruition.  By 1922, the U.S. Navy dismantled virtually the entire camp, though some remnants still may be seen in the area today.

What about the Sidney Phillips medal shown above?  Sidney Phillips, it turns out, was a vaudeville performer who joined the Navy to fight in World War I.  One of the frequent entertainments held in the Pelham Bay Naval Training Station was a "Home Talent Show" in which Navy sailors performed for their compatriots with, apparently, an award at least for the first place winner.  On August 1, 1918, Sidney Phillips won such an award.

This story, however, does not end there.  The next day, the U.S. Navy announced that for the first time in its history it planned to create a six-man entertainment unit of performers who would travel to U.S. Naval camps and also travel aboard ships crossing the Atlantic to entertain U.S. Navy sailors.  Five of the six planned entertainers were named, including Sidney Phillips.  A search followed to name a pianist / accompanist as the sixth member of the group.

*          *          *          *          *

"NAVY OFFICIALLY SELECTS NOVEL SAILOR SHOW TO TRAVEL
-----
Six Enlisted Men at Pelham Bay Camp Will Form Bill of Entertainers to Amuse Sailors on Board and Ashore.  First Show of Its Kind Reported  Recommended by An Admiral.
-----

Officially selected and approved six enlisted sailors at the Pelham Bay Naval Training Station in New York City have been formed into an entertaining unit by the order of an admiral, according to report.  The men selected are former professionals -- Johnnie Ford, George Lane, 'Buck' Mack, Bob Fisher, Sidney Phillips, with one more to be named.

The sextet compose the first program of its kind ever formed in the service over here.  They will travel together and arrange their own program.  They expected to be aboard ships going across the ocean as often as they are detailed to visit the several naval camps.  

The entertainers may file a requisition for a piano player to be included in the group.  It is said they would like to have Frank Westphal, who is also an enlisted sailor, assigned to them.

Each of the sailors included in the group could give an individual continuous entertainment of 20 minutes or longer.  They expect to organize among themselves, devise turns of 'singles,' 'two-acts,' and 'trios,' concluding their performance with an ensemble number, although the precise routine has not been decided upon.

Following the recommendation and approval of the formation of the official playing sailor program the men were given five days' leave of absence, with orders to report Aug. 2 for assignment.

Each of the sailor entertainers has gone through the training period and expects to continue the studies in navigation in the expectancy that they may attain a junior officer's rank.

The Irving Berlin show from Camp Upton, containing men in the Service now stationed there and which is to appear at the Century may be the means of the War Department deciding that some of its players are to go to France as soldier-entertainers, it was said this week, after the Berlin show ends its engagement."

Source:  NAVY OFFICIALLY SELECTS NOVEL SAILOR SHOW TO TRAVEL -- Six Enlisted Men at Pelham Bay Camp Will Form Bill of Entertainers to Amuse Sailors on Board and Ashore.  First Show of Its Kind Reported  Recommended by An Admiral, Variety, Aug. 2, 1918, Vol. LI, No. 10, p. 1, col. 1.  



Real Photo Postcard With Image of Sailors at the Pelham Bay
Naval Training Station, Dated May 7, 1918.  NOTE:  Click on
Image to Enlarge.


"A Review at the United States Naval Training Station, Pelham Bay
Park" in 1918.  NOTE:  Click on Image to Enlarge.


"A review at Pelham Bay Park Naval Training Station."
NOTE:  Click on Image to Enlarge.


"U.S. NAVAL TRAINING STATION.  PELHAM BAY PARK, N. Y.
Petty Officers' School on a Hike."  NOTE:  Click on Image to Enlarge.


"U.S. NAVAL TRAINING STATION.  PELHAM BAY PARK, N. Y.
Leaving Main Camp for a Hike."  NOTE:  Click on Image to Enlarge.


"TRAINING THE NAVAL RESERVES AT PELHAM BAY NAVAL TRAINING
STATION, N. Y."  NOTE:  Click on Image to Enlarge.


Various Images of the Pelham Bay Naval Training Station in Pelham
Bay Park in 1918.  NOTE:  Click on Image to Enlarge.

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Monday, April 23, 2018

Brief Obituary of Maria Rapelje of Pelham Who Died in 1803, a Daughter of Pelham's Rem Rapelje and Helen (Hardenbrook) Rapelje


The obituary was brief; only twenty two words.  It marked the end of a brief life, that of Miss Maria Rapelje of Pelham.  She was the beloved daughter of Pelhamite Rem Rapelje and his wife, Helen (Hardenbrook) Rapelje.  Maria was only twenty years old at the time of her death on July 20, 1803.

Historic Pelham has published a host of articles on the Rapelje family, early Pelham pioneers.  See, e.g.:

Fri., Mar. 03, 2017:  The Will of Rem Rapelje of Pelham, Probated on November 20, 1805.

Thu., Mar. 02, 2017:  1805 Advertisement Reveals Much About the Pelham Farm of Rem Rapelje

Fri., Jan. 08, 2016:  Pelhamite Rem Rapelje, a Loyalist, Was "Rode on Rails" During the Revolutionary War

Wed., Oct. 03, 2007:  Book by George Rapelje, Pelham Resident Along With His Father, Rem Rapelje, Published in 1834

Mon., Feb. 27, 2006:  Another Description of the Farm of Rem Rapelje of Pelham Published in 1806

Wed., Aug. 24, 2005:  1807 Advertisement for Sale of Property of Rem Rapelje in Pelham.

Maria Rapelje is buried in the cemetery of Saint Paul's Church National Historic Site located at today's address of 897 S. Columbus Avenue, Mount Vernon, New York.  The beautiful church, construction of which began in 1765 to replace an earlier wooden structure, stands within what once was the Village of Eastchester.  A section of the Eastchester Village Green remains in front of the church today.  The church was one of several in the wider region that served Pelham families in the 18th and early 19th centuries.

The Rapelje family was closely aligned with Saint Paul's Church.  Indeed, the magnificent pump organ located in the loft of the church that was crafted by Henry Erben of New York City was commissioned by George Rapelje, an original pew holder in Saint Paul's Church, at a cost of $800 in 1833 (about $36,500 in today's dollars).  The organ "remains one of the oldest working organs in the United States" according to the site.

The obituary of young Maria Rapelje appeared in the July 30, 1803 issue of The Spectator published in New York City ten days after her death.  The brief obituary is transcribed below, followed by a citation and link to its source.


Detail of Map Prepared in 1853 Showing Pelham Neck and Lands Owned
by the Rapelje Family. Source: Dripps, Matthew & Conner, R.F.O.,
Southern Part of West-Chester County N. Y. (1853) (Museum of the City
of New York, No. 29.100.2628). NOTE: Click on Image to Enlarge.

*          *          *          *          *

"DIED.

On Wednesday the 20th inst. at the Manor of Pelham, Eastchester, Miss MARIA RAPELJE, in the 20th year of her age."

Source:  DIED, The Spectator [NY, NY], Jul. 30, 1803, Vol. VI, No. 625, p. 3, col. 3.

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Wednesday, April 04, 2018

More on British and Hessian Casualties During the Battle of Pelham


For more than a century, controversy has raged over the number of casualties that occurred during the Battle of Pelham on October 18, 1776.  Indeed, I have written about this issue a couple of times.  See, e.g.:

Mon., Apr. 25, 2016:  Extract of December 3, 1776 Letter Addressing Battle of Pelham Casualties on October 18, 1776.

Fri., Oct. 24, 2014:  October 21, 1776 Report to the New-York Convention Regarding the Battle of Pelham.

Wed., Feb. 17, 2010:  British Report on Killed, Wounded and Missing Soldiers During the Period the Battle of Pelham Was Fought on October 18, 1776.

The British landed that day on the western side of today's Rodman's Neck, then known as Pell's Point and Pelham Neck.  They marched across the neck to today's Shore Road and marched northeastward on that road to its intersection with Split Rock Road which, at that time was roughly where the driveway entrance to the clubhouse of today's Pelham Bay and Split Rock Golf Courses complex in Pelham Bay Park.  

The Split Rock Road at that time extended from Shore Road across today's Split Rock Golf Course and I-95 and what remains of Split Rock Road in Pelham Manor.  There the road wound past the top of Prospect Hill and joined with the pathway and wagon trail we know today as Wolfs Lane until that roadway joined the Old Boston Post Road, known today as Colonial Avenue within the Town of Pelham.  

The Battle of Pelham began early in the day in the midst of today's Split Rock Golf Course.  Colonel John Glover deployed roughly 450 Americans to meet more than 4,000 British and Hessian troops.  He deployed three regiments of troops "en echelon."  This is a military formation in which each unit is positioned successively to the left or right of the rear unit to form an oblique or "step-like" line.  He had each success line to deploy hidden from view behind stone fences that crossed the small fields along the roadway.  

After brief skirmishing by advance guards of the two sides, the Battle of Pelham began when "about 4,000" British and Hessian troops with seven pieces of artillery advanced on the Americans.  Glover and his men remained under the cover of the stone walls until the enemy troops were within fifty yards.  Then, according to Glover, the Americans "rose up and gave them the whole charge of the battalion."  The British returned the fire "with showers of musketry and cannon balls" until the two sides had exchanged seven rounds.  Colonel Glover and Colonel Joseph Read's Regiment then retreated to the rear of men led by Colonel William Shepard. 

The British and Hessians shouted and advanced, thinking the Americans were on the run.  Instead, Col. Shepard and his men rose from "behind a fine double wall" and began firing until he and his men had exchanged seventeen rounds with the British and Hessians "and caused them to retreat several times."

Colonel Glover, together with Read's and Shepard's regiments, pulled back behind a regiment led by Colonel Loammi Baldwin also hidden behind a stone wall and repeated the process, exchanging more rounds with the British and Hessians.  By this time, the movements of the American troops as each line pulled back behind another had moved the American force to an area near the top of Prospect Hill.  

The Americans spotted a British flanking maneuver in the distance and feared that the enemy might get to their rear and cut off their planned escape across the Hutchinson River at the shallow point where today's Colonial Avenue crosses that stream.  The Americans began a fighting retreat, continuing to slow the advance of the British and Hessian troops until the Americans reached Colonial Avenue and crossed the Hutchinson River.  There American artillery on a hill deployed to protect the retreating troops.  

When the British and Hessians reached Colonial Avenue, they stopped and set up camp along both sides of the road with the camp stretching nearly to today's New Rochelle boundary.  They also deployed artillery and exchanged cannonades with the American artillery to little effect for much of the night.

Only about 450 Americans had delayed some 4,000 British and Hessian troops for a day as George Washington and the bulk of the American army struggled to escape from upper Manhattan to White Plains.  The ferocity with which the Americans embraced their duty may best be exemplified by the later testimony of Sir Henry Clinton, a British commander, who later testified he thought they were facing 14,000 American troops during the Battle of Pelham!

Yet, the toll resulting from the battle may have been surprisingly light.  Deserters suggested that hundreds of British and Hessian troops died in the battle with some estimates as high as seven hundred casualties.  This seems an exaggeration.  Though the records are admittedly confused and, at least in the case of Hessian casualties missing, it can only be said with some degree of certainty that Col. Glover recorded that he had "eight men killed and thirteen wounded" (although official returns list only six dead Americans).  The British, in turn, reported a total of only about two dozen casualties.

No firm casualty figures have ever been uncovered for the Hessian troops that fought in the Battle of Pelham.  Interestingly, historians seem always to have assumed that such records are lost or missing.  It is at least possible that there were no Hessian deaths during the Battle of Pelham, though there is evidence of a few Hessian deaths shortly after the battle, likely being wounded men who later died.

David Osborn, Site Manager of St. Paul's Church National Historic Site, has performed extensive research to determine that the incomplete church building was used as a field hospital by Hessian troops after the Battle of Pelham.  An open sand pit in the rear of the church, now marked with a stone at the rear of the church cemetery, was used as a burial site for Hessian troops who died in the church.  David Osborn has reviewed Hessian records and concluded that the remains of five Hessian privates likely were interred there after the Battle of Pelham although there appear to be no records of whether the men died of sickness or battle wounds.  He has written:

"Following the engagement, wounded and sick Hessian soldiers were moved into the half completed extant St. Paul's Church, which was transformed into a field hospital.  Construction of the stone and brick church had begun in 1763.  A contemporary account of the half completed church during the Hessian occupation reported that there was 'no floor, the sleepers are not even down, but along the sides of the building are seen large pieces of timber upon which the sick are sitting or reclining.'  An open sand pit at the rear of the yard was being used to make mortar, soon became a burial site for the Hessian men who died in the church.

