When you think of American history, the cities of
Philadelphia and Boston come to mind. Washington, D.C. and Williamsburg,
Virginia are always known for their popular history. We've all known how
the Borough of Manhattan is saturated in American History as well. But
Brooklyn has more than her own place in the story of America. The first
major campaign between The Continental Army and His Majesty's Royal Army
happened in Brooklyn, U.S.A. It is here where important historical landmarks
resulted from The Battle of Brooklyn in Flatbush and Brooklyn Heights.
Up until July of 1776, there were many English sympathizers,
even within the Continental Congress. Many felt that it was Parliament
which was causing our troubles with the Motherland. The King was expected
to eventually intercede on our behalf. It’s hard for us to imagine in today's
world, but during the 18th century which marked the end of the Middle Ages
and the Renaissance, the small man looked to the King as his protector
and the King was considered benevolent. It was Parliament run by small
minded feudal Lords, and their inherent corruption and politics which people
feared. As such, the thought that the King would intercede on behalf of
the Colonies with the British Parliament was not a far fetched idea. At
least not in America.
But King George III had different ideas. He declared
to Parliament that the American rebellion would be crushed with the full
force of the British Army. And barring its ability to raise enough troops
to put down the rebellion with British citizen's, King George declared
he would hire German mercenaries. It was this declaration which spawned
the commission of the writing of the Declaration of Independence. The first
theater of the war after its issue was right here in Brooklyn.
That March in 1776, George Washington, after being appointed Commander
and Chief of the Continental Army, entered New York City and entrenched
himself in New York and Brooklyn. The New England regiments involved with
the scuffled at `Lexington and Concord' headed down from Boston to New
York to meet with Washington. Many of who where left from Benedict Arnold's
and Robert Montgomery's failed Canadian expeditions also arrived. Regiments
from Pennsylvania, Maryland and Virginia joined Washington as well. The
names of many who served with Washington in this crucial battle, and its
aftermath, ring familiar for many a Brooklynite.
The Main British Army was conveyed across the Atlantic
Ocean under the command of General William Howe. Washington had nearly
20,000 soldiers at his disposal in New York. He built Fort Washington in
northern Manhattan, at and around 180th Street on the west side. In Brooklyn
he engaged Nathaniel Greene and Rufus Putman (Israel Putman's cousin).
Putman and Greene traced out works around Brooklyn Heights that sloped
gradually into the plains of Flatlands and Flatbush, and surveyed the Marshlands
and beaches that makeup Brooklyn's south shore. At the Battery, Knox was
to build, well, The Battery, - a line of cannon artillery that projected
out into New York Harbor. Battery Park at this time in lower Manhattan
was entirely under water.
Washington had his troops spread out over both sides
of the East River and up and down Manhattan Island. Just prior to the signing
of the Declaration of Independence, on June 29th in 1776, the British finally
arrived in New York Harbor in perhaps the largest flotilla the harbor had
seen to that point. Eyewitness Daniel McCurtin wrote, "the whole bay was
full of shipping as it could be. I...thought all London afloat." Knox'
Battery was a formidable force, which unfortunately was pointed in the
wrong direction to be of any use. The British troops landed in Staten Island
and formulated a plan, away from Knox' guns, and through that July, more
and more transport ships met the British Fleet in Staten Island. Dick Howe,
the brother of the General, brought in tremendous reinforcements to help
his brother. In August, the British Fleet that was assigned and blockaded
in the south, commanded by Admiral Peter Parker (no relation to Mary Jane
Watson), joined Howe. General Clinton and General Cornwallis also sailed
into New York Harbor. Together they made up Britain's greatest expeditionary
force to date, ready to snarl Washington.
And if the British weren't enough, Dick Howe brought
to his brother King George's promised German mercenaries. The psychological
effect of the German troops could not have been over-estimated. New York
City was a Loyalist hotbed. But the appearance of German soldiers was a
wake up call to the common man in New York City. If the British weren't
yet considered a foreign power, the presence of the Germans was greatly
resented by the American population.
