American Revolutionary War 19 Apr 1775 – 3 Sept 1783

Add your posts and photographs about battles and other actions in this section
User avatar
Pelican
Posts: 10069
Joined: Thu Aug 09, 2018 10:10 pm

American Revolutionary War 19 Apr 1775 – 3 Sept 1783

Unread post by Pelican »

Happy Evacuation Day! When the British Sailed From New York at the End of the Revolutionary War

On November 25, 1783, the last shot of the American Revolution was fired by a gunner on a departing Royal Navy ship at jeering crowds gathered on the shore of Staten Island, at the mouth of New York Harbor. The shot went wide, missing its target.

Sir Guy Carleton had ordered his troops to sail at noon on November 25th. George Washington and an honor guard from the Continental Army marched in shortly thereafter. Before Washington could arrive, officially ending the seven-year occupation of New York, the British flag, which had been nailed to a greased flag pole at the Battery, needed to be taken down. John Van Arsdale, a survivor of a British prison ship, climbed the greasy pole, ripped down the Union Jack, and nailed up the Stars and Stripes. For years, greased pole climbing contests were popular in celebrations of Evacuation Day in New York.

The British occupation of New York had been brutal. In 1783, the city had roughly 12,000 inhabitants. During the occupation, over 11,000 American prisoners died from intentional neglect aboard sixteen British prison ships anchored in Wallabout Bay in New York’s East River. The total number of Americans who died in combat during the seven-year war was roughly 6,800, which is to say that more Americans died from hunger and disease on these ships than died in every battle of the war, combined.

Continues at - https://www.oldsaltblog.com/2023/11/hap ... more-61067
HMS Pelican 1938 - 1958 GGCV L86 U86 F86 What I Have I Hold ~ A wonderful bird is the Pelican its beak can hold more than its belly can.

Return to “Battles, other Actions and Naval History”