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Quartering, Disciplining, and Supplying the Army at Morristown
537/ / ^ ? ? ? QUARTERING, DISCIPLINING ,AND SUPPLYING THE ARMY AT MORRISTOWN, 1T79-1780 FEBRUARY 23, 1970 1VDRR 5 Cop, 2 1 1 ’ QUARTERING, DISCIPLINING, AND SUPPLYING THE ARMY FEBRUARY 23, 1970 U.S. DEPARTMENT OE THE INTERIOR national park service WASHINGTON, D.C. TABLE OF CONTENTS Page INTRODUCTION .................................................... i I. CIRCUMSTANCES LEADING TO THE MORRISTOWN ENCAMPMENT 1779-1780 .............................................. 1 II. QUARTERING OF THE ARMY AT MORRISTOWN,1779-1780 ......... 7 1. PREPARATION OF THE C A M P ............................. 7 2. COMPOSITION AND STRENGTH OF THE ARMY AT MORRISTOWN . 9 III. DAILY LIFE AT THE ENCAMPMENT............................... 32 1. HISTORICAL BACKGROUND OF THE ARMY OF THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY.............................................. 32 2. ORGANIZATION OF THE CONTINENTAL A R M Y ................... 36 3. HEADQUARTERS: FORD MA NS IO N......................... 38 4. CONSTRUCTION OF THE C A M P ............................... 40 5. LIFE AT THE WINTER QUARTERS......................... 48 6. SOCIAL ACTIVITIES AT THE MORRISTOWN ENCAMPMENT .... 64 7. A MILITARY ENCOUNTER WITH THE E N E M Y ................ 84 IV. DISCIPLINE OF THE TROOPS AT MORRISTOWN.................... 95 1. NATURE OF MILITARY DISCIPLINE ....................... 95 2. LAXITY IN DISCIPLINE IN THE CONTINENTAL AR M Y ............ 99 3. OFFENSES COMMITTED DURING THE ENCAMPMENT ........... 102 V. SUPPLY OF THE ARMY AT MORRISTOWN.......................... 136 1. SUPPLY CONDITIONS PRIOR TO THE MORRISTOWN -
Fort Stanwix
Fort Stanwix hold on this area was tenuous at best, the Mo hawk Valley was a potential invasion route from the north, and the Oneida Carry a vital link between England's several western outposts on the Great Lakes and those on Lake Cham- plain and the Hudson River to the east. The modern city of Rome, N.Y., where Fort Stanwix is located, lies astride an ancient water In the early years of the French and Indian War route linking the Great Lakes with the Atlantic (1754-63) the British built four small forts to Ocean. On the city's eastern side is the Mo protect the portage: Fort Bull at the lower (low hawk River, which flows eastward until it joins water) landing on Wood Creek; Fort Newport the Hudson just north of Albany. On the city's near the upper (high water) landing; Fort Cra western side is Wood Creek, which, along with ven at the upper landing on the Mohawk; and Oneida Lake and the Oswego River, forms Fort Williams, north of Fort Craven on the same a passage to Oswego and Lake Ontario. Except river. In March 1756 the French attacked, cap for the short portage across nearly level ground tured, and burned Fort Bull. The British im between the Mohawk River and Wood Creek, mediately replaced it with Fort Wood Creek (the a colonial traveler or trader could journey by remains of which can still be seen west of Rome water all the way from New York City to Canada on Route 49). When French troops captured and back again. -
AN ABSTRACT of the THESIS of Donald G. Hapward
