326 41 4MB
English Pages 71 Year 1924
THE GERMAN INFLUENCE ITS
IN
SETTLEMENT AND DEVELOPMENT
H
*§^arratlpe
an^ Critical l3istor^
PREPARED BY AUTHORITY OF
THE PENNSYLVANIA-GERMAN SOCIETY
PART XXXI I is
THE PENNSYLVANIA-GERMAN IN THE BRITISH MILITARY PRISONS OF THE REVOLUTIONARY WAR
PUBLISHED BY THE SOCIETY 4
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tibe Ipenns^lpanfa-^erman In tbe
British ^Dilitar^ prisons of tbe IRevolutionari)
Mar
BY
HENRY MELCHIOR MUHLENBERG RICHARDS,
LiTT.D.
LATE UNITED STATES NAVY
P ennsylvayiia-German
and formerly Secretary, Member Historical Society of Pennsylvania, Genealogical Society of Pennsylvania, The Authors’ Club (London), SociPA Academique d'Histoire
Lafe President of the
Internationale (Paris),
Society,
La Ranaissance
(Paris), Aynerican Asi-
National Geographic Society, Sons of the Revolution, Naval Order of the United States, Military
atic Association,
United States, Grand
Order, Loyal Legion of the
Army
of the Republic, Military Order of For-
eign Trar5 of the United States, Naval
M
S pa nish-A rneri-
il ita
ry Order of the
can
War ayid many other
cal
Societies
and
and
Histori-
Alilitary
Orders.
AN HISTORICAL SKETCH Part XXXI. of a Narrative and Critical History PREPARED AT THE REQUEST OF
The Pennsylvania-German Society
LANCASTER, 1924
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The
British Prisons of the Rez-olution.
15
Lutz’s Berks County Battalion of Associators lost
its
commander, Lieut. -Colonel Lutz, its major, three captains, one lieutenant, and fully three hundred men, so far as we can tell from data on hand. The First Battalion of Associators, Colonel Michael Swope, from York County, suffered severely at Long Island and Fort Washington. Captain Graeff’s company was captured in the former battle, only eighteen men returning to join their command. Captain Stake’s company lost many in the latter engagement. Ensign Jacob Barnitz, of York, was wounded at Long Island and lay in Captain Joseph Hiester, of
prison for fifteen months.
Governor of Pennsylvania, captured at Long Island, was exchanged December 8 for Captain Strong, 26th British Regiment, and succeeded in getting home but so feeble and emaciated, from a slow and wasting fever contracted while imprisoned, that he was obliged to crawl up the stairs on his hands and knees. Reading,
We
are
later
more fortunate
in
of the losses sustained by the
and Colonel ber
8,
talions,
British,
x^tlee at
Long
having an authentic report
commands
Island,
1776, taken from a muster
of Colonel Miles
under date of Septemroll
of these three bat-
which was compared with the accounts kept by the They show killed secured under flag of truce.
and missing
as follows:
Regiment Second Battalion, Rifle Regiment Musketry Battalion First Battalion, Rifle
Officers.
Men.
13
120
7
48
12
77
This does not include the losses sustained at Fort Washington, which were not recorded but which must have been hea\T, among them being Captain Abraham DeHuff and Lieutenant Robert Caldwell, both of Lancaster County.
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21
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n^d
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ei
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XqqEdntr «id
baunhnoo ad aiadw ,€no«iiq eli \q a^icdo ni io ano ,bfoi ais aw t^iadw bnc ,EaofJDnq
«Id bawfi^Rg. ^lagmid
amailxa UrI adi oi navhb .8fniloiv ad anoi^ ebnsd arii^ rnoiV ,inio( laift adi oi ^na^nft nwo
daidw axion bni iBnom adi aiB ^lariiO .baiiqxa Lnuol arnoa alid/r ^eIIew noanq adi moi^ baqqrib T?adi ni ,(bidw-’;MiijuoiTi ibdi ni ynh bns boow 8iid diivf;?^ yarli
•*KI)';;ina/nHt»*Ti/on bnil 01
badau8
bf.ri
yadi ^afnogs dicab
(agio'd yallBY ic noagnu^ n^Diiam/t nu ,obisil/
amagidlA -an eiTj?^ mfidgninnuD bnc abi!m iBW inlslqmca nicgA ^ bio iid oi baiofeai ad oi yino Eidqbbslidn rnoi^ bavom *
-tnavoVl liinu aiadi
banUmai
aH
.afioY'
waM
rti
noiiigbq
-^o-nirn dehiifl £ biBod no
badnidma ad nadw diiw banoa lagno! on eBw^EohamA bni
.aan^aiq
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dgoodilfi ,nwonilnu
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M.