"Hessian records indicate the likely identity of five of those casualties.  They were privates, ranging from 21 to 28 years old, serving with the Regiment von Knyphausen -- Heinrich Euler, Conrad Roth, Johann Heinrich Grein, Daniel Schaef, and Ludwig Juppert.  The men were not students, landowners, or skilled craftsmen -- all of those categories were barred from service in the Hessian expeditionary force to protect the more productive elements of society from the perils of warfare.  In 1776, the Hessians usually also barred a family's only son from foreign service.  Most likely, the five Hessians were second or third sons of rural farm families of modest means."

Source:  Osborn, David, The Hessians (Oct. 2007) (prepared for St. Paul's Church National Historic Site web site made available by the National Park Service, U.S. Department of the Interior).  

Occasionally during the early 20th century, unidentified human remains were found in the area of Pelham where the battle was fought, although no determinations were made that the remains reflected victims of the battle.  See, e.g.Fri., May 19, 2006: Possible Remains of a Soldier Killed in the Battle of Pelham on October 18, 1776 Found in 1921.  It remains possible, to this day, that others who lost their lives during the Battle of Pelham lie in hallowed Pelham ground.

Though admittedly counter-intuitive since the Hessians reportedly led the advance against the Americans during the Battle of Pelham, the possibility that the Hessians suffered few or no casualties during the battle must be considered.  Arguably, there is a little indirect evidence to suggest such a possibility, however remote.

Not long after the Battle of Pelham, British Commanding General Sir William Howe issued a letter to Lord George Germaine dated December 3, 1776.  In it he provided a "Return of commissioned and non-commissioned officers, rank and file, killed, wounded and missing, belonging to the army under the command of his Excellency the Hon. Gen. Howe, in several actions, &c. with the rebels, from the 17th of Sept. to the 16th of Nov. 1776, inclusive, specifying the different periods, and the corps the casualties have happened in."

An extract of his letter appears below as it appeared in a British newspaper published on January 4, 1777.  The letter also may be found in other British newspapers of the day as well as in the following publication available online:  "America: Operations of the Army Under Gen. Howe" in The Scots Magazine MDCCLXXVI, Vol. XXXVIII, p. 646 (Edinburgh, Scotland: A. Murray and J. Cochran, Printers 1776).

The letter breaks down casualties during the period September 17 through October 18, 1776 and October 19 through October 28.  For the latter period, Howe's letter provides a summary that includes both British and Hessian casualties.  For the former period (during which the Battle of Pelham occurred), Howe's letter reports only British casualties but no Hessian casualties.  This might be read to suggest that there were no Hessian casualties.

Of course, it must be acknowledged that evidence suggests the Hessians may have taken the brunt of the American firing and that Howe had reasons to minimize -- and, perhaps, to avoid reporting Hessian casualties.  Truth be told, we likely will never know with any degree of certainty precisely how many Hessians were killed and wounded during the Battle of Pelham and, thus, the total number of casualties that resulted from the fight.  Nearly all evidence, however, suggests that the total number of casualties was surprisingly light and likely barelylittle more than three dozen killed and wounded among all the participants despite reports from deserters suggesting hundreds lost their lives.



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"Extract of a Letter from Gen. Sir William Howe to Lord George Germaine.
Dated New York, Dec. 3, 1776.

I have the honor to inclose to your Lordship a return of ordnance and stores taken from the enemy since the landing of his Majesty's troops at Frogs Neck in West Chester county, from the 12th of Oct. to the 20th of Nov.  Those in the commissary and quartermaster General's branches are also very considerable, but as it has not been in their power hitherto to ascertain them, the reports must therefore be deferred to the next opportunity.  I also inclose a return of prisoners taken during the campaign.

Return of commissioned and non-commissioned officers, rank and file, killed, wounded and missing, belonging to the army under the command of his Excellency the Hon. Gen. Howe, in several actions, &c. with the rebels, from the 17th of Sept. to the 16th of Nov. 1776, inclusive, specifying the different periods, and the corps the casualties have happened in.

Head Quarters, New-York, Dec. 1, 1776.

In the action at Pelham Manor, Oct. 18, and in previous skirmishes, from Sept. 17, inclusive.