AN ABSTRACT OF THE THESIS OF Donald G. Hapward for the Master of Arts (Name of Student) (degree) i.n History presented on Au~ust 4, 1979 (major) (date) Title: The Continental Armx at Morristown: 1779-1780 Abstract Approved: ~~~~ During the American Revolution, the Continental Army regularly went into winter encampments and in the years 1779 1780 the encampment was located in Morristown, New Jersey, which was approximately thirty miles west of New York City. This winter hibernation took place from December until the following June. This particular winter was referred to as the "Hard Winter" due to the severity of the weather, which included twenty-two major snowstorms. The colonial troops arrived amidst two feet of snow and immediately set upon construction of the camp. The camp was not fully completed until February, 1780. Morristown was a small, rustic village which the army had used previously for an encampment. It was selected again for numerous reasons: food, water, geographical loca tion to New York City, and an area large enough for ten thousand troops. Morristown's approaches were guarded by a ridge of mountains and a swamp. Therefore, the Jockey Hollow area, the location of the troops' encampment, was more than satisfactory to General George Washington. Camp life was dull, tedious, but necessary in order to prepare for the upcoming campaign. The daily routine consisted of drill work, guard duty and other camp duties. The actual number of men who occupied the winter encampment was lower than the records indicate. Enlistments were up and along with desertions and deaths the Army was never sure of its true strength. -
New York State Historic Markers
Markers_2000_for_APHNYS_printou EntryNumberCounty Town Line1 Line2 Line3 Line4 Line5 Line6 Line7 Location TimePeriod 1 ALBANY ALBANY, CITY OF GENERAL BURGOYNE OVER THIS ROAD ENTERED ALBANY WITH HIS STAFF AFTER THE BATTLE OF SARATOGA GOING TO SCHUYLER MANSION AS PRISONERS OF WAR - 1777 PLAZA, BROADWAY AT FOOT OF STATE ST. 1750-1799 2 ALBANY ALBANY, CITY OF BIRTHPLACE OF AMERICAN UNION NEAR THIS SITE, BENJAMIN FRANKLIN PRESENTED THE 1ST FORMAL PLAN OF NATIONAL UNION; CONGRESS OF 1754 PLAZA, BROADWAY AT FOOT OF STATE ST. 1750-1799 3 ALBANY ALBANY, CITY OF ALBANY CALLED FORT NASSAU 1614, FORT ORANGE 1624, BEVERWYCK 1652, ALBANY 1664; CHARTERED 1686 PLAZA, BROADWAY AT FOOT OF STATE ST. 1600-1649 4 ALBANY ALBANY, CITY OF COLONIAL WARPATH RENDEVOUS OF TROOPS IN FIVE WARS. HERE ARMIES UNDER ABERCROMBIE, LOUDOUN AND AMHERST MOVED TO THE CONQUEST OF CANADA 1756-60 PLAZA, BROADWAY AT FOOT OF STATE ST. 1750-1799 5 ALBANY ALBANY, CITY OF IROQUOIS TREATY AUGUST 1684 BASIC PEACE BY GOV. DONGAN GOV. HOWARD OF VA. AND FIVE NATIONS AT COURT HOUSE WHICH STOOD 100 FEET WEST PLAZA, BROADWAY AT FOOT OF STATE ST. 1650-1699 6 ALBANY ALBANY, CITY OF HENRY HUDSON EXPLORER, HERE ENDED THE VOYAGE OF THE HALF MOON IN QUEST OF THE INDIES SEPTEMBER, 1609 PLAZA, BROADWAY AT FOOT OF STATE ST. 1600-1649 7 ALBANY ALBANY, CITY OF FORT ORANGE SITE OF WEST INDIA COMPANY COLONY 1624. HERE WAS BORN SARAH RAPELJE, FIRST WHITE CHILD IN N. Y. STATE, 1625 FORT STOOD S. E. BY THE RIVER PLAZA, BROADWAY AT FOOT OF STATE ST. -
Order of Battle - Trenton
Order of Battle - Trenton Unit Commander Unit size Notes Washington rode with Greene's division, and Commander-in-Chief Gen. George Washington observed the battle from high ground above the town near the artillery companies.[28] This unit's assigned task was the protection of Commander-in-Chief's Guard Capt. Caleb Gibbs about 75 Washington and his papers. Secretary Lt. Col. Robert Hanson Harrison Washington's aides-de-camp Lt. Tench Tilghman Lt. Col. Richard Cary Lt. Col. Samuel Blachley Webb Reed accompanied militia Brig. Gen. John Adjutant General Col. Joseph Reed Cadwalader's brigade in its failed crossing of the Delaware. Quartermaster General Col. Stephen Moylan Commissary General Lt. Col. Joseph Trumbull Paymaster General Col. William Palfrey Muster Master General Col. Gunning Bedford Director of the General Hospital Dr. John Morgan Chief Engineer Col. Rufus Putnam Greene's Division Maj. Gen. Nathanael Greene 2,690 Washington rode with this division. This brigade served as bridgehead and advance guard,[30] and formed part of the center of Stephen's Brigade Brig. Gen. Adam Stephen 541 Greene's line for the attack, along with Stirling's brigade.