Nov

25

Wednesday, November 25, 2020 – HAVE YOU HEARD OF EVACUATION DAY?

By admin

Wednesday,  November 25, 2020


OUR 219th ISSUE

OF 

FROM THE ARCHIVES

TODAY IS

EVACUATION DAY

COMMEMORATING

NOVEMBER 25, 1783

New York’s Other November Holiday

It’s been a good century or so since New Yorkers celebrated Evacuation Day. But in the late 18th and 19th centuries, this holiday—on November 25—was a major deal, marked by festive dinners, parades, and a deep appreciation of the role the city played in the Revolutionary War.

Washington’s triumphal entry on November 25, 1783.

By John Trumbull – New York City Hall Portrait Collection, Public Domain

FROM WIKIPEDIA
Evacuation Day on November 25 marks the day in 1783 when the British Army departed from New York City on Manhattan Island, after the end of the American Revolutionary War. In their wake, General George Washington triumphantly led the Continental Army from his headquarters north of the city across the Harlem River, and south through Manhattan to the Battery at its southern tip.

The column of the Prison Ship Martyrs' Monument, topped by a bronze urn, among trees, with a modern American and POW/MIA flagstaff adjoining.

Prison Ship Martyrs’ Monument in modern Fort Greene Park, Brooklyn.

Following the significant losses at the Battle of Long Island on August 27, 1776, General George Washington and the Continental Army retreated across the East River by benefit of both a retreat and holding action by well-trained Maryland Line troops at Gowanus Creek and Canal and a night fog which obscured the barges and boats evacuating troops to Manhattan Island.   On September 15, 1776, the British flag replaced the American atop Fort George, where it was to remain until Evacuation Day.

Washington’s Continentals subsequently withdrew north and west out of the town and following the Battle of Harlem Heights and later action at the river forts of Fort Washington and Fort Lee on the northwest corner of the island along the Hudson River on November 16, 1776, evacuated Manhattan Island. They headed north for Westchester County, fought a delaying action at White Plains, and retreated across New Jersey in the New York and New Jersey campaign.

For the remainder of the American Revolutionary War, much of what is now Greater New York was under British control. New York City (occupying then only the southern tip of Manhattan, up to what is today Chambers Street), became, under Admiral of the Fleet Richard Howe, Lord Howe and his brother Sir William Howe, General of the British Army, the British political and military center of operations in British North AmericaDavid Mathews was Mayor of New York during the occupation. Many of the civilians who continued to reside in town were Loyalists.

On September 21, 1776, the city suffered a devastating fire of uncertain origin after the evacuation of Washington’s Continental Army at the beginning of the occupation. With hundreds of houses destroyed, many residents had to live in makeshift housing built from old ships. In addition, over 10,000 Patriot soldiers and sailors died on prison ships in New York waters (Wallabout Bay) during the occupation—more Patriots died on these ships than died in every single battle of the war, combined. These men are memorialized, and many of their remains are interred, at the Prison Ship Martyrs’ Monument in Fort Greene ParkBrooklyn.

British evacuation

In mid-August 1783, Sir Guy Carleton, the last British Army and Royal Navy commander in the former British North America, received orders from his superiors in London for the evacuation of New York. He informed the President of the Confederation Congress that he was proceeding with the subsequent withdrawal of refugees, liberated slaves, and military personnel as fast as possible, but that it was not possible to give an exact date because the number of refugees entering the city recently had increased dramatically (more than 29,000 Loyalist refugees were eventually evacuated from the city).The British also evacuated over 3,000 Black Loyalists, former slaves they had liberated from the Americans, to Nova Scotia, East Florida, the Caribbean, and London, and refused to return them to their American slaveholders and overseers as the provisions of the Treaty of Paris had required them to do. The Black Brigade were among the very last to depart.

Carleton gave a final evacuation date of 12:00 noon on November 25, 1783. An anecdote by New York physician Alexander Anderson told of a scuffle between a British officer and the proprietress of a boarding house, as she defiantly raised her own American flag before noon. Following the departure of the British, the city was secured by American troops under the command of General Henry Knox.
Portrait by Gilbert Stuart, 1806 (Museum of Fine Arts, Boston)

Entry to the city under General George Washington was delayed until a still-flying British Union Flag could be removed that had been nailed to a flagpole at Fort George on the Battery at the southern tip of Manhattan as a final act of defiance, and the pole was greased. After a number of men attempted to tear down the British colors, wooden cleats were cut and nailed to the pole and, with the help of a ladder, an army veteran, John Van Arsdale, was able to ascend the pole, remove the flag, and replace it with the Stars and Stripes before the British fleet had completely sailed out of sight. The same day, a liberty pole with a flag was erected at New Utrecht Reformed Church; its successor still stands there.] Another liberty pole was raised in Jamaica, Queens, in a celebration that December.
Finally, seven years after the retreat from Manhattan on November 16, 1776, General George Washington and Governor of New York George Clinton reclaimed Fort Washington on the northwest corner of Manhattan Island and then led the Continental Army in a triumphal procession march down the road through the center of the island onto Broadway in the Town to the Battery. The evening of Evacuation Day, Clinton hosted a public dinner at Fraunces Tavern, which Washington attended. It concluded with thirteen toasts, according to a contemporary account in Rivington’s Gazette, the company drinking to:

The United States of America.

  1. His most Christian Majesty.
  2. The United Netherlands.
  3. The king of Sweden.
  4. The Continental Army.
  5. The Fleets and Armies of France, which have served in America.
  6. The Memory of those Heroes who have fallen for our Freedom.
  7. May our Country be grateful to her military children.
  8. May Justice support what Courage has gained.
  9. The Vindicators of the Rights of Mankind in every Quarter of the Globe.
  10. May America be an Asylum to the persecuted of the Earth.
  11. May a close Union of the States guard the Temple they have erected to Liberty.
  12. May the Remembrance of THIS DAY be a Lesson to Princes.

The morning after, Washington had a public breakfast meeting with Hercules Mulligan, which helped dispel suspicions about the tailor and spy.[

WEDNESDAY PHOTO OF THE DAY

Can you identify this site?

send you submission to 
ROOSEVELTISLANDHISTORY@GMAIL.COM

TUESDAY’S PHOTO OF THE DAY
OUR THREE EXHAUSTED ELECTION WORKERS

ARE HANGING OUT IN THE RIHS DISPLAY WINDOW IN RIVERCROSS
ALEXIS VILLEFANE, LAURA HUSSEY AND LISA FERNANDEZ 
WERE CORRECT 

 

Mayor Dinkins played tennis on the island and frequently we would be on the same tram to Manhattan in the morning. He was always friendly and great with the kids, a true gentleman.

Text by Judith Berdy
Thanks to Bobbie Slonevsky for her dedication to Blackwell’s Almanac and the RIHS
Thanks to Deborah Dorff for maintaining our website
Edited by Deborah Dorff
All image are copyrighted (c)
Roosevelt Island Historical Society
unless otherwise indicated

Google Images (c)

Wiki-Arts
Wikipedia

FUNDING PROVIDED BY ROOSEVELT ISLAND OPERATING CORPORATION PUBLIC PURPOSE GRANTS CITY COUNCIL REPRESENTATIVE BEN KALLOS DISCRETIONARY FUNDING THRU DYCD

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