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http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924032738464 



REVOLUTIONARY DEFENCES 



RHODE ISLAND 




PROVIDENCE BEACON 



XVOlinrNKMLY DteNCES 



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RHODE ISLAND 



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W/2V/ MAP&. HANS, AND JIMUStM^lOMS 



PROVIDENCE, R.I. 

HkgrroN AN© E^tTJra®: 






f\7iS30j 

Copyright, 1896, « 
By EDWARD FIELD. 



All rights reserzied 



Nortoooti ^rese 

J. S. dishing & Co. — Berwick & Smith 

Norwood Mass. U.S.A. 



a n \'a( 



eta tfje Memory 

OF 

MY MOTHER 



PREFACE. 

The history of the Revolutionary De- 
fences in Rhode Island has occupied my 
leisure time at irregular intervals for several 
years past. 

Some of the earlier results of my study 
of the subject were embodied in a paper 
which I read before the Rhode Island His- 
torical Society on January 26, 1886, entitled, 
" Fortifications in and around Providence," 
and which was subsequently printed in the 
Narragansett Historical Register, No. 3, 
Vol. V. From this paper I have drawn 
largely for the material relating to the ac- 
count of the Providence defences ; but I 
have now added much that was then to me 
unknown, and have corrected errors then 
made. 



Vlll PREFACE 

The authorities for the statements herein 
made have been mostly derived from the 
Rhode Island Colonial Records, including 
both Bartlett's printed volumes and the 
printed schedules of the proceedings of the 
General Assembly during the Revolutionary 
period and the manuscript records of the 
Council of War. I have also derived much 
information from Cullum's Fortification De- 
fenses of Narragansett Bay, Arnold's His- 
tory of Rhode Island, the various printed 
town histories, and the town record books 
of Providence, East Greenwich, Warwick, 
Barrington, and Bristol ; while the manuscript 
collections in the State Archives, the Rhode 
Island Historical Society, and the docu- 
mentary possessions of the city of Provi- 
dence have furnished me much new material. 
The muster rolls and company lists here 
printed have been carefully transcribed from 
the originals, and reference to the place where 
they may be found is given in each case. 

In the study of the subject I have trav- 
ersed the entire coast line of the state and 



PREFA CE ix 

have examined and made plans of each one 
of the old earthworks now remaining, besides 
visiting . most of the other historic places 
mentioned in the text. The plan of Fort 
Chastellux has been taken from Cullum's 
Fortification Defenses of Narragansett Bay, 
the Prospect Hill fort from Stone's French 
Allies, and Fort Liberty from a map of 
Newport made in 1776. 

I take this opportunity of expressing my 
thanks to my friend Norman M. Isham, 
Esquire, for his generous contribution to 
these pages, in making the drawings and the 
map of the State of Rhode Island, which 
form a part of the illustrations of this book. 

I am also indebted to the Honorable 
Charles P. Bennett, Secretary of State, for 
the privilege of reproducing the map of the 
operations on Rhode Island, now in his 
custody, and to the Honorable George M. 
Carpenter, the Honorable Amos Perry, 
Librarian of the Rhode Island Historical 
Society, and to R. H. Tilley, Esquire, Libra- 
rian of the Newport Historical Society, for 



X PREFACE 

the opportunity of using valuable manu- 
scripts, interesting relics, and for many other 
kindnesses. The full-page photographs, with 
one exception, the Butt's Hill fort, are the 
work of Samuel B. Burnham, Esquire. 

In presenting this account of the action 
of the men of Rhode Island in the great 
struggle for American independence, I have 
sought to bring together such facts as would 
add interest to these old works scattered 
along the seaboard, and to point out their 
location, that they may be easily identified 
by those who care to visit such historic 
spots. 

E. F. 

Providence, R.I., 
May, 1896. 



CONTENTS. 

CHAPTER I. 

PAGE 

The Military Forces in Rhode Island — Army of Ob- 
servation — Form of Enlistment — Lists of Soldiers 
in Captain Stephen Kimball's Company, Captain 
Jeremiah Olney's Company, Captain Ethan Clarke's 
Company, Captain Joseph Knight's Company, and 
Captain Simeon Thayer's Company i 

CHAPTER II. 

Condition of the Army at Jamaica Plain — Method of 
encouraging Enlistments — Arms and Accoutre- 
ments — Rules adopted for their Care — Gun-makers 
and Bayonet-makers — Powder and Saltpetre Mills 
erected . .... . 14 

CHAPTER III. 

The Providence Beacon — Fox Hill Fort — Rules and 
Regulations for its Conduct — Trial of the Beacon 
— Notice to the Country — Master and Wardens of 
the Beacon — Tonomy Hill, Scituate, and Cumber- 
land Beacons — Watch at Tower Hill 42 



xii CONTENTS. 

CHAPTER IV. 

PAGE 

Intrenchments at Field's Point and Sassafras Point — 
Bombardment of Bristol — John Howland's Narra- 
tive — Works at Kettle Point and Pawtuxet — Fort 
Independence — Cost of the Work — Boom and 
Chain — The Redoubts on the Road to the Upper 
Ferry ....... 56 

CHAPTER V. 

Beacon Hill Fort — General Spencer's Request — Provi- 
dence Companies detailed to work on Fortifications 
— Fort Sullivan — Hog Pen Point Fort — Action of 
the Town of Rehoboth — Defences in the War of 
1812 — Fort William Henry . . -70 

CHAPTER VI. 

Fortifications at Newport — Fort George — Fort at 
Brenton's Point — Newport Town-Meeting Author- 
ity questioned — Memorial to the Continental Con- 
gress — North Battery — Guards established at 
Warwick Neck and Pawtuxet — Lists of Officers 
and Men . . -79 

CHAPTER VII. 

Fortifications ordered at Bristol Ferry and Howland's 
Ferry — Fort Barton — List of Officers and Men 
stationed at Howland's Ferry — Coast-guards estab- 
lished — Tonomy Hill Fort — Fortifications at Bris- 



CONTENTS. xiii" 

PAGE 

tol Harbor — Alarm at Bristol — List of Barrington 
Men appearing — Fort Daniel — List of Officers and 
Men located at East Greenwich — List of Captain 
John Whipple's Company on Rhode Island — Kings- 
town Reds 98 

CHAPTER VIII. 

Fort at Beaver Tail — List of Officers and Men guard- 
ing the Charlestown Shore — Story of the Wickford 
Gun — Order for the Guard at Quonset — Rum as a 
Munition of War — Distribution of Cannon in the 
State — Forts at Popasquash and Bullock's Point — 
Table of Defences in Narragansett Bay — Fortifica- 
tions at Warren — Colonel Angell's Regiment sta- 
tioned at Warren — Roll of Captain Tew's Company 117 

CHAPTER IX. 

Arrival of the British Fleet at Newport — Governor 
Cooke's Letter to General Washington — Evacuation 
of the Island of Rhode Island by the Americans — 
British erect Additional Works — Forts at Codding- 
ton's Point and Cove — Loss of the Spitfire — Wil- 
liam Pearce loses his Cider — The Owl's Nest — 
Butt's Hill Fort — Dumplings Battery — Eldred's 
One-gun Battery — The Battery at the Bonnet . 127 

Index of Names 149 

Index of Subjects . . . , - • • '59 



LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS. 



opp 



Providence Beacon .... Frontispiece 

Providence Grenadier's Hat . 

British Grenadier's Hat . 

Facsimile of Enlistment Paper 

Colonel Bowen's Cartridge Box 

Facsimile of Receipt for Bounty and Recruit . . <?, 

Colonel Sherburne's Cartridge Box 

Elbridge Gerry's Gun and William Ellery's Gun 

Wooden Canteen ...... 

Group of Shot and Shell .... 

Robin Hill Fort, near Sassafras Point, Providence 

Robin Hill Fort 

Fort Independence ..... 

Fort Independence, Field's Point, Providence 
Prospect Hill Fort, Providence 

Hog Pen Point Fort 

Fort Liberty 

Fort Barton 

Tonomy Hill Fort (Beacon Hill) . 



opp 

opp 



opp. 



15 

16 

20 
21 



24 

33 
40 

53 
62 

64 
73 
76 
80 

99 

102 



xvi LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS 



FAGE 



Tonomy Hill Fort and Observatory, Newport . opp. 130 

Coddington's Point Fort 131 

Bliss Hill Fort, Green End, Middletown . . opp. 132 

Coddington's Cove Fort 133 

Coddington's Point Fort, Newport . . ■ opp. 134 

Bristol Ferry Fort . . ... 137 

Butt's Hill Fort, Portsmouth .... opp. 140 

Fort Chastellux 142 

Fort on Conanicut Island (Beaver Head) . . . 144 

Fort at Bonnet Point ....... 146 

Map of Rhode Island . preceding Index 

Map of the Island of Rhode Island, showing Military 

Operations in Sullivan's Expedition in 1778 . opp. 142 



REVOLUTIONARY DEFENCES IN 
RHODE ISLAND. 

CHAPTER I. 

The Military Forces in Rhode Island. — Army of Observation. 
— Form of Enlistment. — List of Soldiers in Captain 
Stephen Kimball's Company, Captain Jeremiah Olney's 
Company, Captain Ethan Clarke's Company, Captain 
Joseph Knight's Company, and Captain Simeon Thayer's 
Company. 

At the outbreak of the war of the Revo- 
lution, the active military force of Rhode 
Island consisted of the several companies of 
the Train Bands and of independent char- 
tered military organizations bearing high- 
sounding names like the Kingstown Reds, 
North Providence Rangers, Scituate Hunt- 
ers, Pawtuxet Rangers, Providence Grena- 
diers, Kentish Guards, and some others. 

According to the standard of the times 
these companies were well equipped and 



2 REVOLUTIONARY DEFENCES 

well disciplined. The officers were elected 
at stated times by the members of the com- 
panies and their choice communicated to the 
General Assembly, which body approving 
the choice, they were duly commissioned by 
the Governor. These officers were gener- 
ally selected with due regard to their skill 
and ability, and were men of some promi- 
nence in the community in which they lived. 
Except such as had seen service in the pre- 
vious wars, most of the soldiers' experience 
had been obtained at the general musters or 
trainings. 