But all this mattered not, because Washington, without
a Navy to control the waters around New York Harbor, was faced with a divided
force. Much of it was in Brooklyn, cut off from an escape route if needed
as Howe's fleet took control of the East River. On top of this problem,
Washington's Army was barely more than a mob. Troops were undisciplined
and had little respect for military rank. They were ill equipped without
heavy artillery.They had no experience to use the artillery they had. Military
drill was critical at a time when the musket firearm was not much more
effective than the bayonet, and effective use of weapons depended on elaborately
choreographed warfare which laid down thick lines of fire to make up for
a lack of accuracy. Strict precision discipline in the ranks translated
to successful campaigns. This was an art almost unknown by American troops.
Even the senior staff command structure was in flux.
Israel Putman was suppose to be in command within
the Brooklyn Heights main garrison. John Sullivan was a Major General who
commanded what was known as the American Left in Brooklyn, and the Right
Sector ( Western Brooklyn) was given to a New Jersian, William Alexander.
Sullivan and Putman feuded as to their respective responsibilities. The
entire operations in Brooklyn was supposed to be overseen by General Greene
(as in Fort Greene). Greene, however, became ill just prior to the beginning
of Howe's move from Staten Island to Brooklyn. The command structure had
to be adjusted to compensate for Greene's absence. Hence, the three General
command structure was implemented using Putman, Sullivan and Williams.
It was on August 22nd, 1776 when Howe began to move.
Rather than face Knox' artillery at the Battery, Howe smartly navigated
88 frigates across the narrows where the Verrazano Bridge now stands, to
land in Graves End. Each frigate was filled with German and English troops.
Some of the English companies included the 17th Light Dragoons (as they
spelled it) and the Black Watch Brigade (A Scottish brigade with Black
Kilts). 15,000 men landed on Brooklyn from Staten Island, along with Commanders
Clinton, Cornwallis and the Hessian (German) Count von Donop.
While the move across the Narrows went smoothly
for the British, the winds of New York Harbor favored Washington throughout
the campaign and all but prevented Howe from sailing war ships up the East
River. Washington quickly reinforced Brooklyn by ferrying by row boat more
troops to the Brooklyn side of the River. On the 25th of August, after
3 days, winds shifted further in Washington's favor and Howe was unable
to add more troops to Brooklyn's south shore. But by the 26th Howe was
able to move the many German Troops to the theater of the Brooklyn War.
Washington had split his Army in two, half of the Continental Army in Brooklyn,
its back to the East River and vulnerable to naval assault, and half in
New York City, with Knox' cannons facing the wrong direction.
In Boston the English made the mistake of underestimating
the rebels and marched their columns directly in front of fortified American
positions on Breed Hill. In Brooklyn, Howe was not going to make the same
mistake. The terrain of Brooklyn is such that a large hill runs down the
center of its spine from the terminal moraine which runs up Sunset Park,
through Prospect Park and Lookout Hill, Mount Prospect behind the Brooklyn
Museum, and out along Eastern Parkway. Washington fortified the hill tops
and the southern slopes in Red Hook and Flatbush. 10,000 British troops
simply marched around the American fortifications in what is called a flanking
maneuver. After camping for 5 days in Flatbush, they marched east on what
was called Jamaica Pass, which ran approximately along present day Empire
Blvd., and was unguarded by the Americans. Unopposed they marched into
New Lots and Brownsville. They stopped for drinks (yup - drinks) at a tavern
called the Rising Sun Tavern and forced the tavern owner to show them a
northern passage called Rockaway Path in today's Evergreen Cemetery, north
to what today is the Eastern Parkway area, to the township of Bedford.
They then surprised the American troops, attacking
behind their wall of fortified positions, hitting them from the side on
the northern slope of the Heights. Sullivan's Left Wing was crushed and
sent into turmoil. The American Rifle, superior in most respects to the
common musket, was unable to fire more than one round at a time without
reloading it and repacking it. Muskets, similarly needed to be reloaded
after each shot. But Muskets, especially British Muskets, were fitted with
bayonets, and as the British advanced, they would lay down firing column
after firing column until in bayonet range at which point they rushed the
American lines in a form of organized hand to hand combat. The American's
simply couldn't combat this style of open warfare.