[31] 4th Virginia Regiment Lt. Col. Robert Lawson 229 Col. Thomas Elliott was absent. 5th Virginia Regiment Col. Charles Scott 129 6th Virginia Regiment Col. Mordecai Buckner 191 This brigade formed part of the center of Greene's Stirling's Brigade Brig. Gen. William Alexander (Lord Stirling) 673 line for the attack, along with Stephen's brigade.[31] 1st Virginia Regiment Capt. John Fleming 185 No field officers were present.[33] Col. Haslet was one of several men that fell into the 1st Delaware Regiment Col. -
Camp Followers and the Military Community During the American Revolution
W&M ScholarWorks Dissertations, Theses, and Masters Projects Theses, Dissertations, & Master Projects 1990 Belonging to the army: Camp followers and the military community during the American Revolution Holly A. Mayer College of William & Mary - Arts & Sciences Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.wm.edu/etd Part of the United States History Commons Recommended Citation Mayer, Holly A., "Belonging to the army: Camp followers and the military community during the American Revolution" (1990). Dissertations, Theses, and Masters Projects. Paper 1539623793. https://dx.doi.org/doi:10.21220/s2-56bp-nv94 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by the Theses, Dissertations, & Master Projects at W&M ScholarWorks. It has been accepted for inclusion in Dissertations, Theses, and Masters Projects by an authorized administrator of W&M ScholarWorks. For more information, please contact [email protected]. INFORMATION TO USERS The most advanced technology has been used to photograph and reproduce this manuscript from the microfilm master. UMI films the text directly from the original or copy submitted. Thus, some thesis and dissertation copies are in typewriter face, while others may be from any type of computer printer. The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. Broken or indistinct print, colored or poor quality illustrations and photographs, print bleedthrough, substandard margins, and improper alignment can adversely afreet reproduction. In the unlikely event that the author did not send UMI a complete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted. Also, if unauthorized copyright material had to be removed, a note will indicate the deletion. -
Negotiating at the Oneida Carry
National Park Service U.S. Department of the Interior Northeast Region History Program NEGOTIATING AT THE O NEIDA CARRY WILLIAM J. C AMPBELL H ISTORIC R ESOURCE S TUDY PRESENTED TO F ORT S TANWIX N ATIONAL M ONUMENT I N P ART N E R S H I P WITH THE O RGANIZATION OF A MERICAN H ISTORIANS /NATIONAL P ARK S E RV IC E Cover Image: The 1784 Treaty of Fort Stanwix. Courtesy of the Library of Congress, Rare Book and Special Collections Division, Continental Congress & Constitutional Convention Broadsides Collection. NEGOTIATING AT THE ONEIDA CARRY FORT STANWIX NATIONAL MONUMENT HISTORIC RESOURCE STUDY WILLIAM J. CAMPBELL PREPARED UNDER COOPERATIVE AGREEMENT WITH THE ORGANIZATION OF AMERICAN HISTORIANS NATIONAL PARK SERVICE U.S. DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR MAY 2017 NEGOTIATING AT THE ONEIDA CARRY HISTORIC RESOURCE STUDY Fort Stanwix National Monument William J. Campbell, Ph .D. U.S. Department of the Interior Region 1, North Atlantic-Appalachian National Park Service/In Partnership with the Organization of American Historians November 2019 Recommended: Shaun Eyring Date Chief, Cultural Resources Northeast Region Approved: h 'L~ Kevin Wyrick ~ Date Superintendent Fort Stanwix Natiqnal Monument TABLE OF CONTENTS List of Illustrations v A Note on Terminology vii