It is a fact that these trainings were more 
of a frolic than anything else. Training- 
day was a holiday, every one laid aside his 
work to witness the manoeuvres of the 
troops, much jollification was indulged in, 
and much liquor drunk. The headquar- 
ters of the militia was usually at some one 
of the many taverns in the town, and the 
tavern-keeper always made provision for 
training-day by laying in an extra stock of 
liquors. It was customary for the newly 
elected officers to be generous in treating, 
not only the soldiers in the company, but 
every one else, and liquor was furnished in 
such overflowing abundance that some who 



IN RHODE ISLAND 3 

attended " training " took many more steps 
returning home than they had in coming. 
" We had our Training and Treating and 
the company was all here," wrote one tavern- 
keeper in his diary. Non-attendance at a 
training was met with a fine, and the money 
thus obtained was sometimes used to pur- 
chase powder for use in firing at a mark. 

By a law of the colony, passed in 1774, 
each enlisted soldier was required to furnish 
himself "with a sufficient gun or fuzee" and 
a good bayonet for his gun. The equip- 
ments were therefore the soldier's own prop- 
erty and, so long as he furnished all that the 
law required, no question was raised as to 
type. 

Immediately after the Concord and Lex- 
ington fight, the General Assembly of Rhode 
Island ordered an Army of Observation of 
fifteen hundred men to be raised " with all 
the expedition and despatch that the nature 
of the thing will admit of," and all the militia 
in the state was ordered to drill a half-day 
once in every fortnight. This Army of Ob- 
servation, as it was politely called, was raised 
for the purpose of repelling any " insult or 
violence that may be offered to the inhabi- 
tants " by the fleets and armies which sur- 



4 REVOLUTIONARY DEFENCES 

rounded them, — the fleets and armies of His 
Britannic Majesty. Those who entered the 
army did so by subscribing to this oath of 
enlistment : — 

" I, the subscriber, hereby solemnly engage 
and enlist myself as a soldier in His Majes- 
ty's service, and in the pay of the colony of 
Rhode Island, for the preservation of the 
liberties of America, from the day of my 
enlistment, to the last day of December 
next, unless the service admit of a discharge 
sooner, which shall be at the discretion of 
the General Assembly ; and I hereby prom- 
ise to submit myself to all the orders and 
regulations of the army, and faithfully to 
observe and obey all such orders as I shall 
receive from time to time from my officers." 

This entire army was, therefore, enlisted 
in the King's service, but it is quite certain 
that His Majesty did not experience great 
happiness in having this colonial contingent 
so promptly in the field, for its meaning was 
far different from what appeared on its face. 

This was the beginning of Rhode Island's 
contribution to the Continental Army, and 
during the whole struggle her contributions 
were both prompt and generous. It is un- 
fortunate that so little is known of the make- 



IN RHODE ISLAND 5 

up of the companies included in this first 
body of troops to be raised in Rhode Island 
for the defence of American liberties. There 
are few records of the soldiers who were 
engaged in service during the year 1775 ; the 
state archives are bare, and what few muster 
and pay rolls are now to be found relating 
to this period, are mostly in private hands. 
The names of all the commissioned officers 
may be found in the Colonial Records, but 
the state's papers contain no lists of the 
non-commissioned officers and privates. 

A persistent search among the deposito- 
ries of such records has disclosed but four 
muster or pay rolls particularly identified 
with this year. Three of these companies 
were of the Army of Observation, while the 
fourth, Captain Joseph Knight's Company, 
was located in Scituate, and the period of 
service was for a time only a few days pre- 
vious to the raising of the army, the roll 
being dated April 20, 1775. As these lists 
contain the names of those who were the 
first to enlist in the great struggle for inde- 
pendence, and as many of the names men- 
tioned have been heretofore inaccessible, 
they are here given. 



6 revolutionary defences 

Captain Stephen Kimball's Company in Colo- 
nel Daniel Hitchcock's Regiment of the 
Army of Observation, 1775. 1 

Stephen Kimball, Captain. 

Jonathan Smith, Lieutenant. 

Nehemiah Angell, Ensign. 

Nathan Olney 

Timothy Hopkins \ Sergeants. 

Isaac Medbury J 

William Arnold ] 

Othniel Arnold [- Corporals. 

Philip Salsbury j 

Thomas Bickford Thomas Pearce 

Jabez Arnold Homes Perkins 

Elisha Ormsbury David Remock 

Squire Bucklen John Swain 

Benjamin Arnold Perrigreen Smith 

Charles Brown Israel Shippey 
Solomon Burlinggame Thomas Thornton 

Zachariah Basset David Whitman 

James Blancher John Whitman 

Joseph Bosworth Joseph Williams 

Amaziah Blackmar John Walker 

Benjamin Boss Nathan Walker 

Rufus Chapman Jeremiah Wescot 

Caleb Colgrove Comfort Weatherhead 

1 Cowell's Spirit of"]i> in Rhode Island, page 21 : A copy 
of the original, certified by Benjamin Boss, is among the 
Military Papers of the Rhode Island Historical Society. 



IN RHODE ISLAND 



Zephaniah Cotnan 
Morris Corkern 
Samuel Singleton 
Jonathan Dolbey 
William Edmans 
Bethuel Curtis 
Abel Ford 
Joel Hopkins 
Oliver Hopkins 



Ephrean Hopkins 
James Wescot 
Jotham Hawkins 
Reuben Hines 
Jeremiah Walling 
Hezekiah Medbury 
Pain Hines 
Abel Hornton 
Abram Jones 



Captain Jeremiah Olney's Fourth Company in 
Colonel Daniel Hitchcock's Regiment of 
the Army of Observation, 177s. 1 

Jeremiah Olney, Captain. 
Amos Jencks, Lieutenant. 
Nehemiah Field, Ensign. 
Holiman Potter, First Sergeant. 
Thomas Knight, Jr., Second Sergeant. 
Benjamin Wood * 



Corporals. 



Silas Howard 
Naman Bishop 
Jere Burlingame 

John Phillips,* Drummer. 

Nathan Waterman, Fifer. 



1 Cowell's Spirit ofj6 in Rhode Island, page 20. 

* The names thus marked are found on the list of Captain 
Joseph Knight's Scituate Company and may serve to indicate 
the town from which they enlisted when the Army of Obser- 
vation was raised. 



RE VOL UTIONAR Y DEFENCES 



John Manchester * 
Collins Roberts * 
Joseph Collins * 
David Knight * 
Obadiah Bridges 
Samuel Eldrich * 
Joseph Briggs * 
Rufus Knight 
Nathan White 
Eleazer Randall 
Oliver Jencks 
Joel Whipple 
Abel Aldrich 
Ichabod Richmond 
John Grant, Jr. 
Stephen Edwards* 
William Taylor, Jr. 
William Jeffers 
Paskow Austin 
Simon Jeffers 
Caleb Nichols 
John Fuller 
Caleb Steere * 
George King 
Thomas Weaver 



Oliver Weeks 
Joseph Bennett * 
Stukely Westcott 
Edward Daw 
Christopher Collins ' 
William King 
Allen Briggs 
Eleazer Clark 
Peter Cappell 
Stukely Thornton * 
Elisha Sarle 
Thomas Colvin, Jr. 
Solomon Dailey 
John Booth 
Thomas Sarle, Jr. 
Benjamin Gorton 
William Edwards 
James Stone 
Edward Bennett * 
Phillip Morris 
James Wood 
Joseph Angell 
Waterman Randall 
Oliver Bisshop 



IN RHODE ISLAND g 

Captain Ethan Clarke's Company, Decem- 
ber, 1775. 1 

Ethan Clarke, Captain. 

Thomas Cole, Lieutenant. 

Paul Harrington, Ensign. 

Joshua Babcock 1 

Henry Northrop [ Sergeants. 

Nicholas Clarke j 

Jonathan Hazard ] 

Daniel Stafford I Corporals. 

David Remington J 

Nathaniel Plumb, Fifer. 
Asa Clarke, Drummer. 

Ebenezer Hill James Shote 
Robert Perigo Lubius Lewis 
George Tanner Jonathan Lewis 
John Gardner Moses Roger 
Arnold Coon Samuel Bissell 
William Watson Amos Smith 
John Popple George Griffith 
George Popple William Harvey- 
James Bliven Thomas Duglas 
Jonathan Goodbed Benedict Brown 
Joshua Church Daniel Scranton 
Oliver Frink Stephen Johnson 
Walter Wordin Nathan Whiting 

1 The roll of Captain Clarke's Company is in the custody 
of the Providence Record Commissioners, and is one of the 
" Warner Papers,' 7 so called ; it has never before been printed. 



Missing Page 



Missing Page 



12 REVOLUTIONARY DEFENCES 

1775- to January i, 1776, and the compa- 
nies in which they were serving at the time 
Thayer's Company was detached. 

Simeon Thayer, Captain. 

Lemuel Bailey, First Lieutenant. Tew's Co. 

William Humphrey, Second Lieutenant. Aldrich's 

Co. 
Thomas Page, First Sergeant. Thayer's Co. 
Thomas Ellis, Second Sergeant. Thayer's Co. 
Moses Bryant, Third Sergeant. Field's Co. 
Samuel Singleton, Fourth Sergeant. Kimball's Co. 
Moses Cockran, First Corporal. Kimball's Co. 
James Hayden, Second Corporal. Thayer's Co. 
Silas Wheeler, Third Corporal. Field's Co. 
Thomas Low, Fourth Corporal. Thayer's Co. 
Eleazer Thayer, Private. Thayer's Co. 
John Thompson, " 
John Latham, " Field's Co. 

Elijah Fowler, " Tew's Co. 

John Bridges, " C. Olney's Co.* 

Moses Hemenway, " Thayer's Co. 

James Welch, " Field's Co. 

James Monk, " Thayer's Co. 

Silas Hooker, " 

William Gouge, " " 

Jacob Good, " 

John Robinson, " 
Cornelius Higgarty, " Field's Co. 

Abraham Jones, " Kimball's Co.j 

* Dismissed. f Discharged at Cambridge. 



IN RHODE ISLAND 



13 



Pasco Austin, Prh 
Joseph Bosworth, 
Manie O'Daniel, 
Elijah Jones, 
James Stone, 
John Holley, 
John Cambridge, 
David Lawrence, 



•ate. J. Olney's Co. 

Field's Co. f 
J. Olney's Co. 

a 

Talbot's Co. 
Thayer's Co. 
C. Olney's Co. 



It will thus be seen that thirty-three of 
these men belonged to Rhode Island com- 
panies. 



14 REVOLUTIONARY DEFENCES 



CHAPTER II. 