In essence, the British attacked the Americans from
behind. In Prospect Park there is a marker for what is known as Battle
Pass. Battle Pass had a large oak tree known as Dongal Oak. The tree was
felled and the Americans took position behind it and along a corridor blocking
Battle Pass. The British attacked from Bedford (around Fulton and Bedford
Avenue) behind the defensive line. Americans fled in all directions. They
were bayoneted near the Atlantic Ave. LIRR train station at Baker's Tavern.
They were chased into the woods which are now remolded to Prospect Park,
up Flatbush Ave., and down Park Slope on Port Road which was located near
1st street.
On the 26th, Washington came to Brooklyn to oversee
the operation. There was little that could be done but to hope that the
wind would keep Howe's war fleet out of the East River. Washington must
have realized at this point that he had maneuvered his Army into a trap.
On the American Right was William Alexander's (a.k.a.: Lord Sterling),
and William Smallwood's Marylanders. Accompanying the Marylanders was Haslet's
regiment of Delawares. Smallwood's and Haslet's regiments were the real
heros of the Battle of Brooklyn. Aside from the flanking maneuver, the
British also drove forward from Brooklyn's western shore line. In a strange
quirk of history, and in typical Brooklyn fashion, 2 British soldiers were
caught stealing watermelons from a field at the Red Lion Inn at 39th street
in Sunset Park. They beat a hasty retreat and in an example of truth being
stranger than fiction, returned.....but with 5000 more British troops.
General Alexander then met the troops there with 1700 men. They arrived
on the morning of the 27th badly outnumbered but prepared to die for America's
honor. And die they did.
Under the command of Alexander, Haslet's Delawares
and Smallwood's Marylanders where surrounded by the British grenadier and
Scottish 42nd Black Watch. The British were amazed at the valor of these
two groups. But they destroyed them anyway. Alexander tried to save his
troops and ordered an organized withdrawal. Through the Gowanus Creek they
withdrew, except for 200 Marylanders lead by the war hero, Mordecai Gist.
At the Cortelyou House, Gist and his men counter attacked and nearly broke
the British lines. Alexander had ordered his sixth counter attack when
fresh British troops arrived. And Gist and his fellow Marylanders had to
fight their way back to the American Line. Only 9, including Mordecai Gist
survived. But the offensive on what is now known as the Stone House, allowed
the rest of Alexander's Army to survive. 256 died at the Stone House, in
an unmarked grave. General Alexander himself is caught by the British Army.
More men came over from Manhattan, and then the rains began.
On August 29th, Washington at the Cornell Mansion
on Pierpoint Place decides it is time to retreat from Brooklyn, while he
still had the wind in his favor. Those of us who live in Brooklyn know
what it is like in late August in a pouring rain. Not the sort of thunder
storm that would suddenly appear but the kind of rain where it is overcast
and raining for a couple of days, and when fog covers the Harbor. Howe
composed a letter to Lord George Germain on his total victory in Brooklyn.
He had a clear run to Brooklyn Heights. But in the wake of walking troops
into barricaded Americans in Boston and suffering a terrible defeat, he
hesitates to enter the Lion's Den of Brooklyn Heights with the weather
as heavy as it was. He pulled back east and digs in for a seige. Hoping
to push closer and closer to the American troops holed up in Brooklyn Heights
from their protection of earthworks, rather than just marching into the
American fortifications. In the mists of a full blown Nor'easter, similar
to the one that ripped the shore off of Sea Gate a few years back, Howe
steadily pushed forward. Washington finally decides to withdraw from Brooklyn.
And yet in doing so, he knows that if the British discovered his retreat
across the East River, half his Army and most of its command would to be
caught in a massacre of British fire and bayonets.
Washington's Army in the moment of withdrawal was
in deadly peril. John Glover was a leader of a brigade called the Marbleheaders.
They were seamen by trade, and along with the Massachusetts 27th regiment
lead by Israel Hutchinson they rowed the Continental Army and their equipment,
in complete silence across the East River. One British Military critic
had said, “Those who are best aquainted with the difficulty, the embarrassment,
noise and tumult which attend even by day, and with no enemy at hand, a
movement of this nature...will be the first to acknowledge that this retreat
should hold a high place among military transactions. While Washington's
misjudgment put the Army in extreme danger, on the strength of his leadership
he was able to save the force. When the British arrived at Brooklyn Heights
that next morning, they found nothing more than some rusted buckets.