List of Abbreviations ix Acknowledgements xi Preface xiii Chapter One Introductions 1 Chapter Two Empires: War and Fort Stanwix 19 Chapter Three Collaborators: The Road to Deowainsta 33 Chapter Four Accomplices: The 1768 Treaty of Fort Stanwix 55 Chapter Five Revolutions: Wars for Independence, 1769–1783 77 Chapter Six Adversaries: 1784 Treaty of Fort Stanwix 99 Chapter Seven Mistreated Allies: 1788 Treaty of Fort Stanwix 119 Chapter Eight “Very Unwise”: The 1790 Treaty of Fort Stanwix 135 Epilogue 147 Summary and Research Recomendations 151 Bibliography 153 iii LIST OF I LLUSTRATIONS Figure 1 Oswego location and fortifications, ca. -
A Historical and Archeological Synthesis of the Fishkill Supply Depot
A HISTORICAL AND ARCHEOLOGICAL SYNTHESIS OF THE FISHKILL SUPPLY DEPOT TOWN OF FISHKILL DUTCHESS COUNTY, NEW YORK Prepared for: Friends of the Fishkill Supply Depot P.O. Box 311 Fishkill, NY 12524 National Park Service American Battlefield Protection Program 1201 Eye Street NW (2287) Washington, DC 20005 (Grant # GA-2287-14-003) Prepared by: Richard W. Hunter, Ph.D. James S. Lee, M.A. Redacted Copy This material is based upon work assisted by a grant from the Department of Interior, National Park Service. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Department of the Interior. MARCH 2016 ABSTRACT This report presents a synthesis of past historical and archeological research relating to the Fishkill Supply Depot, a key facility in the Hudson Highlands that supported the operations of the Continental Army and New York State militia throughout the Revolutionary War. This project was undertaken by Hunter Research, Inc. under contract to the Friends of the Fishkill Supply Depot and was funded by a grant from the National Park Service, American Battlefield Protection Program. The principal work tasks, carried out between January and October 2015, involved extensive archival and background research, landscape and military terrain analysis, several field visits, review of archeological reports and data, creation of a series of four presentation maps, and preparation of this technical report and public outreach materials (including one public presentation on October 25, 2015). The Fishkill Supply Depot Site was entered into the National Register of Historic Places on January 21, 1974. -
A Biography of William Vredenburgh Revolutionary War Veteran
A Biography OF William Vredenburgh Revolutionary War Veteran AND Three Generations of His Descendants Larry Mark Vredenburgh January, 1997 January, 1997 Larry Mark Vredenburgh 22113 McCarthy Drive Tehachapi, California 93561 (661) 822-5008 [email protected] A Biography of William Vredenburgh, Revolutionary War Veteran, and Three Generations of His Descendants. This paper may be freely copied for research purposes only. CONTENTS Page INTRODUCTION............................................................................................................................. 1 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS................................................................................................................ 1 EARLY GENERATIONS .................................................................................................................. 1 WILLIAM AND THE REVOLUTIONARY WAR .................................................................................. 2 BOUNTY LAND............................................................................................................................... 8 RAISING A FAMILY......................................................................................................................... 9 WILLIAM AND HIS DESCENDANTS................................................................................................ 10 THE HENRY VREDENBURGH FAMILY........................................................................................... 12 VREDENBURGHS IN LEE, OGLE, AND CARROLL COUNTIES, ILLINOIS ........................................12 -
American Army of the United Colonies, March 1776
American Army of the United Colonies March 1776 Commanding Officer: General George Washington Forces around Boston: 6th (Massachusetts) Continental Regiment (28/33/5/281)1 16th (Massachusetts) Continental Regiment (29/32/3/309) 18th (Massachusetts) Continental Regiment (29/46/5/328) 27th (Massachusetts) Continental Regiment (34/44/4/461) New England Militia in Continental Service: (about to be discharged) Commanding Officer Connecticut Militia John Douglas (34/53/4/424) New Hampshire Militia John Waldron (33/42/4/473) Massachusetts Militia Simeon Cary (42/60/5/520) Massachusetts Militia Lemuel Robinson (38/51/5/520) Massachusetts Militia Jacob French (37/49/5/493) Massachusetts Militia Josiah Whitney (35/46/3/518) Massachusetts Militia John Robinson (30/39/5/408) Connecticut Militia James Wadsworth (34/46/4/421) Massachusetts Militia Issac Smith (29/35/4/450) Connecticut Militia Erastus Wolcott (32/48/5/422) Troops Before Quebec: Brigadier General Benedict Arnold Green Mountain Boys (102) Major Cady's Troop (82) 1st Pennsylvania Regiment (225) Brown's Detachment (38) Wooster's Provisional (42) 1st New York Regiment (76) 2nd New York Regiment (81) 3rd New York Regiment (207) 4th New York Regiment (91) 1st Canadian Regiment (206) Arnold's Regiment (117) Canadians (under J. Dugan) (123) 2nd New Jersey (under Maxwell)(216) Massachusetts Regiment (82) Lamb's Artillery (31) 1 Figures are officers, NCOs, staff officers, and rank & file present under arms. 1 Forces before Wilmington, North Carolina: 1st North Carolina Regiment (34/50/2/358) 2nd -
1. Battery. 3Rd Continental Artillery
SPECIAL COLLECTIONS AND MOORE WH1G ORDERL .... BOOK COLLECTIONS Regiments arranged by statQ : 1. Battery. 3rd Continental Artillery. Headquarters . West Point. Captain William Treadwell : July-August 1779: manuscript . 2 . 3rd Continental Artillery . West Point. verplank 's Point . Strong Point fortifications . Captain Winthrop Sargent's plans : 1782 : manuscript . 3 . ProctOr'S Regimental Art illery. North Redoubt . West Point . Sergeent L . Broome ; November 1780 - January 17 S1 : ma nuscript . 4 . Colonel Crane's Battalion of Artillery . Captain Treadwell's Company ; July-August 1779 : typescript . 5 . 4th Artillery. North and Middle Redoubts near West Point. Sergeant L . Broome of Captain Simond's Company ; 1780- 1781 : typescr ipt . 6 . U . S . Artillery . Second Regiment . Fort Michilimackinac : 1787-1800 : manuscript. 7 . Corps of Artillerists and Engineers. West Point ; May 7 . 1795 - August 1796 : manuscript . Note : 2 volumes . 8 . c o rps of Artillerists and Engineers . West Po i nt ; May 28 . 1796 - December 1797 : manuscript . 9 . corps of Artillerists and Engineers. West Point ; May 29 . 1799 - April 2 . 1806 : manuscript . 10 . company M, Second Batta lion corps of Artillery : July 18 15 - November 1817: manuscrip t . 11 . Company M. Second Battalion corps of Artillery : 1 817- 1818: manuscript , 12 . Company M. Second Battalion Corps of Artillery : 1818- 1820 : manuscript . 13 . 3rd Connecticut. 1st Connecticut. Ebenezer Hunt ington ; September 7 , 1778 - October 8 . 1 783 : microfilm (Moore Wing) Regimental orders: Tiverto n , RI; Warren, CT; West Point and vicini ty . Includes the arrangement of the Connecticut Continental Line. November 1782 . 14 . 2nd Canadian. Benjamin Mooers; September 16 - November 19 . 1780 : microfilm ( MOore Wing) Orderly book kept by Mooers as adjutant.