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. 407 words

^In the Jtetnrn of the Killed, Wounded, and Missing^ of the Hoyal .{riiiii, appended to General Howe's desi>atch to Lord George Germaine, dated "Nf.w-Yobk, 3 December, 1776," it was stated that the only one of either of the two Kegiinents of the Light Dragoons then in America, who was killed, from the nineteenth to the twenty-eighth of October, inclusive, was one Kauk and File, of flie Seventeenth Itegiment ; and, very probably, that one was the same to whom we have referred, in the text.

^ Memoirs of Major general Jfeatli, 7?*.

1" General Howe to Lord George Gennaine, " New-Yokk, 30 November, "1770."

11 David How's Diary, October 29 and 30, 1770.

See, also. Lieutenant-colonel Tilghman to his father, " White Plains, 31 "October, 1776 " ; Memoirs of Major-general Heath, 79 ; etc.

THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION, 1774-1783.

the interval had been undoubtedly occupied by the Americans, in industriously strengthening their position, they could scarcely have made defensible and formidable what, only a few iiours previous, had been hardly respectable. Indeed, at no time, even under the most favorable circumstances, were the defences of the American lines, immediately above the Plains, in any respect formidable ; and the center, where the post-road passed through them, was decidedly the weakest portion. Tliey liad been hastily constructed, without the superintendence of experienced Engineers. The stony soil prevented the ditch from being made of any troublesome depth or the parapet of a troublesome height : the latter was not fraised : only where it was least needed -- probably because the construction of it, elsewhere, had been interfered with -- was there the slightest appearance of an abatis.* There was little foundation, therefore, for General Howe's transparent excuses ; and it would have been more creditable to his candor, had he told the true reason for his failure to assault the lines, on the morning after the Battle and while the troops who had been designated to make the assault, with their line unbroken, were resting on their arms, within a mile and in open sight from the works which they were expecting to assault, and ready to move against them, at a moment's notice -- the fact was simply this, as we have already seen,^ " the Army could no longer expediently attempt "anything against the enemy's" [the Americans'^ " main body ;" and it was necessary that it should be reinforced, before the Americans should be attacked.