Interview with Barker, William
He was at this time supposed by every horseman to be a British spy, and his capture and subsequent escape, were afterwards shown to have been pre-concerted with the view of impressing the Royalists and the public at large with the opinion that the American authorities considered him as strongly attached to the King and as being in the habit of rendering the tories important services. After leaving leaving West Chester in 1780, he lived a free life and it was said sometimes
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[margin: 18215] 91. plundered. Once he searched a house and found nothing, when it occurred to him there might be a secret apartment. Accordingly, being a carpenter, and having a scale by him, he measured the house and rooms inside and then took the dimensions outside, and made discovery of a hiding place for valuables, partitioned from off the house. He and his party then obtained a great quantity of clothes, money and dry goods, all of which they were in search of. When taken at Scarsdale Kennicutt was secured by a rope which he took off with him to show his friends when he got within the British lines.
Once during the war, probably, in 6 or 7 Skinners was overtaken in Scarsdale near my father's house by a party of DeLancey's who attacked
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[margin: 18215] 92. them, refused to give them quarter, killed all but one, cut & left him for dead, he was cut to pieces and life barely remained in him, but he at length recovered. These men were hacked slashed and killed begging for quarter. [This probably occurred in 1781, and is the affair mentioned by Dr. Thatcher in his Military Journal.]