Condition of the Army at Jamaica Plain. — Method of 
encouraging Enlistments. — Arms and Accoutrements. — 
Rules adopted for their Care. — Gun-makers and Bayonet- 
makers. — Powder and Saltpetre Mills erected. 

The Army of Observation was at once 
despatched to the seat of war at Boston, and 
went into camp at Jamaica Plain. Here 
Nathanael Greene, who had been elected 
Brigadier-General, assumed command. 

He found his troops in commotion and 
disorder; but, through his skilful manage- 
ment and great personal influence, order was 
restored and a high grade of discipline there- 
after maintained. 

Notwithstanding the hurried way in which 
the Rhode Island brigade had been placed 
in the field, it was the best equipped force 
in the army. Chaplain William Emerson, of 
Concord, Mass., an observing man, who vis- 
ited from time to time the various com- 
mands and made notes of what he observed, 
says, " the Rhode Islanders are furnished 
with tent equipage, and everything in the 



IN RHODE ISLAND 



15 



most exact English style." With the dis- 
cipline which Greene's personality inspired, 
and the completeness of its equipment, the 
Rhode Island division of the Continental 
Army was marked and noticeable. 




Providence Grenadier's Hat. 

No complete uniform such as was worn by 
the Rhode Island troops has been found in 
the various collections in the state, but the 
uniform hat here represented was the kind 
worn by the independent company called the 
Providence Grenadiers, chartered in 1774, 
and one of the companies that assisted in 
the construction of the fort on Prospect Hill, 



1 6 REVOLUTIONARY DEFENCES 

in Providence, in 1777. It is among the col- 
lection of the Rhode Island Historical So- 
ciety. A similar hat, differently decorated, 
worn by the Newport Light Infantry, another 
independent company chartered about the 
same time, may be seen in the interesting 
collection of relics owned by the Newport 
Artillery. Nothing whatever is known of 




British Grenadier's Hat. 



the other Grenadiers' hat, but the symbols 
of royalty which adorn its front show plainly 
enough that it was once the property of a sol- 
dier of His Britannic Majesty. This also be- 
longs to the Rhode Island Historical Society. 
About the first of July the army from 
Rhode Island consisted of three regiments, 
comprising 107 officers and 10S5 enlisted 



IN RHODE ISLAND \J 

men, — nearly the whole number that had 
been called for. It is within bounds to say 
that during the years of the war, every loyal 
able-bodied man in Rhode Island between 
the ages of sixteen and sixty, performed his 
share of military service, while there are in- 
stances where those even younger and older 
served faithfully in the army and in the 
coast-guard. Within the little state there 
was one hundred and thirty miles of coast 
and two navigable rivers ; the British ships in 
the lower bay impeded navigation, and all of 
the seaport towns were subject to depreda- 
tions by parties from these vessels. They 
landed all along the shore, drove off and 
killed the cattle belonging to the farmers, 
stole their produce, poultry, and other live- 
stock, and when any resistance was offered 
even destroyed the homes of the country 
people. 

One of the coast-guard stationed near the 
present village of Wickford said that one 
night he "counted five fires in various direc- 
tions, which afterwards were ascertained to 
have been the burning of houses and barns 
by the enemy." Every house, save one, on 
the island of Prudence was thus destroyed. 
A chain of these guards was kept up all 



1 8 REVOLUTIONARY DEFENCES 

along the shore, made up of detachments 
from the several militia companies. It was 
not necessary at all times to keep a large 
body in this service, but from time to time 
the members of companies were summoned 
to make their appearance to perform " a 
tower of duty," or relieve others who had 
already served. 

The inhabitants were continually on the 
watch against these attacks and forays, but 
when the British army landed at Newport 
the dangers were increased tenfold ; every 
householder along the seaboard became a 
guard over his own home and fireside, and 
was often called upon to stand his watch 
over that of his neighbor. Soon after the 
three regiments were despatched to Boston, 
the work of raising troops was begun. Each 
town was enlisting its quota and making pro- 
vision for putting them in the field, armed 
and equipped for active service. Early in 
the war, on the 30th of December, 1776, 
" the Committee of the Four New England 
States at their meeting in Providence," held 
for the purpose of " taking into considera- 
tion the bounties and allowances offered by 
Congress for enlisting the Continental bat- 
talions," found that in order to fill up the 



IN RHODE ISLAND 19 

quotas of the different states, it was neces- 
sary to offer some "encouragement to men 
to enlist," and they recommended to the 
several legislatures of the states that cer- 
tain bounties be furnished. Rhode Island 
promptly voted to give an " additional 
bounty of £4. to the £6 heretofore al- 
lowed," and a blanket each year; to this 
the several towns in the state made liberal 
allowances. Besides the state bounty of 
one hundred silver dollars, Hopkinton 
voted to add " fifty bushels of Indian corn." 
In Woonsocket, in 1778, those who en- 
listed received from the town ^"35, in 
addition to the state bounty of ^20, and 
were also furnished with " a uniform coat, 
2 waist coats, 2 pairs of breeches, 3 
shirts, 3 pairs stockings, 2 pairs shoes, 1 
hunting shirt, and 1 pair of overalls." 
At another time, those who enlisted and 
furnished their own arms and accoutre- 
ments received a bounty of 48 shillings, 
while those who were without equipments 
received 36 shillings. 

Woonsocket seems to have been gener- 
ous indeed with her soldiers. The town of 
Westerly approached her soldiery in a differ- 
ent manner. She appealed to them in a 



20 REVOLUTIONARY DEFENCES 

popular way, and voted " Three gallons of 
Rum to treat the soldiers enlisted and to 
encourage those that have a mind to enlist." 

The method by which recruits were en- 
listed from Rhode Island into the Continental 
Army is illustrated by the plates. They refer 
to a special draft that was made on the 
state in the summer of 1780. The origi- 
nals are preserved among the manuscripts 
belonging to the city of Providence. 

In July, 1780, General Washington called 
upon the state of Rhode Island for six hun- 
dred and thirty able-bodied, effective men 
for three months' service, and the General 
Assembly forthwith ordered that number 
enlisted into the Continental Army. Each 
town was ordered to supply a certain num- 
ber of men, the number which Providence 
was to furnish being forty-two. 

On the 14th of July the entire number 
had been enlisted, of which William Phetti- 
place and Felix Holbrook were numbered 
37 and 38 respectively. Three days before, 
these two men signed the prescribed form 
of enlistment paper, took the oath of engage- 
ment before a justice of the peace, and were 
mustered into service. 

For thus enlisting they were entitled to a 



WE the Sub{ 
as Soldiei 
Providence P latitat 
rica ;' in whofe S 
until the Firft Da 
nerai Congrefs of 
to all the Orders j 
faithfully to obfer 
Time receive fron 



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20 REVOLUTIONARY DEFENCES 

popular way, and voted " Three gallons of 
Rum to treat the soldiers enlisted and to 
encourage those that have a mind to enlist." 

The method by which recruits were en- 
listed from Rhode Island into the Continental 
Army is illustrated by the plates. They refer 
to a special draft that was made on the 
state in the summer of 1780. The origi- 
nals are preserved among the manuscripts 
belonging to the city of Providence. 

In July, 1780, General Washington called 
upon the state of Rhode Island for six hun- 
dred and thirty able-bodied, effective men 
for three months' service, and the General 
Assembly forthwith ordered that number 
enlisted into the Continental Army. Each 
town was ordered to supply a certain num- 
ber of men, the number which Providence 
was to furnish being forty-two. 

On the 14th of July the entire number 
had been enlisted, of which William Phetti- 
place and Felix Holbrook were numbered 
37 and 38 respectively. Three days before, 
these two men signed the prescribed form 
of enlistment paper, took the oath of engage- 
ment before a justice of the peace, and were 
mustered into service. 

For thus enlisting they were entitled to a 



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IN RHODE ISLAND 21 

bounty, which in this case was " fifty Spanish 
milled dollars," or " hard dollars," as they 
were sometimes called. 

This bounty money was paid to the sol- 
dier by the town treasurer upon presentation 
of a certificate signed by one of the field-offi- 
cers of the regiment to which the recruit had 
been assigned. 



Colonel Bowen's Cartridge Box. 

From the records of Hopkinton a good 
idea of the style of the cartridge or cartouch 
boxes used by the Continentals is obtained; 
for it was provided that the cartridge boxes 
to be furnished the Hopkinton soldiers 



22 REVOLUTIONARY DEFENCES 

" shall hold nine rounds each and made in 
good plain manner, the covering to be sheep- 
skin and the flaps to be horseskin." All of 
the cartridge boxes supplied to the Rhode 
Island troops were not like this, however. 
The writer has one, which formerly be- 




Colonel Sherburne's Cartridge Box. 

longed to a soldier in a Smithfield company, 
and which held seventeen cartridges. 

The cartridge box belonging to Colonel 
Jabez Bowen, one of the most active men in 
Providence during the Revolution, is of the 



IN RHODE ISLAND 23 

regulation pattern of that period and held 
twenty-six cartridges. 

The other is of a different character, made 
to buckle around the waist, not unlike the 
sportsman's cartridge belt of modern times ; 
it is made of cloth, and trimmed with red 
and white braid. This was formerly the 
property of Colonel Henry Sherburne, 
commanding one of the Rhode Island 
regiments during the war. Some of the 
cartridges are yet remaining in it. The 
first belongs to the Rhode Island, while 
the latter belongs to the Newport Histori- 
cal Society. 

The eruns with which the men were fur- 
nished were of various kinds, and were 
usually called firelocks. They were almost 
entirely flintlocks ; for it was not until fifty 
years after the Revolution that the percus- 
sion lock came into general use, although 
invented in 1807. At a time when every- 
thing in the shape of a firearm was in 
demand, it is quite likely that some of the 
soldiers were equipped with the old match- 
lock and snaphaunce, the precursor of the 
flintlock. These guns were of many pat- 
terns and calibers ; it was on this account 
that the town of Westerly voted " That the 



24 REVOLUTIONARY DEFENCES 

store of lead now in the town be run into 
bullets for firearms of several sizes." 

On the 6th of February, 1777, General 
Washington, from his headquarters at Mor- 
ristown, wrote to Governor Cooke : — 

" Sir : — As the arrival of a sufficient 
quantity of small arms from Europe, in 
time to arm the Continental troops, is a 
matter of great uncertainty, proper steps 
should be immediately taken in your state 
to collect all that can be purchased from 
private people. 