BRITISH.  17th regiment of light dragoons, 1 drummer missing; 1st battalion of light infantry, 1 serjeant, 2 rank and file killed; 1 field-officer, 1 captain, 1 subaltern, 3 serjeants, 1 drummer or trumpeter, 23 rank and file, wounded; 2 rank and file missing; 2d ditto grenadiers, 2 rank and file wounded; 4th regiment, 1 rank and file missing; 27th, 1 rank and file wounded; 28th, 1 rank and file wounded; 38th, 1 rank and file wounded; 55th, 1 rank and file wounded; 57th, 1 rank and file wounded; 71st, 5 rank and file killed, 7 rank and file wounded; royal artillery, 1 serjeant, 3 rank and file killed.  Total; 2 serjants.  11 rank and file killed; 1 field-officer, 1 captain, 1 subaltern, 3 serjeants, 1 drummer or trumpeter, 40 rank and file wounded; 1 drummer, 3 rank and file missing.

Names of the officers killed and wounded, &c.

1st battalion of light infantry, Capt. Evelyn of the 4th regiment, mortally wounded, and since dead; Lieut. Col. Musgrave, of the 40th regiment, wounded; Lieut. Archibald Rutherford of the 22d regiment, wounded.  N. B. The serjeant and 3 rank and file of the royal artillery, returned killed, were drowned in East River by the oversetting of a boat the 12th of October.

In the action the 28th of October, in passing the Brunx river, and in previous skirmishes, from the 19th of Oct.

BRITISH.  16th regiment of light dragoons, 1 serjeant, 2 rank and file, 1 horse wounded, 1 rank and file missing; 17th ditto, 1 rank and file, 5 horses killed; 1 subaltern, 4 rank and file, 3 horses wounded; brigade of guards, 1 rank . . . [Page 1 / Page 2] and file killed, 2 rank and file missing; 3d battalion of light infantry, 1 rank and file killed, 1 subaltern, 3 rank and file wounded; 5th regiment, 1 rank and file killed, 1 field-officer, 1 rank and file wounded; 10th ditto, 1 rank and file killed, 1 rank and file wounded; 28th ditto, 1 captain, 8 rank and file killed, 1 subaltern, 4 serjeants, 53 rank and file wounded; 35th ditto, 1 field-officer, 1 subaltern, 15 rank and file killed, 2 captains, 1 subaltern, 6 serjeants, 31 rank and file wounded, 2 rank and file missing; 37th ditto, 3 rank and file killed, 2 rank and file wounded; 45th ditto, 1 drumer, 1 rank and file missing; 49th ditto, 1 captain, 1 subaltern, 1 serjeant, 5 rank and file killed, 1 subaltern, 2 serjeants, 17 rank and file wounded; 71st ditto, a rank and file missing; New-York company, 1 rank and file wounded; Queen's Rangers, 20 rank and file killed, 1 subaltern, 8 rank and file wounded, 28 rank and file missing; royal artillery, 1 rank and file killed, 1 serjeant, 1 rank and file wounded.  Total, 1 field-officer, 2 captains, 2 subalterns, 1 serjeant, 57 rank and file, 5 horses killed, 1 field-officer, 2 captains, 6 subalterns, 14 serjeants, 123 rank and file, 4 horses wounded, 1 drummer, 36 rank and file missing.

HESSIAN CORPS, &c.  Chasseurs, 4 rank and file killed, 1 subaltern, 9 rank and file wounded, 20 rank and file missing; grenadier battalion of Linsing, 1 captain, 2 rank and file wounded; grenadier battalion of Block, 1 rank and file wounded; hereditary Prince's, 2 rank and file wounded; Losberg's, 6 rank and file killed, 1 serjeant, 39 rank and file wounded; Knyphausen, 2 rank and file wounded; Raille's, 2 rank and file, 1 horse killed, 1 subaltern, 3 rank and file wounded; Trumback's, 8 rank and file missing; artillery, 1 rank and file wounded; 3d reg. of Waldeck, 13 rank and file missing.  Total, 12 rank and file, 1 horse killed, 1 captain, 2 subalterns, 1 serjeant, 59 rank and file wounded, 23 rank and file missing.

Names of the Officers wounded.

Chasseurs, Lieut. de Rau wounded; grenadier battalion of Linsing, Capt. de Wefterhagen wounded; regiment of Raille, Lieut. Muhlhausen wounded.  N. B. The 8 rank and file of the Hessian regiment of Trumback, returned missing were taken prisoners on State-island, the 15th of Oct. . . ."

Source:  Extract of a Letter from Gen. Sir William Howe to Lord George Germaine -- Dated New York, Dec. 3, 1776, The Ipswich Journal [Ipswich, Suffolk, England], Jan. 4, 1777, No. 1987, p. 1, col. 4 & p. 2, col. 1.