The
British Prisons of the Revolution,
23
thousand suffered death by their inhuman, cruel, savage and barusage on
barous
board
who
adding those in the city, a
the
filthy
and malignant prison
died and were poisoned in the infected prisons
much
larger
number would be necessary
who suffered by command York. The scenes enacted in these Cunningham, the like of whom, for those
all
ships
to include
of British generals in
New
prisons alm.ost exceed belief.
unpitying, relentless cruelty,
the w^orld has not produced, thirsted for blood,
and took an eager
delight in murder.
Some Personal Experiences. It is to
be regretted that, with but one exception, no
journals seem to be in existence which were written by
Pennsylvania-Germans setting forth their experience these prisons.
Plowever,
in
we have those of others, conand who underwent the same we can readily form some idea
same places sufferings, and from these of what our fathers had to endure. I propose to give a few’ quotations from these memoirs. That one exception is in the case of Major Henry Bedinger in part of a leter to a son of General Samuel Finley. Henry Bedinger w^as descended from an old German family, his grandfather emigrating to America from The highest rank attained by him in the Alsace in 1737. fined in the
War
of the Revolution w^as that of Captain.
The .
.
.
following extracts are taken from this letter: until the Spring of 1775,
of Virginia for tw’o of Riflemen of
Siege of Boston of Berkeley,
called on the State
Complete Independent Volunteer Companies
100 men each,
&
when Congress
to assist
to serve one year.
Gen’l Washington
Captain
Hugh
and Daniel Morgan of Frederick were
and command those companies, they being the
first
in the
Stephenson
selected to raise
Regular troops
required to be raised in the State of Virginia for Continental service.
ft
ritsmudiu tirdi
bna
-tad
enothq
arfj
^bi^bnl oJ
w 9 no’ lud rfliw ,1«d3 b99JyjS9i ad o1 a\ ll nalJhv/ aiawidlDidw aanajeix? ni ad oJ rnaa^ alsmuoi
on
‘'-Roa ,inaHio
liarit
U
a«ofl3
gfiEnnaO-cinfiviyafina^
:3nlil52
ritioi
avcH aw ,iavowoH.- .anozhq
aearii
afn« adi ni banft cabi amoe Tinol yfibcai nca aw aeadJ moi^ bn* Te3 ^rIafto^ .ainbna ol b*d eiadj*^ loo isdw s avig oi “woqmq ! *niQmam asadi inenli jsnoiisfoop .wa’i azsa adl rti ti nohqaaxa ano ikHT -baH ymall lo^nM Ln«
amfie adJ inaWiabnu orlw
.
biiow
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adT
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asahnabi
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Sf>t»5^Li8 fen*?worij
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# bn»
jd bluow idffiun
'09n
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bssyry jeomk simiuhq sodj
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-
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ni lagni
moii babnaaeab asw nagnibaH yinaH oi
gnijtiginia
mid yd banietlc
ladJ-Blbnsag
ilnci itadgid
adT
2 iri
*^1^1 ni aacalA.
«*w noilulovafl a(b lio 1*7/ ais mciixa gniwoUol adT
.nislqfiD Id 3crb
I
:iai»Uii!i moil navi*)
"
jitiZ
noa z o> laJal
IsianaD
n*rniraO blo^^n* ^
aaoiifq
ft
tjriJ
aainnqnioD iwinoIoV insboftqabnl 3 iIj ni
gnhqS
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noi^niHaaV/
no«nadqaj 2
dsuH
TnaO ^zmn
nij;iq*D
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l«TRf
...
oiq{noD owl loi AirngtiV
01 ,da«a
.iBay
a^im 01 baioilai aiaw jbhabrr'?
!» 3
iitmi
nam ooi
ano a>na« 01
namaRiH
jJ noitvB,
ncsioH iain«Q bn*
\o
\o a^aiS
^yafajliaS
adi ^niad yarfl ^wineqmcp aeo/b bruemmoa bn*
-viaz IjBTnaobnoO lo^ ulni^^irV
aib ni baziin ad 01 baniopn
The Pennsylvania-German
24
Society.
was Shepherd’s Town (now Martinsburg) and Captain Morgan’s was Winchester Captain
Hugh
Step'henson’s rendezvous
.
.
.
(both of these localities were largely settled by Pennsylvania-Ger-
mans, which shows the composition of these celebrated riflemen, Ed.). .
.
.
Our
Stephenson
Hugh
time of service being about to expire Captain
was commissioned
regiment for three years
.
.
a
in
about
weeks.
five
(Here follows a record
to
a
raise
rifle
Captain Finley and myself were
.
dispatched to Berkeley to recruit and
we performed
...
Colonel
of their
the old company,
refill .
which
.
.
movements with an
interesting
account of the capture of Fort Washington.) .
.
New
.
On
York, fourteen miles from Fort Washington, where
evening biscuit,
we
.
.
Our
The
...
we had
more than
seen for
were then separated from the
officers
and
Jails
soldiers.
So that
in
Washington
.
.
.
They
without blankets or cover-
given them to eat, and that
little
worst quality. of the Fort
morsel of provision
first
into sugar houses
ing; had Ver}^
the
in
poor Soldiers fared most wretchedly different.
were crowded
to
some barrels of raw pork and musty spoiled
received
being the
three days. .
we were guarded
the third day after our surrender
little of
the
Very
two months and four days about 1900
troops had died.
.
.
.
1777 the British commander was informed a plan was forming by a party of Americans to pass over to Long Island In the
and sweep us
fall of
us
ofr, release
from
captivity.
the Island about three
hundred American
were of course ordered
off immediately,
North River
two large transports
in the
mained but about 18
days, but
it
There were then on officers
prisoners.
We
and placed on board of
as prison ships,
being Very Cold, and
where we
re-
we Confined
between decks, the Steam and breath of 150 men soon gave us Coughs, then
fevers,
billets I believe
and had
we
not been removed back to our
one half would have died
in six
weeks.
.
.
.
Captain Alexander Graydon, of the Third Pennsylvania Battalion, was captured at Fort Washington, No-
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'
The it
followed
British Prisons of the Revolution.
me hard upwards of six weeks
now am vastly better May God keep and and death.
I will
.
.
.
my
after that a
was;
of pity
fire—poor
are
Long
with
or
little
hunger, offering eight dollars
in
their hearing
it is
— they I
shocking to
are
crowded
human nature
jaw’d mortal, hunger laid to keenest
Edge
garments,
Rotten
Could fix
I
do
clothes
for
—
of food
—
loose their voices
into churches
Relieve
their na-
and some
and there guarded
make
his
— Could
draw
I
there expose to your view a lean
;
his
them
to behold
no
with
'perishing
in silver to
want
is
can’t paint the horable appearance they
from before you
the curtain
no
and gone, some almost
night and day.
—
and they are Real objects
paper for one
their distressing hunger, occasioned
tures are broke
Island where
confined and in houses where there
still
mortals,
children.
you into the poor citua-
to faintly lead
in fact these cases are deplorable
— they
my
times from sin, sickness
all
tion the soldiers are in, especially those taken at I
slow fever, but
you and
sincere love to
preserve you at
endeavor
—
27
skinny hand (upon him) and whet
stomach cravings, surrounded with tattered
Rags,
this, I say,
beset
close
unwelcome vermin.
with
possable I might in
some (small) manner
your idea with what appearance sum hundreds of these poor
creatures
make
God’s Blessings,
God
houses where once people attempted to Implore
in
mh
,fli8
-swi? lociq
Mb otm
^•ndw bn&lai ^noJ
«wldo IwM on
987uJqi;:>
b3{ft wfft. Jti. bng .gnimom )xsn od) moon isdjonfl ddrw ni iisnsqqad 3|ob a 0) nsvig yilai/)f»vs aaw snbibsrn »riT
,omb JioHa 3^37 a ni bsifa odw amho 3dg>|. iobbnaI^n3 ni sib q) bsnnpbnos eaw ,«ia^ isbnorn sfft o) bsaw^noo ^nobussxs' tid )b ^bna ^bjrtiimrrioD bna ,noaioq yd jhoY wtVl ib noanq-^ni alsdsi ^^ncm io sd) s??qH laisnsD 61 gnsrtoqoh «id noqn %iad) b3)a)a ia)al ni^ .fiarn
smaa eidX
The Pe7insylvania-Gennan
30
number of
was
prisoners dead, his pay
Society.
He
raised.
further
confessed that he poisoned the wells used by the American
Flying Camp, which caused such an
among them
in the
uncommon
mortality
year 1776.
Journal of Experiences after the Battle of
In his
Long
John Nice, of Colonel Atlee’s Musketry^ Battalion, gives us the following itinerary of the movements of the prisoners v/hich is most useful in locating them Island,” Captain
August 29
—We
were
down
town, four miles
sent under a strong guard
the Island, called
turned over to a battalion of Hessians
August 31 charge of
—The Sent
us.
who
to a small
Flat Bush, and were used us very well.
Highlanders relieved the Hessians and took our private soldiers to Gravesend, where
all
they were lodged in two churches.
September
3
— Under guard we went on board
Capt. Davis, and were placed on short
snow Mentor, allowance, Yz lb Pork and the
man daily. September 5 Our men were placed on the transports oolly and Rockford where we lay until September 22, when we passed the Narrows and anchored be10 ounces of Bread per
W
—
tw'een Governor’s
and Gallows Islands.
—
September 29 opposite Fowl’s
October parole.