" The custom of hiring them for the 
campaign is attended with many bad con- 
sequences ; the owners take little care of 
them, and carry them away and sell or 
change them, as they please. 

" Particular attention should be paid to 
the quality of the firelock ; no light trash 
arms should, on any account, be received 
in the public stores ; if they are not sub- 
stantial, both in lock and barrel, they 
should be thrown upon the hands of the 
commissary who purchased them. 

" I have the honor to be, sir, 

" Your most obedient servant, 

" Go. Washington." 




ELBRIDGE GERRY'S WILLIAM ELLERY'S 
GUN GUN 

From the collection of the Newport Historical Society 



IN RHODE ISLAND 25 

The gun on the left in the illustration was 
owned by Elbridge Gerry, one of the signers 
of the Declaration of Independence from 
Massachusetts, and has engraved upon the 
brass stock plate " E. Gerry, 1774," while the 
other was the property of William Ellery of 
Rhode Island, another signer of the Declara- 
tion, who left it in his will to his son. Both 
these historic relics are now in the posses- 
sion of the Newport Historical Society, hav- 
ing been deposited there by grandsons of 
these distinguished patriots. They illustrate 
the type of firearms generally in use during 
the war, one being of the regulation musket 
pattern with bayonet attached, while the 
other, a much lighter arm, is usually called 
a " fowling-piece." 

Anticipating the manner in which the 
troubles with the mother country would ter- 
minate, Jeremiah Hopkins of Coventry, as 
early as 1774, petitioned the General Assem- 
bly to grant him the benefit of a lottery for 
raising the sum of $200, to purchase works 
and tools ; for, as he states in his petition, 
"he sufficiently understands the business of 
a gunsmith, so as to make guns, or small 
arms, with advantage to himself, and to 
others, by whom guns are much wanted at 



26 REVOLUTIONARY DEFENCES 

this time when they cannot be imported from 
Great Britain." 

His petition was granted, and a committee 
appointed to see that his lottery was fairly 
conducted. 

On September 12, 1775, Barnard Eddy, 
having been directed by a vote of the town 
of Providence to make a list of the men 
and arms, presented his report. It showed 
that there were 569 arms in the town, 
502 of which belonged to the inhabitants, 
while 67 belonged to the public stock ; 
by what Eddy called a " Roof Account " in 
this report, it appears that there were 600 
men in the town. A year later another cen- 
sus of the '' arms and men " was taken, showing 
726 men and 497 arms. These proportions 
doubtless show the condition of the colony 
in this important munition of war. Early in 
1775 the manufacture of firearms was com- 
menced in Providence, and the archives of 
the city contain many of the bills rendered 
for those used in supplying the Providence 
companies. Elihu Peck made gun stocks, 
while Edward Martin, Stephen Jenckes, 
Thomas Bicknell, Prince Keene, and others 
made guns, bayonets, and ramrods. " 20 
gun barrels with bayonets and ramrods " 



IN RHODE ISLAND 27 

cost ,£28 or 28 shillings a set, while for 
" Stocking 30 guns," Elihu Peck's bill was 
,£15-15-11. 

Edward Martin's bill, rendered the town 
August 4, 1775, included the items: — 

54 sts gun trimmings @ 6/ £16- 4 

88 prs swivels @ 9/ 3-6 

119 sets scabbard hooks & plates @ 5d 2- 9-7 

21-19-7 

It is confidently believed that the arms 
thus supplied were " no light trash arms " 
either. 

These guns when turned over to the town 
were carefully guarded, and the following 
rules were adopted regulating their use : — 

" 1. That the Town Arms & Accoutre- 
ments be Devided into three equal Divi- 
sions : to be lodged in the hands of three dis- 
creet men one in each District of the Town 
— Viz. above or near the Court House, below 
or near the bridge and at or near Muddy 
bridge in Weybosset Street. 

" 2nd. That they be by them respec- 
tively, safely kept, clean, & in good order, and 
not to be delivered out or lent on any occa- 
sion whatever but to the Order of some one 
of the Field Officers of the Providence 



28- REVOLUTIONARY DEFENCES 

Batalion, or to the Order of their Superior 
Officers, to & for the use of Persons In- 
habitants of the Town of Providence, on 
General Musters & Field Days of their Re- 
spective Companies — saving and Excepting 
Times of General Alarm — [when Necessity- 
will not admit of being restrained by Rules] 

" 3rd. That Such Officers, to whose Order 
the Arms &c. shall be delivered out as afore- 
said shall Immediatly after the Occasion for 
them be over, cause the same to be returned, 
in good order as when delivered out, which 
shall discharge his said orders, and if any 
Arms or Accoutrements shall be missing 
& not returned, so many as are returned 
shall be indorsed on each order & the same 
shall remain in the hands of the Person who 
delivered out such Arms, and shall be his 
protection from any demand from the Town 
against him for any Arms & Accoutrements 
lost or missing as aforesaid, and be also 
security to the Town to demand & recover 
the Arms &c. or the value thereof from the 
drawer of the Order as aforesaid. 

" 4th. That on all General Alarms, upon 
Orders from the Officers in Chief Present, 
or in writing — Each person having the care 
of said Arms &c. shall distribute the same, 



IN RHODE ISLAND 29 

to the Officers of the several Military Com- 
panies in Providence, taking down the num- 
ber delivered to each and if any remain after 
they are supplied to such Free Persons either 
White or Black, who he may know to belong 
to the Town of Providence and whom he 
may judge suitable to use them, taking their 
names down and what they receive — which 
Account rendered to the Town shall dis- 
charge him and make those charged with the 
receipt thereof liable to return them in good 
Order or Pay the Town the Full Expense & 
Value of Procuring others in their room — 
On Demand — unless the Town upon appli- 
cation shall think fit to remit the same or 
any part thereof. 

" 5th. And if any Person belonging to a 
Neighbouring Town should happen to be 
in this Town at the time of any Alarm — 
and there should be a surplussage of Arms 
after the Inhabitants are as aforesaid sup- 
plied — In such case the keepers thereof 
may deliver out the Arms &c. remaining to 
any persons of Character known to them re- 
questing the same taking down their names 
&c. as aforesaid which shall render them lia- 
ble to return them — or Pay the Town in 
case of loss — in Manner as the Inhabitants 



30 REVOLUTIONARY DEFENCES 

of this Town are liable by the preceding 
Article. 

" 6th. That all Arms & Accoutrements 
which may suffer damage in The Actual 
Service of the Public, thro' unavoidable ac- 
cidents shall be repaired — at the Expense 
of the Town [notwithstanding any thing in 
the preceding rules] upon proper proof to 
the Town Treasurer. 

" 7th. That the Town Treasurer, shall 
prosecute all persons delinquent — and not 
conforming to the above regulations within 
six days, after information shall be given him 
thereof by the keepers of Arms respectively 
— and each Keeper of sd Arms is hereby en- 
joined to give information of such delinquent 
to the Treasurer, within two days after the 
time expires — in which such Arms &c. may 
be returned. 

"Providence, November 20th 1775. 

" We the subscribers being appointed by 
the Town to procure a Number of Fire 
Arms & Accoutrements for Town Stock 
do report that we have Eighty Fire Arms 
& about One hundred Cartouch Boxes 
ready to deliver to the Town and a 
number of others which will be com- 
pleted in a short time — we also agree- 



IN RHODE ISLAND 31 

able to the Order of the Town Report 
the within regulations for the same. 
" And are the Towns Very Humble 

Servants, 
" Benj. Thurber, Jona. Arnold, 

" Elihu Robinson, Paul Allen, 
" David Lawrence, J no. Mathewson." 

Nathan Miller of East Greenwich was an 
" Excellent Bayonet-maker " and when he 
was drafted to serve his turn in the guard 
at the Warwick Neck station, a general peti- 
tion was sent from that town and " adjacent 
parts of Warwick " praying that he might 
be excused from this duty, and the reason 
given was that his services were " much 
wanted in the Country at Present" to make 
these important articles of warfare. This 
petition was duly considered, and by order 
of General Spencer he was excused. 

So great was the demand for skilled labor 
in the manufacture of war material, that the 
General Assembly was frequently resorted 
to for legislation, exempting men thus em- 
ployed from serving in the military force. 

In 1776, George Tefft and Jeremiah Shef- 
field, members of the Kingstown Reds, one 
of the independent companies, were recom- 
mended to their officers to be excused from 



32 REVOLUTIONARY DEFENCES 

duty, as they were then employed in " mak- 
ing and stocking guns," and about the same 
time John Wells and Waterman Williams, 
workmen at the paper mill, were also excused 
from service, for the reason, as the record 
says, that " the state will be deprived of car- 
tridge paper, which is at present very much 
needed," if these men were taken from the 
mill and compelled to serve in the detach- 
ments on guard duty. 

Many of the soldiers instead of cartridge 
boxes used powder-horns made from cows' 
horns, and many of these old relics are yet 
preserved, covered with quaint inscriptions 
and curious carvings made by their owner 
when in camp, at idle moments. The most 
interesting of these which has come to the 
writer's attention is in the collection of 
Revolutionary relics at Washington's head- 
quarters at Valley Forge. It is not a Rhode 
Island relic, but was the work of a Connec- 
ticut soldier, and is thus inscribed : — 
" Jabez Rockwell 

Ridgebury Conn 
His Horn 

made in camp at Valley Forge. It was 

first used at Monmouth, June 28, 1778; 

last used at Yorktown, 1781." 



IN RHODE ISLAND 33 

It has passed through most of the thrilling 
events of the war and now finds itself back 
again near the place where Jabez Rockwell 
fashioned it for use. 

In Providence, Barrington, and other 
towns, men were specially appointed, 
charged with making the town's stock of 
powder up into cartridges. 




Wooden Canteen. 



Another necessary equipment was the 
canteen; those used during the Revolution 
were of wood of various capacities, holding 
from a pint to two quarts; they are frequently 
met with nowadays, and are often marked 



34 REVOLUTIONARY DEFENCES 

with the owner's initials and a date. In 
1776, the town of East Greenwich voted to 
provide a sufficient number of " wooden can- 
teens with lines to sling them with," for the 
soldiers enlisted to fill up the town's quotas. 

The town of Warren appointed Henry 
Ormsbee to furnish its militia with camp 
furniture, mess pots, mess pails, mess bowls, 
narrow axes, and baggage wagons, and the 
state provided that the allowance to the 
soldiers in camp for provisions should be 
" one pound of bread, one pound of beef or 
pork, a half penny for vegetables, half a gill 
of rice, one pint of milk, one quart of beer 
per day, and one pint of molasses per 
week." 

