Westchester County, New York, During the American Revolution
Noth withstanding "all these difficulties, We are determined to combat every obstacle and "to Btrain every nerve in defense of the rights and liberties of America, '* which we conceive to be most materially interested in the safety of this "State. By our Resolutions for ordering the several drafts made in the "Comities of Suffolk, Queens, Kings, Westchester, Duchess, Ulster, and "Orange, to the environs of New York, we hope, in about sixdays, to "add near throe thousand men to your Army.
"We lament, exceedingly, that we should have occasion to complain " of the languid efforts which the neighbouring States have made for " our assistance. From the zeal they professed for the public cause ; *' from the vicinity of some of them to this invaded country ; and from " the dangerous situation in which Connecticut, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, and Jersey must be in, Bhould the enemy succeed in their "designs against this State, we expected the most strenuous and expeditious exertions. How great our concern [is] at finding so consideiu- "ble a deficiency in the establishment of this Array, your Excellency " may easily judge from the .feelings of a patriotic bosom, on the im- "portance of the cause and the daugers to which it is, by these means, " exposed.
"We flatter ourselves, however, that this supiueuess will not be of
WESTCHESTER COUNTY.
General Howe, on the contrary, had been strengthened, on the twelfth of July, by the arrival of his brother, Admiral Lord Howe, with the long expected reinforcements for theEoyal Array j 1 and he brought, also, a Commission from the King, appointing his brother, General Howe, and himself 2 to be Commissioners for granting pardons to those of the Americans who should ask for the clemency of the Sovereign. 3 On the twelfth of August, the two fleets, under the convoy, respectively, of Commodore Hotham and the Bepulse, met off Sandy-hook, and entered