History of Westchester County, New York, Vol. I
< ncsides the unceasing attempts to encroach on the territory of New Y'ork, and, in other ways, to invade the Rights of the Colonists, in that Colony, which Connecticut and men from Connecticut were constantly making, Isaac Scars, on the occasion now under notice, with the evident purpose of throwing all the titles of properties, in New Y'ork, and all the domestic and business relations, therein, into confusion and uncert«iinty, in order to make the inroads of depredators more certain of success, " intimated his design speedily to revisit this Province with a more " numerous body of the Connecticut Rioters, and to take away the " Records of the Province." (Governor Tryon to the ICarl of Iiartmonth, No. 22, "On Bo.\Rn the Ship Ditciiess of Gordon Nkw-Yokk IIab- " BoVR, G"> Dec' 1775.")
The declarations of Colonel Waterbury and Isaac Scars, on the sam subject, subsequently, will be noticed hereafter.
HISTORY OF WESTCHESTER COUNTY.
occupied the harbor and commaaded all the approaches to the City, by water, and by whom a large armed force could have been thrown into the City, to protect the inhabitants from such outrages as that which is now under consideration, meanwhile, remaining, apparently unconcerned, without raising a hand or firing a gun for that principal purpose of their presence in the Colony.
In the evening of the day on which the outrage on James Rivington was committed, {^Thursday, November 23, 1775,] Lancaster Burling and Joseph Totten, members of the General Committee for the City and County of New York, offered a Resolution, in that body, citing Isaac Sears, Samuel Broome, and John Woodward to appear before it, to answer for their conduct in entering the City, on that day, with a number of horsemen, in a hostile manner, which the movers of the Resolution considered a breach of the Association ;^ but on the following evening, probably because it was distasteful to the greater number, Mr- Burling withdrew the Resolution,^ rather than to see it ignominiously defeated.