Westchester County, New York, During the American Revolution
1 This statement if the proceedings of the Meeting at which a Deputation was chosen to represent WestcheBter-county, in the first Provincial Congress, is made on the authority of the official report of that Meeting, signed by " James Van Cortlandt, Gliairman for the Day," and pub_ llshed in Bivmgton's New-York Oanetteer, No. 108, New-Yobk, Thursday, May 11, 1775 ; and on that 0f the Credentials, Bigned by each of the twenty -three Members of the Committee for the County who were then present, which Credentials have been preserved among Credentials of Delegates, in the Historical Manuscripts, relating to the War of the Revolution, in the Secretary of State's Office at Albany, Volume XXIV., Page 133.
2 The Provincial Congress, on the twenty-ninth of June, 1775, issued a Warrant to David Dan, as First Lieutenant, under Captain Jonathan Piatt.
3 The Provincial Congress, on the twenty-ninth of June, 1775, issued a Warrant to Jonathan Piatt, as Captain.
did not constitute even a respectable minority of those who were heads of families and householders, throughout the County. 4 . It will be seen, also, that the Morris family, strengthened by its alliance with its kindred family of Graham, had fully entrenched itself, as the political head of the County ; and it will be particularly noticed of what kind of material Delegates were made, even at that early period of the revolutionary movement in Westchester-county, the most ill-disguised monarchists and even office-holders holding Commissions under the Crown, from among the non-producing class in that purely agricultural community, boldly, if not audaciously, assuming to be in harmony with the industrial masses whom they really despised, and crowding forward, in their greed for place and emoluments, to seize whatever opportunity for advancement, their ingenuity and their superior intelligence should place within their reach.