In 1775 fish, butter, vinegar, and soap were 
also provided at stated intervals, but this was 
in the early days of the struggle ; three years 
later no such rations were to be had. The 
position of the troops had been shifted from 
the hospitable neighborhood of Boston to 
the bleak and barren hills at Valley Forge, 
and, says one, " a part of the army has been 
a week without any kind of flesh, and the 
rest three or four days," and Hamilton wrote 
to Clinton, " For some days past there has 
been little less than a famine in the camp." 



IN RHODE ISLAND 35 

Nor was this condition confined to any one 
locality, for Captain Asa Waterman, a deputy 
commissary of issues, wrote from Provi- 
dence, May 3, 1779, to Commissary Peter 
Colt at Wethersfield, Conn. : — 

" This morning waited on Major-Gen- 
eral Gates. He informed me the distressed 
condition this Department is in for want 
of Flour. The troops are very uneasy and 
constantly mutinizing for want of bread, 
and request I would do everything in my 
power to see them supplied. . . . The 
General further informs me he has rec'd 
intelligence of a number of troops embark- 
ing, which, by Information, is Destined for 
Newport, and if they arrive he must call 
in the Militia, and what he shall be able 
to do without Bread he can't tell." 

Each town was required to have an am- 
munition cart, and to furnish its share of 
blankets, stockings, and other articles of 
clothing. The demand for blankets was 
incessant, and officers were specially author- 
ized to " borrow or purchase " all that they 
could, and were even directed by warrant 
from the Governor to take them from the 
homes of the inhabitants, but were required 



36 REVOLUTIONARY DEFENCES 

to keep strict account of those thus taken, 
for which the state would be accountable. 

Committees were appointed to take an 
account of the powder, arms, and ammuni- 
tion throughout the colony, including private 
arms as well as those belonging to the pub- 
lic stock, and every man in the colony was 
ordered to equip himself completely. The 
old queen's arm, that had hung on the wall 
covered with dust and grime, was taken from 
its resting-place, cleaned, and brightened, and 
noted in the "list of arms fit for use." All 
was excitement and activity in the militia. 
" Not a day passes, Sundays excepted," says 
the Providence Gazette, " but some of the 
companies are under arms, so well con- 
vinced are the people that the complex- 
ion of the times renders a knowledge of 
the military art indispensably necessary." 
The Continental Army, when it took the 
field, was so curiously uniformed and 
equipped that it at once attracted the 
attention of the officers of the well-organ- 
ized regiments that had been sent out from 
England, and caused them much amuse- 
ment. " No regiment is properly uniformed 
or armed. Every man has a common gun," 
wrote one of the British officers. 



IN RHODE ISLAND 37 

Many of the commissioned officers in the 
American army were ignorant of military 
methods. They had hurriedly left the 
plough, shop, or forge to take the position 
to which they had been chosen in the mili- 
tia, and what they knew of tactics and dis- 
cipline was mostly acquired after they had 
entered the service. The British were "often 
astonished at the number of military books 
found in the knapsacks of the officers." One 
of these books, which was carried in the 
knapsacks of two Rhode Island officers, is 
yet preserved. 1 

When the Barrington company took up 
its station in Boston in 1775, Thomas Allen 
was the captain and Viall Allen ensign. 
Neither had much, if any, military experi- 
ence, and, like others, they proceeded at 
once to obtain a book to study up the art 
of war. 

The work they purchased was entitled, 
An Easy Plan of Discipline for a Militia, 
by Timothy Pickering, Jr. It was " printed 
in Salem, New England," by Samuel and 
Ebenezer Hall, 1775, and was, doubtless, 
published to meet the demand then being 

1 The property of the Hon. Thomas W. Bicknell, of Provi- 
dence, R.I. 



38 REVOLUTIONARY DEFENCES 

made. On the stained fly-leaf there is writ- 
ten " Thomas & Viall Allen. Theire Book 
Bought at Watertown, 1775." From this 
book Thomas Allen and Viall Allen ob- 
tained their first military knowledge. The 
excellent use they made of it is shown in 
the result ; for the former rose to the rank 
of brigadier-general, while the latter obtained 
a captain's commission. The English and 
Hessian officers continually ridiculed the 
character of the officers in the Continental 
troops. Among them " are many so-called 
colonels, lieutenant-colonels, majors, and other 
officers, who, however, are nothing but me- 
chanics, tailors, shoemakers, wigmakers, bar- 
bers, etc.," so wrote Colonel Von Heesingen, 
commanding a Hessian regiment. And all 
of this was, to a great extent, true. Na- 
thanael Greene operated a forge ; Stephen 
Olney was a farmer; Silas Talbot was 
a stonemason ; Ezekiel Cornell was a me- 
chanic ; William Barton, a hatter. Notwith- 
standing this sarcasm, however, these critics 
found later that shoemakers, wigmakers, and 
barbers made good officers, and were, in the 
end, more successful than the output from 
the military schools of Europe. 

With the raising of troops came the great 



IN RHODE ISLAND 39 

question of supplying them with the mate- 
rial necessary to maintain an army in the 
field. There was no depot of supplies from 
which the army could be equipped, and each 
state was left to its own resources. 

In Rhode Island each town provided equip- 
ments for its quota, while the colony itself 
undertook to furnish the armament for its 
forts and batteries, powder, shot, lead, and 
flints. 

Early in January, 1776, the firm of Jacob 
Greene and Company had supplied to the 
colony " six new double-fortified four-pound 
cannon with their carriages, together with 
one hundred and thirty round shot, six bags 
of grape shot, some sliding and bar shot, 
with ladles, rammers, sponges, worms, &c," 
the whole valued at ^"100 sterling. The 
projectiles named in the list include nearly 
all of those used in heavy guns at that 
period. There was another, however, called 
a " carcasse," which was a shell filled with 
combustibles to be thrown in bombarding a 
town or against shipping. Many of these 
latter projectiles were used in the bombard- 
ment of Bristol. All of those shown in the 
group were probably discharged in the bat- 
tle on Rhode Island in August, 1778. The 



40 REVOLUTIONARY DEFENCES 

large shell was taken from the ground near 
the base of Bliss Hill, in Middletown, and 
was quite likely thrown from the American 
work on Honeyman's Hill, and fell without 
exploding. The bar shot on the right was 
dug up in Thames Street, Newport, while 
the other was taken from the water of New- 
port Harbor, directly in front of the North 
Battery (Fort Greene). The two sections 
of shot are what formed one end of a chain 
shot, two balls being connected with a short 
section of chain which was cast into the shot. 

All of these, with the exception of that 
taken from the harbor, have been found in 
the earth around Newport, and are among 
the valuable collection of relics in the pos- 
session of the Newport Historical Society. 

The most necessary munition of war was 
gunpowder, and, to encourage the manufact- 
ure of it, a premium of ^"30 was voted to any 
person who should erect a powder mill and 
manufacture five hundredweight of good 
powder. The ruins of one of these powder 
mills formerly stood near the Goddard or 
Waterman road in Johnston, not far from 
the little hamlet known as Caesarville. The 
trench, which can now be seen crossing the 
road, serves approximately to identify the lo- 



IN RHODE ISLAND 41 

cation of this mill. This property was pur- 
chased of the state by Isaac Olney, and by 
him, in 1797, sold to William Goddard. The 
deeds of this transfer refer to it as " the lot on 
which the Powder Mill stood." It has been 
sometimes called the Mud Mill lot, and is 
perhaps better known by that name. A 
bounty of three shillings a pound was al- 
lowed on every pound of saltpetre made 
in the colony previous to August 26, 1776. 
But the manufacture of gunpowder was a 
new industry for the colony. Heretofore it 
had mostly been imported, the people de- 
pending largely on the other countries for 
their supply. These sources of obtaining it 
were now liable to be cut off, and, as it was 
not likely that the mills so hurriedly erected 
and equipped would be able to produce a 
quantity and quality that could be relied on, 
the colony agreed to purchase all the gun- 
powder imported before the first of April, 
1777, at three shillings a pound. 

Saltpetre mills were also built, one of which 
was in East Greenwich, and was operated by 
Richard Mathewson. It was located on what 
is now Division Street, near the old windmill 
grounds. This lot is even to-day known as 
the " saltpetre lot." 



REVOLUTIONARY DEFENCES 



CHAPTER III. 

The Providence Beacon. — Fox Hill Fort. — Rules and Reg- 
ulations for its Conduct. — Trial of the Beacon. — Notice 
to the Country. — Master and Wardens of the Beacon. — 
Tonomy Hill, Scituate, and Cumberland Beacons. — Watch 
at Tower Hill. 

The news of the battle of Bunker Hill 
filled the inhabitants of Rhode Island with 
terror and alarm. A peaceful adjustment of 
the grievances of the colonies was now im- 
possible. The blow had been struck ; and 
if, before, diplomacy could have averted the 
impending storm, the time had passed for 
such a settlement. 

The Continental Congress at this time 
had particularly urged upon the inhabitants 
of the seaport towns in the colonies, the 
necessity of strongly fortifying such ports 
and taking such other precautions as might 
be expedient ; this had been promptly en- 
dorsed by the General Assembly of Rhode 
Island, on June 28, 1775. 

The first act of precaution taken at Provi- 
dence was the erection of a beacon to alarm 



IN RHODE ISLAND 43 

the country about, in case of the approach of 
an enemy. This action was taken at a town 
meeting held on July 3, 1775. A week later, 
a committee consisting of Joseph Brown, 
Joseph Bucklin, and Benjamin Thurber were 
appointed to " erect a beacon on the hill to 
the eastward of the town to alarm the coun- 
try in case of an enemy's approach." 

The hill selected for the location of this 
beacon was that now called Prospect or Col- 
lege Hill, and the spot was near what is now 
the corner of Prospect and Meeting streets. 
A beacon had been erected here more than 
a century before, in May, 1667, during the 
troublesome times with the Indians. This 
undertaking was commenced at once. The 
Providence Gazette, on July 29, 1775, in- 
formed its readers that " a beacon is now 
erecting on a very high hill in the town 
by order of the Honorable General Assem- 
bly. A watch is likewise kept on Tower 
Hill in case of any attempt by water from 
our savage enemies." 

Great activity was going on in the various 
military companies in the colony, and the 
people were alive to the situation, and were 
diligently at work. 

As early as January, 1 775, Stephen Jenckes, 



44 REVOLUTIONARY DEFENCES 

of North Providence, had supplied to several 
of the military companies muskets of his own 
manufacture, and by the middle of June, Mr. 
Paul Allen had made up the town stock of 
powder and lead into cartridges, agreeable to 
a vote of the town ; these he was directed 
to deliver to such of the inhabitants as he 
thought would make a proper use of them, 
and to take a receipt for the number deliv- 
ered. That these cartridges might not be 
wasted, a promise was exacted to return them 
on demand, if not used in the colony's ser- 
vice. Not more than seventeen cartridges 
for each firearm fit for use was to be deliv- 
ered, and a fine of ninepence in lawful money 
was imposed for each missing cartridge at 
any ordered review. 

On the 20th of July, 1775, news of a 
startling nature was received from Newport. 

The British ships, under the command of 
Captain James Wallace, lay in a line of 
battle, with the intention of bombarding 
the town. 

The greatest excitement prevailed through- 
out the colony. Two days later the British 
commander, probably realizing the impor- 
tance of Newport as a rendezvous, abandoned 
this intention and withdrew his fleet. 



IN RHODE ISLAND 45 

At Providence the news of the departure 
of Wallace was gladly welcomed ; for, had 
the British commander desired, nothing was 
in his way to prevent his vessels from sailing 
into the harbor and laying waste all within 
his reach, for the defences of the town were 
entirely inadequate to cope with the British 
ships. 

Newport had been left unharmed, but no 
one knew how soon the fleet would return. 
In consequence of this proposed attack, the 
inhabitants of Providence resolved to take 
immediate action toward the town's further 
defence. 

A town meeting was convened July 31, 
1775, and the Hon. Nicholas Cooke chosen 
moderator ; little business other than that 
appertaining to the defence of the town was 
transacted at this meeting. 

Fortifications were ordered built on Fox 
Hill, at Fox Point, and intrenchments and 
breastworks were ordered "to be hove up 
between Field's and Sassafras points of suffi- 
cient capacity to cover a body of men ordered 
there on any emergency." 

Captain Nicholas Power was directed to 
superintend their construction, and was or- 
dered to advise and consult with Captain 



46 REVOLUTIONARY DEFENCES 

Esek Hopkins, Ambrose Page, Captain John 
Updike, Samuel Nightingale, Jr., Captain 
William Earle, and Captain Simon Smith, 
who were made a committee on the manner 
of building these fortifications. A battery of 
six iS-pounders was ordered to be located 
at the Fox Hill fort, and four cannon to 
be mounted as field-pieces. 

This committee was also ordered to draw 
up a set of rules for the conduct of the Fox 
Point Battery, and this they did, presenting 
it to the town meeting, August 29, 1775, for 
its approval. It is a most remarkable mili- 
tary paper, and shows the crude way in which 
such affairs were managed in the early days 
of the Revolution. It is as follows : — 

" Regulations of the Fox Point Battery 
Drawn by Committee Presented to the 
Town in Town Meeting August 29 
1 775-" 

" Voted one capt E Hopkins be appointed 

to comrad the Battery at Fox Hill 
'"' Voted one luft that Samuel Warner 
" Voted one gunner Christopher Sheldon 
" do 7 men to each gun Including offi- 
cers that such be select'd from the town 
Inhabits, as are acq'd with the use of 



IN RHODE ISLAND 47 

Cannon and doe not belong to Any of 
the Independt. Companys who Attend- 
ing this Duty be excused from the 
Militia Duties. 

" Voted that the Battery compy Appt a 
capt & gunner for Each Gun out of 
their compy. 

" Voted that upon any person quiting the 
Battery compy the officers thereunto 
Belonging have power to sellect others 
as above said to keep their number 
complete 

" Voted that two Persons be app'd to Guard 
said Battery on Day who shall attend 
there on morning to Relieve the Night 
watch and Tarry until the Evening 
watch is Sett. 

" Voted that the Great Guns be No & 
Each persons name who belong to said 
Guns be Wrote on a Card & stuck on 
the Gun they may belong to that they 
may know where to repair in case of 
an Alarm — Vot'd that the Capt. Lieut 
& Gunner of said Battery have the Care 
of preparing & keeping the Stores Be- 
longing Thereto in Good Order 

" Voted that the Battery Compy Exercise 
their cannon once a month or oftener 



- Committee." 



48 REVOLUTIONARY DEFENCES 

to Perfect themselves in the use of 
Great Guns. 

" It is recomended that 2 more 18 
pounders be mounted at the Battery 
at Fox Hill. 

"William Earle 

" Simon Smith 

"John Updike 

" Esek Hopkins 

" Ambrose Page 

" Saml Nightingale Jr. 

The location of the Fox Hill fort is 
shown on an old map of the town of Provi- 
dence made by Daniel Anthony in 1803, but 
on account of the many changes that have 
from time to time been made in this vicinity 
its exact location is somewhat uncertain ; but 
the square now bounded by Brook, Thomp- 
son, and Tockwotten streets covers the 
ground on which this important work was 
erected. A high bluff lay to the south of 
the fort ; but this, like a greater portion of 
the hill, has been cut away to bring the 
streets in the district to grade. Nothing 
remains there to-day to remind us of the 
days of the Revolution. 

The committee having in charge the 
erection of these defences appointed Captain 



IN RHODE ISLAND 49 

Samuel Warner to take charge of the Fox 
Hill fort upon its completion, with all its 
guns, stores, and material. The engine 
house, which stood next to the market house 
(City Building, where the Board of Trade 
is now located), partly over the water, and 
wherein was located one of the town's fire- 
engines, was ordered removed to the fort at 
Fox Hill to be used as a guard-house. 

Meanwhile the beacon approached com- 
pletion, and the committee under whose 
direction it had been built was ordered " to 
fire the same on Thursday the 17th day of 
August, at the setting of the sun, and that 
they procure one thousand handbills to be 
printed to advertise the country thereof, that 
proper observations may be made of the 
bearings of the beacon from different parts 
of the country, and that they notify the 
country that the beacon will not be fired at 
any time after August 1 7th, unless the town 
or some part of the colony should be attacked 
by an enemy, in which case the beacon will 
be fired and three cannon discharged to 
alarm the country that they may immedi- 
ately repair to the town, duly equipped with 
arms and accoutrements." 

These handbills were at once printed, and 



50 REVOLUTIONARY DEFENCES 

widely scattered about the neighboring coun- 
try. They read as follows : — 

" Providence Beacon. 

" The Town of Providence to the inhabitants 
of the towns adjacent: 

" Loving Friends and Brethren : In con- 
sequence of the recommendation of the Con- 
tinental Congress that those seaport towns, 
which are principally exposed to the ravages 
and depredations of our common enemies, 
should be fortified and put into as good a 
state of defence as may be, which has also 
received the approbation of the legislature 
of this colony ; besides a strong battery and 
intrenchments on the river, there has been 
lately erected on the greatest eminence in 
this town, A Beacon for the purpose of 
alarming the country whenever it shall be- 
come necessary in our defence, and as we 
doubt not of the readiness of our friends 
and brethren, both within and without this 
government, to give us every assistance in 
their power on such an occasion if timely 
apprized thereof. This is, therefore, to in- 
form you that it is our urgent request that 
you all hold yourselves in readiness, and 



IN RHODE ISLAND 51 

whenever you see said Beacon on fire you 
immediately and without delay, with the best 
accoutrements, warlike weapons, and stores 
you have by you, repair to the town of 
Providence, there to receive from the mili- 
tary officers present such orders as may be 
given by the authority of this jurisdiction 
for our common safety and defence. In case 
of an alarm we intend to fire the Beacon, 
and also discharge cannon to notify all to 
look out for the Beacon. Be it observed 
and carefully remembered that the discharge 
of cannon Alone is not an alarm, but the 
firing of the Beacon itself, even without 
cannon, will be an alarm in all cases, except- 
ing on Thursday, the 17th inst., at sunset, 
when the Beacon will be fired not as an 
alarm, but that all may ascertain its bear- 
ings and fix such ranges as may secure them 
from a false alarm, and that they may know 
where to look for it hereafter. Whenever 
you hear cannon look out for the Beacon." 

This same notice was published in the 
Gazette, on August 12, in order to give 
additional warning of this trial. 

At the time appointed the beacon was put 
to a test, and it was clearly demonstrated 
that it would serve the purpose for which it 



52 REVOLUTIONARY DEFENCES 

had been built ; for a letter, received by the 
publisher of the Gazette, stated that it was 
observed over a wide area of country, ex- 
tending from Cambridge Hill to New Lon- 
don and Norwich, and from Newport to 
Pomfret. It is also stated that many of the 
inhabitants of the neighboring country, not 
understanding the nature of this signal fire, 
hurriedly left their homes and promptly re- 
paired to Providence all armed and equipped, 
imagining that the town was about to be 
attacked by the enemy. The beacon itself 
was a simple affair, consisting of a spar or 
mast, some eighty odd feet in height, securely 
braced at the foundation ; wooden pegs for 
steps, at regular intervals, enabled those 
managing it to ascend to the " kettle," which 
hung from an iron crane or mast-arm. This 
kettle was filled with inflammable stuff so as 
to produce a brilliant light. 

The material of which the beacon was 
built is shown by the following bill, yet pre- 
served among the documentary possessions 
of the city of Providence. 



in rhode island 53 

" The Town of Providence 

To N. Angell, Dr. 

1775- 

July 25 To 1 Spar for Beacon ^2.8 

Did. Joseph Brown 
[Endorsement.] 

Pay the within Ace. to Nathan Angell it 
being for the Use of the Town for the Beacon, 
Two pounds Eight shillings 
To James Arnold, Town Treasr., 

Joseph Brown, 
Received the above, 
Pr. Jas. Angell." 

Solomon Drowne, Jr., writing to his brother 
in Mendon, Mass., August 12, 1775, said: — 

" I herewith send you a handbill, pub- 
lished to be sent into the country for in- 
forming the inhabitants of our beacon, &c. 
The beacon-pole mast, or whatever you 
please, is raised on the hill, not very far 
above the powder house, nearly opposite 
the church ; the top of it, I have heard 
said, is about eighty feet higher than the 
top of the new meeting-house steeple 
which, perhaps you have heard, is up- 
wards of one hundred and eighty feet 



54 REVOLUTIONARY DEFENCES 

from the ground. Judge what an ex- 
treme view it commands. If this reaches 
you before the 17th inst, I wish you 
would go up on the hill near your habi- 
tation at the time appointed, and direct 
your eye towards Providence, to descry, 
if possible, that light, on which one time, 
perhaps, our safety may in a considerable 
measure depend." 

If William Drowne complied with his 
brother's request, he must have seen, from 
the green hills of Mendon, the glare of this 
watch-fire that August night. Mr. Joseph 
Brown was appointed to the office of " Mas- 
ter of the Beacon," and James Marvin, James 
Berry, James Wheaton, and Abimelech Riggs 
were " appointed Wardens to rig the kettle, 
&c. when orders are Given to alarm the 
country." 

A house was constructed at the base of 
this beacon, wherein to store the combusti- 
bles, so as to be ready at a moment's warning. 

Beacons were established on the high lands 
in other parts of the colony to further the 
spreading of news, in case of any unusual 
demonstration or attack by the enemy. Be- 
sides the Providence beacon there was a 



IN RHODE ISLAND 55 

similar one erected, on Tonomy Hill on the 
island of Rhode Island. A trial of this was 
made June 20, 1776, but no record is found 
regarding the arc of illumination. 

Another was in Cumberland, on the hill 
now called Beacon Pole Hill; and a hole 
drilled in a rock, which caps the summit of 
the hill, is shown as the location of this 
signal. Yet another was on Chopmist Hill 
in Scituate. Here Squire Williams was 
stationed as a guard and keeper of the bea- 
con during most of the time when the British 
were located within the borders of the state. 
It does not appear these latter signals were 
ever lighted. 

In June, 1775, a post was established on 
Tower Hill in South Kingstown, for the pur- 
pose of giving " intelligence to the northern 
counties in case any squadron of ships should 
be seen off." Job Watson was appointed to 
this important station, with orders, that in 
case he should discover an enemy's fleet, 
to give immediate warning, whereupon the 
alarm companies in the northern counties 
were directed to immediately repair to Provi- 
dence. 



5 6 REVOLUTIONARY DEFENCES 



CHAPTER IV. 

Intrenchments at Field's Point and Sassafras Point. — 
Bombardment of Bristol. — John Howland's Narrative. — 
Works at Kettle Point and Pawtuxet. — Fort Independ- 
ence. — Cost of the Work. — Boom and Chain. — The 
Redoubts on the Road to the Upper Ferry. 

During the latter part of August, 1775, 
the British ships cruising about the bay 
threatened an attack on Providence, and 
the batteries in the harbor were manned, 
and the militia assembled under arms ; the 
enemy, however, did not approach the town. 

Before August 30, the fort at Fox Hill 
had been completed and was ready for ser- 
vice ; on that day Thomas Gilman was sta- 
tioned at the fort as a permanent guard. 
The works in the lower harbor, between 
Field's and Sassafras points had also been 
completed by the hard work of the towns- 
men. Solomon Drowne, in the letter to his 
brother, already referred to, says, regarding 
these latter defences : — 

" One day last week Mr. Compton, with 
one of the Light Infantry drummers and 



IN RHODE ISLAND 57 

two of the Cadet fifers, went round to 
notify the sons of freedom who had 
the public good and safety at heart to 
repair to Hacker's wharf, with such im- 
plements as are useful in intrenching, 
where a boat was ready to take them 
on board and transport them to the 
shore between Sassafras and Field's 
Point. About sixty of us went in a 
packet, many had gone before, some in 
J. Brown's boat, &c, so when all had got 
there the number was not much short of 
200. I don't know that ever I worked 
harder a day in my life before. With 
what had been done by a number that 
went the day before, we threw up a breast- 
work that extended near one quarter of a 
mile. 

'.' A large quantity of bread was carried 
down, and several were off catching qua- 
haugs, which were cooked for dinner a la 
mode de Indian. 

" The channel runs at not a great dis- 
tance from this shore so that when cousin 
Wallace comes up to fire our town, his 
men who work the ship can easily be 
picked down by small arms, from our in- 
trenchment, which is designed principally 



5S 



REVOLUTIONARY DEFENCES 



for musqueteers. However we have a 
little twentyfication growing at Fox Point, 
where six pretty lusty bulldogs are to be 
placed ; perhaps this creature may grow 
into a fortification in time." 




To further corroborate this the bill of 
William Compton, the town sergeant, which 
was rendered to the town about this time, 
contains this item : — 

" August 2, to warning the town to 



work on fortifications, 



-4-0 





B 



111 


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11 


n. 


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Ill 




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in 


Q 


V) 


:- 


■a' 


l/l 


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s.: 


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IN RHODE ISLAND 



59 



The result of a portion of this labor by the 
inhabitants has been called Robin Hill Fort. 
It is still well preserved, and is located on 
the bluff overlooking the river, in the rear 
of the spot where the powder house once 
stood ; southward from it was the line of 
intrenchments running along the edge of 
the bluff. Of these, however, there is little 



now remaining. 



During the intervening time, until Octo- 
ber, 1775, the town was not in great danger 
from an attack by the enemy, but the bom- 
bardment of Bristol, the 7th of this month, 
again aroused the townsmen to the dangers 
which might follow, if the British ships 
should continue up the river. 

John Howland, of Providence, then a boy 
of eighteen years, belonged to one of the 
military companies which marched to New- 
port to protect that town from the depreda- 
tions of Wallace. He was an eye-witness 
to this attack on Bristol, and in his remi- 
niscences says : — 

" No houses were burnt by Wallace, as 
he did not land any men, but kept up a 
severe cannonade ; and from his bomb 
brig threw several shells among the 



60 REVOLUTIONARY DEFENCES 

houses, which did but little damage. Of 
this transaction I was a witness, as Cap- 
tain Tallman's Company of minutemen, to 
which I belonged, and Captain Power's 
Company were stationed on the Dudley 
and Bannister farms, not far from New- 
port. I saw Wallace with his fleet when 
they got under way between Cost Harbor 
and Gould Island, and as he sailed slowly 
up the river, we commenced our march in 
range with him. As it was our business 
to attack any men he might attempt to 
land, we kept even pace with him, till we 
arrived at Bristol Ferry, when one of his 
fleet grounded on the extreme northwest 
point of the island. 

" Wallace with the rest of his squadron 
came, too, waiting for the tide to rise to 
float the grounded one. Several of our 
minutemen, without any orders of the of- 
ficers, ran across the meadow, near as 
possible to the grounded vessel, and dis- 
charged their muskets at her. 

" Wallace then brought two of his larg- 
est ships to bear upon them and by re- 
peated broadsides tore up the turf among 
them. They all began the retreat up- 
hill to the road, and came tumbling 



IN RHODE ISLAND 6 1 

over the stone-wall among us. It was 
dark when the vessel floated, and Wal- 
lace stood with all his fleet for Bristol 
Harbor. We stood on the high ground 
near the ferry, and saw the flash of his 
guns, which appeared to be mostly dis- 
charged in broadsides ; but such was 
the state of the air we could hear none 
of the report, though only four miles off. 
In Providence they were heard distinctly." 

Howland made this statement to correct 
a story which had been published and exten- 
sively circulated, that on this occasion much 
damage was done to the town by the British 
ships. It was reserved to a later day for 
Bristol to suffer from the hands of the enemy. 

Following this affair at Bristol, the works 
at Kettle Point and Pawtuxet were thrown 
up, batteries were located all along the 
seaboard, and permanent guards were estab- 
lished. Another fort was considered neces- 
sary for the safety of Providence ; and at a 
town meeting held October 26, 1775, a com- 
mittee was appointed, authorized " to direct 
where, and in what manner, fortifications 
shall be made upon the hill to the south- 
ward of the house of William Field." A 



62 



REVOLUTIONARY DEFENCES 



portion of this ancient dwelling is yet stand- 
ing, although the land about it is materially 
changed ; for what was then the garden and 
door-yard of William Field's house has been 



t^ 






fHhjfc. 




Tort I Sg 

Kd£PE.ndeaicl\ ~% 



* JCCTiON OF 

^- Rampart 






„P.:A 






Mltlfe. 



"Ks <!4F 



dug away, to carry out the plan of the city's 
sewerage system. 

The old house, the ancestral home of the 
Fields, of Pumgansett, yet remains to mark 



IN RHODE ISLAND 63 

the spot where Thomas Field builded more 
than two centuries ago. This committee 
evidently performed the duty required of 
them both promptly and faithfully; for, on 
the same day, it was voted " that the part of 
the town below the Gaol Lane (Meeting 
Street), on the east side of the river, be re- 
quired by warrant from the town clerk, as 
usual, by beat of drum, to repair to-morrow 
morning at 8 o'clock, to Field's Point, to 
make proper fortifications there ; to provide 
themselves with tools and provisions for the 
day, that the inhabitants capable of bearing 
arms, who dwell on the west side of the 
river, be required in the same manner to 
repair thither, for the same purpose, on Sat- 
urday next ; and that the inhabitants of that 
part of the town to the northward of the 
Gaol Lane, be required, in the same man- 
ner, to repair thither for the same purpose 
on Monday next." 

The fort built at this time was located on 
the high hill at Field's Point. This hill is 
a conspicuous point from the river and bay, 
and its flat top suggests the fort which even 
now crowns its height. 

On the maps of this locality the fort is 
named Fort Independence, but no mention 



64 REVOLUTIONARY DEFENCES 

of such a name is found on the records of 
this period. The name quite likely origi- 
nated with some map-maker in later years. 
Fort Independence, so-called, is one hundred 
and ten feet long in its greatest length, and 
varies in width from fifty-three to sixty feet 
inside of the embankment. The construc- 
tion of this fort was superintended by Cap- 
tain Barnard Eddy, and his bill to the town 
for labor and material was made up of the 
following items : — 

Town of Providence to Barnard Eddy 

'775 
November 20 to i-|- days work William 
Field & 2 hands & his 
team at 12s per day o 18 o 

to Boards & Other Stuff 
to mend Wheale Barers 
& mack hand Barers 080 

to 7 Days Work by William 
Field attendance on the 
men at the fortification 
at 4/6 pr day 1 13 6 

2 19 6 



JN RHODE ISLAND 65 

To i day of Joseph Eddy 

in going to Johnston 

for the Spars 046 

to 24 days for myself from 

the 27 of October to 25 

of November at 5s pr 

day 600 



Erors Excepted 

Barnard Eddy 
to 7 Spars of Obediah 

Brown for the Boam 12 -1 

to 7 do of Samuel Winsor 

at 15s per ton 41 feet - 15 4^ 

10 11 sh 
Barnard Eddy 

The last two charges in this bill suggest 
another means of protection which had been 
adopted, for these were for the boom and 
chain which was ordered stretched across the 
river at the Field's Point narrows to prevent 
any hostile vessel from entering the harbor. 
Captain John Updike was put in charge of 
preparing this obstruction, and was directed 
to " prepare a number of scows and proper 
combustible materials with chains of a suit- 
able length to fasten them together to be 
used when necessary for the purpose of an- 



66 REVOLUTIONARY DEFENCES 

noying any Enemy who may come against 
the Town by water." He was also instructed 
to procure an anchor with which to moor 
the boom and chain when it was placed in 
position. 