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I have written extensively about the Battle of Pelham fought on October 18, 1776.  See, for example, the following 60 previous articles many of which, like today's, document research regarding the battle:  


Bell, Blake A., The Battle of Pelham:  October 18, 1776, The Pelham Weekly, Vol. XIII, No. 41, Oct. 15, 2004, p. 10, col. 1.  

Bell, Blake, History of the Village of Pelham:  Revolutionary War, HistoricPelham.com Archive (visited Dec. 18, 2015).  

Mon., Feb. 28, 2005: 

Mon., Apr. 18, 2005:  Restored Battle of Pelham Memorial Plaque Is Unveiled at Glover Field.  

Fri., May 27, 2005:  1776, A New Book By Pulitzer Prize Winner David McCullough, Touches on the Battle of Pelham.  

Thu., Jul. 14, 2005:  Pelham's 1926 Pageant Commemorating the 150th Anniversary of the Battle of Pelham.  

Wed., Oct. 26, 2005:  Remnants of the Battlefield on Which the Battle of Pelham Was Fought on October 18, 1776.  


Fri., May 19, 2006:  Possible Remains of a Soldier Killed in the Battle of Pelham on October 18, 1776 Found in 1921.  

Fri., Aug. 11, 2006:  Article by William Abbatt on the Battle of Pelham Published in 1910.  

Thu., Sep. 21, 2006:  A Paper Addressing the Battle of Pelham, Among Other Things, Presented in 1903.  

Mon., Oct. 30, 2006:  Brief Biographical Data About Sir Thomas Musgrave, British Lieutenant Colonel Wounded at the Battle of Pelham on October 18, 1776.

Wed., Nov. 1, 2006:  Two British Military Unit Histories that Note Participation in the Battle of Pelham on October 18, 1776.

Tue., Jan. 16, 2007:  Brief Biography of British Officer Who Served During the Battle of Pelham on October 18, 1776.

Thu., Jan. 18, 2007:  Three More British Military Unit Histories that Note Participation in the Battle of Pelham on October 18, 1776.

Wed., Jan. 24, 2007:  An Account of the October 18, 1776 Battle of Pelham and the "Grand Review" that Followed It, Published in 1897.

Fri., Feb. 09, 2007:  Extract of October 23, 1776 Letter Describing British Troops in Eastchester After the Battle of Pelham on October 18, 1776.  

Mon., Feb. 12, 2007:  Saint Paul's Church National Historic Site Opens New Exhibition:  "Overlooked Hero:  John Glover and the American Revolution."  

Mon., Jul. 16, 2007:  Mention of the Battle of Pelham on October 18, 1776 in Revolutionary War Diary of David How.  

Tue., Jul. 17, 2007:  Mention of the Battle of Pelham on October 18, 1776 in Writings of Francis Rawdon-Hastings, Aide-de-Camp to British General Clinton.  

Wed., Jul. 18, 2007:  Another British Military Unit History that Notes Participation in the Battle of Pelham on October 18, 1776.  

Tue., Aug. 7, 2007:  An Account of the Battle of Pelham on October 18, 1776 Contained in the McDonald Papers Published in 1926.  

Wed., Aug. 8, 2007:  A Description of an Eyewitness Account of the Interior of St. Paul's Church in Eastchester During the Revolutionary War.  

Thu., Sep. 6, 2007:  Information About St. Paul's Church, the Battle of Pelham and Other Revolutionary War Events Near Pelham Contained in an Account Published in 1940.  

Mon., Oct. 8, 2007:  American Troops Who Guarded Pelham's Shores in October 1776.  

Fri., Oct. 12, 2007:  Images of The Lord Howe Chestnut that Once Stood in the Manor of Pelham.  

Fri., Oct. 27, 2006:  Orders Issued by British Major General The Honourable William Howe While Encamped in Pelham After the Battle of Pelham on October 18, 1776.

Thu., Jan. 22, 2009:  Another Brief Biography of Sir Thomas Musgrave, a British Officer Wounded at the Battle of Pelham on October 18 1776.  

Fri., Mar. 27, 2009:  Remains of 53 Individuals Thought to Be Revolutionary War Combatants Reinterred at St. Paul's Church on October 17, 1908.

Wed., Feb. 17, 2010:  British Report on Killed, Wounded and Missing Soldiers During the Period the Battle of Pelham Was Fought on October 18, 1776.  

