Home / Scharf, J. Thomas, ed. History of Westchester County, New York, including Morrisania, Kings Bridge, and West Farms, which have been annexed to New York City, Vol. I. Philadelphia: L.E. Preston & Co., 1886. / Passage

History of Westchester County, New York, Vol. I

Scharf, J. Thomas, ed. History of Westchester County, New York, including Morrisania, Kings Bridge, and West Farms, which have been annexed to New York City, Vol. I. Philadelphia: L.E. Preston & Co., 1886. 447 words

* On Sunday night, the twenty-eighth of July, because the New England troops ^ad gone away, on the preceding day, leaving the river-line unguarded, the boatd from the shii>s went ashore, "atone Bailey's," near the mouth of Crotou-rivor ; " weut back, half a mile ; and drove off " a pair of o.xcn, two cows!, one calf, onti heifer, and eleven sheep : no "doubt had the assistance of some Tories, on shore." {Pierre Van CortUtndt and Zepltaniah PlaU, Junr., to the Convention, *' Head qI'akters, "MoiTU OF Crot>in, .\ugt. 2, 1770.")

Was the Bailey, at wh^j^e house the lauding was thus made, the same Bailey who waa seen ou board tbe Phoenix, a few days afterwards ?

Tarrytown, during either the second or third of August.^

In the meantime, while the ships were thus alarming nearly every one, by their movements up the river, General Washington, notwithstanding his multitude of other cares, promptly adopted measures for securing the removal of those unwelcome visitors from the waters of the Hudson. Immediately after their successful passage up the river, the General wrote to the Governors of Connecticut and Rhode Island, for the use of some of the galleys which those States had built; and, on the twenty-fourth of July, he wrote to the Convention of New York, telling it what he had done ; that he was in expectation, "every ''hour," that three or four of those galleys would reach the City of New York ; that he had one, ali-eady ; that if any measures were being taken for attacking the ships, in which these galleys could be usefully employed, to let him know ; and that, " if not other- " wise materially engaged," he should be glad to cooperate with them, and to furnish any a-ssistance which the galleys could give.'" The reply of "the "Secret Committee" of the Convention, to whom this portion of the General's letter was referred, has not been found ; but the tenor of it may be seen in the fact that two of the galleys went up the river, on the twenty-eighth of July, and three or four more on the first of August; " and that they probably " ran into "shoal water and creeks, whence they could warp out, " at certain times of tide, and annoy the shipping." On the afternoon of the third of August, these galleys -- bearing the names, respectively, of Wa)<hin(/toii, Laily Wtishingtou, Spifjifc, W/iifiii;/, Independence, Crane, and an unnamed whaleboat -- boldly attacked the ships, at their anchorage ; and as this early naval conflict occurred in the waters of Westchestercounty, we make room for the contemporary account of it: