Interview with Brown, Nehemiah
Dole then charged upon Adderton, but finding his strength failing from loss of blood, he put spurs to his horse and rode as far as Nathan Merritt's (about half a mile), where, faint from loss of blood, he remained and had his wound dressed, and staid till he recovered. Shube called at Merritt's and claimed Dole as his prisoner and demanded his property. Fearing Shube, Merritt's people surrendered his sword and pistol. Shube then proposed to [page break] Nehemiah Brown contd. parole him. Dole replied that it was unnecessary as he should probably die. Shube insisted he should surrender himself below if he recovered. Dole said he would if Shube assured him he would be paroled. Shube refused to accede to that, and Dole refused to surrender. Shube then said he would kill him, and Dole bid him defiance. Shube was struck with Dole's courage and expressed his admiration of such bravery at the gates of death. Shube ended the colloquy by saying he would leave it to Dole's sense of honor and propriety whether he should go below and surrender when he got well or not. Dole at last consented. When well he went below, and was afterwards promoted to a lieutenancy.
Captain Fowler was wounded in the neck at Horseneck, and complained to his friends on the ground that his cravat choked him. They took it off. The ball fell out of his neck [page break] Nehemiah Brown continued. and he instantly bled to death.
When Tom Ferris and two others took Delancey's horse they were so hotly pursued, that Tom abandoned his friends, and meeting a quaker on horseback in East Chester, made him dismount and took his horse; but the horse, put to speed, soon tired, and jumping Ferris ran into a swamp, and afterwards got to Throgs Neck where his mother lived.