Fri., Apr. 23, 2010:  Charles Blaskowitz, Surveyor Who Created Important Map Reflecting the Battle of Pelham.  


Thu., Feb. 06, 2014:  A Description of the Revolutionary War Battle of Pelham Published in 1926 for the Sesquicentennial Celebration.

Mon., May 19, 2014:  Biography of British Officer Who Fought in the Battle of Pelham on October 18, 1776.

Wed., Jun. 04, 2014:  An Account of the Battle of Pelham on October 18, 1776 Presented and Published in 1894.

Thu., Jun. 19, 2014:  Account of the Revolutionary War Battle of Westchester Creek, Leading Up to the Battle of Pelham on October 18, 1776.

Mon., Jun. 23, 2014:  Excerpt of Memoir of American Officer Who, Though Wounded, Tore up the Planks of the Causeway During the Battle of Westchester and Joined His Comrades for the Battle of White Plains in October, 1776.

Wed., Jun. 25, 2014:  Image of Sir Thomas Musgrave, a British Officer Wounded During the Battle of Pelham on October 18, 1776.

Fri., Jun. 27, 2014:  Newly-Published Account Concludes Colonel William Shepard Was Wounded During the Battle of Pelham on October 18, 1776.

Mon., Jun. 30, 2014:  A British Lieutenant in the Twelfth Foot Who Fought at the Battle of Pelham on October 18, 1776.

Wed., Sep. 17, 2014:  References to the Battle of Pelham in 18th Century Diary of Ezra Stiles, President of Yale College.

Fri., Sep. 19, 2014:  Abel Deveau, An American Skirmisher on Rodman's Neck as British and Germans Landed Before the Battle of Pelham.

Fri., Oct. 17, 2014:  First-Hand Diary Account of Battle of Pelham on October 18, 1776.

Mon., Oct. 20, 2014:  American Diary Account of Events Before, During, and After the Battle of Pelham on October 18, 1776.

Tue., Oct. 21, 2014:  November 1, 1776 Letter Describing the Battle of Pelham and Events Before and After the Battle.

Fri., Oct. 24, 2014:  October 21, 1776 Report to the New-York Convention Regarding the Battle of Pelham.

Wed., Dec. 17, 2014:  Installation of the First Memorial Tablet on Glover's Rock on October 18, 1901.

Wed., Feb. 18, 2015:  Young American Hero James Swinnerton, Badly Wounded in the Battle of Pelham.

Wed., Feb. 25, 2015:  Where Were the Stone Walls Used by American Troops During the Battle of Pelham on October 18, 1776?

Mon., Apr. 27, 2015:  Obituary of British Officer Who Participated in the Battle of Pelham on October 18, 1776 as a Young Man.

Mon., May 18, 2015:  Cannonball Fired in The Battle of Pelham Found on Plymouth Street in Pelham Manor.

Tue., Sep. 08, 2015:  Pelham Manor Resident Makes Revolutionary War Discovery.

Fri., Dec. 18, 2015:  Brief Report on the Battle of Pelham Fought October 18, 1776 Prepared Five Days Afterward.

Fri., Feb. 19, 2016:  The 600-Year Old "Lord Howe Chestnut" Tree that Once Stood in Pelham.

Mon., Mar. 07, 2016:  Does Pelham Have a Connection to the Painting "Washington Crossing the Delaware" by Emanuel Leutze?

Thu., Mar. 24, 2016:  An Account of the Battle of Pelham on October 18, 1776 Published in The McDonald Papers

Mon., Apr. 25, 2016:  Extract of December 3, 1776 Letter Addressing Battle of Pelham Casualties on October 18, 1776.

Wed., May 25, 2016:  Did the Pell Homestead Known as "The Shrubbery" Serve as General Howe's Headquarters After the Battle of Pelham?

Fri., Jul. 01, 2016:  Evidence the Battle of Pelham May Have Begun at Glover's Rock After All.

Fri., Jul. 22, 2016:  Extract of November 1, 1776 Letter Describing the Battle of Pelham.

Thu., Oct. 19, 2017:  Another 18th Century Account of the October 1776 British Campaign that Included the Battle of Pelham.

Fri., Mar. 09, 2018:  More on the 1926 Pageant Commemorating the 150th Anniversary of the Battle of Pelham.

Tue., Apr. 03, 2018:  British Propaganda Downplayed the Battle of Pelham to British Readers in 1776.

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