History of Westchester County, New York, Vol. I
" As Colonel Drake's Regiment of Minute-men "consists of one hundred and eleven jjrivate men, " present, and yet have no less than four Field "Officers, two Cajjtains, and thirteen other Commis- "sioned Officers, and twenty Non-commissioned "Officers, it is unreasonable to put the Continent to "the enormous expense of maintaining so many " Officers for the use of so few men ; and it is thcre- " fore ordered that one F'ield-officer, two Captains, " four Lieutenants, two Ensigns, the Adjutant, and " Quartermaster, eight Sergeants, eight Corporals, or " Drums or Fifes, and no other Officer do remain with " that small part of the Regiment ; the other Officers " are to return to their County, in order to complete " their Corps. Colonel Swartwout' and Lieutcnant- " colonel Humphreys** are to observe the same rule in "proportion to their numbers; and they are all of " them to send into Headquarters, Returns of their " respective Corps, present.'' ^
The reader will become better acquainted with this portion of the history of Colonel Samuel Drake's Regiment of Westchester-county Minute-men, byand-by.
The Regiment, when it reached the City of New- York, was employed in the construction of a redoubt, on Hoern's Hook, at the mouth of the Harlem-river, for the defence of the pass of Hell-Gate as well as to command the ferry to Long Island, which, even at that early period, had been established at that place ;
0 Captain Gray's Company probably marched from Bedford, on the sixteenth of February, agreeably to the promise tliat it sliould do so ; ami on the twenty-ninth of the s;inie mouth. General Lee said of the lii'giment and of a Company detiiclifd from another Rej^iment, tonrtber forming the garrison at Hoern's Hook, " Dr.ake'8 Keginiunt of Minnte- " Men and ijiic mure Company, (//( till alxntt tico hundred,) are statioii<-d at "Horn's Hook, which coniniamls Hell-Gate.