7
Sailed up the
Hook (Paulus
Flook).
—We were landed
The New York and
North River and dropped anchor
New York New England in
and signed a second officers
were put
in
Holy Ground the Maiydanders, Delawarians and Pennsylvanians were lodged in the house of Mr. Mariner, on William Street, except the field officers, who had the a house together on the
;
liberty of hiring a house for themselves.
—Tonight
October 9 officers,
who
I
was
insulted by a
number
of
Highland
rushed into the house, abused us with bad language,
and struck Lieut. Carnaghan, of the Right Battalion, and Ensign
Famandaz,
of the
Maryland
Battalion, and forced
them away
to
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The
British Prisons of the Revolution,
the guard-house
Here they were treated very civil next morning released by order of General
that night.
by the sergeant, and the
We
Robertson.
heard during the day heavy cannonading
direction of Forts
November November brought to
—
16
18
31
Washington and Lee. Fort Washington was
—The
New
taken.
prisoners taken at Fort
York; the
lay
officers
in the
Washington were
the
in
Baptist meeting
house that night.
Oliver Woodruff, captured at Fort Washington,
left the
following record:
We were
marched
to
New York
and went into different
Eight hundred and sixteen went into the the City Hail and
Broadway)
Dutch Church. the windows not
some
Bridewell (between
Sugar House; others
Bridewell was a cold, open
glazed, without straw to
lie
on and no
one cart load per week.
fuel but
We
we
dare not multiply, as
of misery and suffering. for
sufficient
readily might, these tales
What
has already been said
Surely nothing further
our purpose.
needed
to picture the horrors
passed
who were amongst
Long
into the
The New
into the
house,
;
New
prisons.
is is
through which our fathers
the unfortunate prisoners of
Island and Fort Washington.
We
w^ill
therefore
conclude by quoting from the account which Colonel Ethan Allen, himself a prisoner, gave of
what he there saw.
He
says
The
prisoners
New York ish
(from Fort Washington) who were brought to
were crowded into churches, and environed with
slav-
Hessian guards and at other times by merciless Britons, whose
mode
of
communicating
ideas being unintelligible in this country
served only to tantalize and insult the helpless and perishing; but
above
all
as they
the hellish delight and triumph of the tories over them,
were dying by hundreds.
bear as a spectator; for
I
saw the
This was too much for me tories exulting
to
over the dead
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The Peniisylvania-German
32
bodies of their countr>^men.
I
Society.
have gone into the churches and
seen sundry of the prisoners in the agonies of death; in consequence of very hunger; and others speechless and near death, biting pieces
of chips; others pleading, for God’s sake, for something to eat,
Hollow groans
and at the same time shivering with cold.
my
ears,
and despair seemed
The
countenances.
to direct
my
on every one of their
to be imprinted
these churches, in consequence of the
filth in
was almost beyond
fluxes,
saluted
description.
steps so as to avoid
have carefully sought
I
but could not.
it,
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beg for God’s sake for one copper or morsel of bread.
I
have
seen in one of the churches seven dead, at the same time, lying
among the excrements of their bodiesIt was a common practice with the enemy from these
filthy places In carts, to
making
seen whole gangs of tories
to
convey the dead
be slightly burled, and
I
have
and exulting over the
derision
dead.
The
cient for the support of
much more eaten,
was by no means
provision dealt out to the prisoners
and
I
so In
am
It
life.
...
Quality
bold to aver
it
as
it
suffi-
was deficient in Quantity, and was loathsome and unfit to be
my
opinion, that
It
had been con-
demned and was of the very worst sort bad as It was, it was swallowed almost as quick as they got hold of it. I saw some of them sucking bones after they were speechless; others who .
.
.
could yet speak and had the use of their reason, urged me, in the
my
strongest and most pathetic manner, to use
behalf
.
.
.
but as
I
not do them
could
interest
in
any material
and by any public attempt for that purpose
I
their
ser\uce,
might endanger
myself by frequenting places the most nauseous and contagious that could be conceived
The
of,
refrained going Into the churches
these suffering prisoners
integrity of
hundreds of them,
I
I
am
were pressed
to do.
Incredible,
.
.
many
confident, submitted to death rather than
which
enlist in the British service,
erally
is
.
.
.
Meantime mortality raged
I
am
informed they most gen-
.
among knew the
to such an intolerable degree
the prisoners that the very school children In the street
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THE GERMAN INFLUENCE IN ITS
SETTLEMENT AND DEVELOPMENT
H
‘Warrative an6 Critical tiistorg
PREPARED BY AUTHORITY OF
THE PENNSYLVANIA-GERMAN SOCIETY
PART XXXII THE EVOLUTION OF AN AMERICAN PATRIOT
PUBLISHED BY THE SOCIETY
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