For some unexplained reason, objections 
had been made to the situation of the guard- 
house and magazine at the Fox Hill fort, 
and the officers of the battery located there 
were authorized to remove them, if they 
thought necessary, to some safer place nearer 
the fort. They were also empowered to give 
direction " where and in what manner in- 
trenchments shall be made to the northwest 
of the fort, for covering a body of men which 
may be placed there to oppose an enemy 
coming up the river." 

That these intrenchments were thrown up, 
seems certain from the statement made by 
Mr. Thomas N. Sumner, a former resident 
of Providence, in a letter of reminiscences 
addressed to his daughter, dated Brookline, 
May 13, 1834, printed in Stone's French 
Allies, for he says : — 

" I remember in addition two circular 
forts called redoubts south of the main 
fort on the hight of the hill one north and 



IN RHODE ISLAND 6? 

one south of the powder house which stood 
on Powder House Lane. This lane was 
then the only road to what was called the 
upper ferry, now central bridge, I believe. 
It led by where Moses Brown now lives, 
or did live." 

These works were long ago obliterated, 
but were probably not far from the present 
Angell Street, which was the road to the 
upper ferry. 

Some idea of the expense attending the 
construction of the Fox Hill fort, maintain- 
ing a guard there and the cost of stores and 
provisions used when the Field's Point fort 
was built is shown by the following bill. 

Town of Providence 

To Nicholas Power Dr 

1775 £ s d 

Aug 1 6 To 1 48 \ days work for men 
building battery at Fox 
Hill, @ 3 shillings per 
day 22 4 9 

To paid Thos Gilman 
wages and billett for 3 
mos guard at the bat- 
tery from Aug 30 to 
Nov 30 9150 



Missing Page 



Missing Page 



•JO REVOLUTIONARY DEFENCES 



CHAPTER V. 

Beacon Hill Fort. — General Spencer's Request. — Providence 
Companies detailed to work on Fortifications. — Fort Sul- 
livan. — Hog Pen Point Fort. — Action of the Town of 
Rehoboth. — Defences in the War of 1812. — Fort William 
Henry. 

The news of the arrival of the British fleet 
at Newport produced the most intense ex- 
citement in Providence. A town meeting 
was immediately convened " by warrant on 
Sabbath Day morning, December 8th, 1776," 
and the following preamble and resolution 
adopted, Stephen Hopkins being moderator. 

" Whereas a large body of the Enemy 
have arrived in the Narragansett Bay and it 
is probable soon intend to attack this Town, 
and in order that proper defence may be 
made it is Voted That the Hon. bl Stephen 
Hopkins Esq., Col. Jonathan Arnold, Col. 
John Mathewson, Mr. Joseph Brown, Col. 
Barzillai Richmond, Col. Joseph Nightingale, 
Col. James Angell, and Mr. Sumner be and 
they are hereby appointed a Committee to 
Examine the most suitable places for Erect- 



IN RHODE ISLAND J I 

ing and making proper Batteries and in- 
trenchments for the defence of the Public 
against the Enemy." They were directed to 
notify the Governor as soon as they had de- 
cided where such works should be built, that 
he might order the troops immediately to 
begin the work. It was further voted that 
every male inhabitant of sixteen years of age 
and upward assemble at the Court House 
Parade at three o'clock the same day, armed 
and equipped for active service. 

And that Sabbath morning the inhabitants 
of Providence were aroused to the alarming 
situation of the colony, by hearing the town 
crier with his bell, and the town sergeant 
with his drum as they hurried through the 
streets of the town hoarsely announcing that 
the enemy was within the borders of the 
state and their homes and lives were in 
danger. 

The utmost activity was now necessary to 
guard against any surprise or attack on the 
town. The militia was constantly on duty, 
and steps were taken to put the town in the 
best possible position for defence. 

In May following, Captain Sumner laid 
before the town meeting held on the 5th of 
that month a " Plan of a Fort proper to be 



;2 REVOLUTIONARY DEFENCES 

erected for the Common Defence upon the 
Hill Eastward from the compact part of the 
Town." This plan had the hearty approval 
of General Spencer, and he asked the assist- 
ance of the town in pushing it to completion 
by the following letter : — 

"Providence, 13th May, 1777. 

"Sir: — It having been represented to 
General Spencer that the inhabitants of 
this town were desirous that a fortress 
should be erected upon the College Hill, 
for their more secure and effectual defence 
against the common enemy, and great en- 
couragement of the works, being speedily 
effected by the united aid and services of 
the inhabitants and the army, the General 
has been induced to protract, and caused 
to be laid the lines of a fort at that place, 
which being completed, would doubtless 
be greatly beneficial to the public. The 
work being now ready to proceed upon, 
the General hereby signifies that the ser- 
vices of the good people of the town 
would be very acceptable. It is to be 
wished that they would supply themselves 
with the necessary tools, &c. 

" W. Bissell, A. D. Camp. 

" By the General 's Order." 



IN RHODE ISLAND 



73 



The townsmen promptly passed a vote 
ordering the different military companies in 
the town to repair, on the sixteenth day of 
that month, to Beacon Hill, — another name 
for College Hill, — where the beacon had 
been already erected, to make fortifications. 









^^Il'ILlJifliiltMllWiJIlifit 



Fo 



ORT QAf 



% : * "S 
I II 

i-Hj 

5 =,'-■* Proj>plct Hill 

iii 

«* « i 

/ 5 1 



1 9 i'' 
yjLs 



# % § ^mVM'll'li™i^lI^im)^li)'Ui[lll|jrX;M':'.:: ll 'J'.'/i;i..'il'. , .ljj' , ii. l HOJlW)li'% E H= f 

I J 5 / /j9aBiiiiiiii!i:iiiH!iiwit!;f«iii»»[«i«»» % \ f| \ 

- r 'v^ ; » i 



The record of the town's order for this 
reads as follows : " That Capt. Barzillai Rich- 
mond's Company go upon duty to-morrow, 
Capt. Russell's the next day, Capt. Burrill's 
on Monday, Capt. Keene's on Tuesday, Capt. 
Snow's and the Grenadier Company on 
Wednesday, and that the captains keep lists 
of all persons who work and also those who 



74 REVOLUTIONARY DEFENCES 

do not, and that the said companies begin 
on Thursday next week, and go through a 
second tower of duty in rotation, in the 
same manner, each person to furnish his 
own tools and provisions." The fortifica- 
tions, constructed at this time were on the 
brow of the hill, extending at some distance 
around the beacon. 

Some years ago, portions of these works 
were visible, but the last vestige of them was 
destroyed to make way for the brick house 
at the corner of Congdon and Bowen streets. 
This fort was probably the only one in the 
town built from plans prepared before the 
work was commenced, the others being 
thrown up according to lines laid out on 
the ground at the time the work was done. 
The Prospect Hill or College Hill fort, says 
Stone, in his French Allies, was " three hun- 
dred by one hundred and fifty feet, within 
the parapet. It was surrounded by a fosse, 
or ditch, and was capable of mounting fifty- 
eight guns." 

On the high land on the west side of the 
river, southerly from what was then called 
the road to Pawtuxet (now Broad Street), was 
a fort which bore the name Fort Sullivan. 

While there is no recorded evidence to 



IN RHODE ISLAND 



75 



show when it was built, the name given to it 
suggests that it was thrown up during the 
time when General John Sullivan was in 
command of this department, and that was 
in 1778. 

It was probably the first of the Revolu- 
tionary defences to be obliterated ; for in 
1 784, the owners of the property on which it 
was located, — Messrs. Barzillai Richmond, 
John Field, Daniel Snow, Joseph Snow, 
Joseph Snow, Jr., Daniel Snow, Jr., and 
Benoni Pearce, — desiring to improve this 
tract of land, caused a good part of the hill 
to be dug away, and used the material to fill 
in the low marshland along the river at 
its base. Through the land thus graded, 
streets were laid out, and dedicated to the 
public use. The square bounded by Broad, 
Foster, Chestnut, and Friendship streets in- 
cludes the spot on which Fort Sullivan was 
built. 

There was yet another fort in the harbor. 
It was not, however, in Rhode Island, but 
was built on territory so near that it has 
since, by a change in the state line, been 
brought within its borders. This is the 
work on Fort Hill, in East Providence. 

In the days of the Revolution this land 



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82 REVOLUTIONARY DEFENCES 

twenty-ninth day of April, 1776, unani- 
mously voted that they would defend the 
said Town, and ordered that the inhabitants 
should work upon the Fortifications, upon 
the Penalty of paying Three shillings per 
day for each and every day's Neglect . . . 
and at another meeting held on the twenty- 
fifth of May, it was ordered that the Fines 
of the Delinquents should be collected by 
William Davis, and in case of Refusal he 
should distrain." With this preamble the 
town prayed for advice as to whether it had 
authority to make such an order and enforce 
it. The whole question was promptly set- 
tled ; the General Assembly upholding the 
acts of the Newport town meeting. 

Additional light is shed upon the doings 
of the people of Newport, by a memorial 
prepared in June, 1776, during the recess of 
the General Assembly, " by such of the 
Members as could be conveniently be imme- 
diately convened," to be sent to the Conti- 
nental Congress, wherein it is stated that 
the inhabitants of Newport " assembled in 
a full town meeting and unanimously voted 
to work upon the necessary fortifications, 
and to defend the Town, and immediately 
entered upon it with Vigour. . . . Three 



IN RHODE ISLAND 83 

considerable works have been erected . . . 
and the Town of Newport is now capable 
of being defended against all the Frigates 
in the British Navy. Fortifications are also 
making at Bristol Ferry and on the East 
side of Rhode Island, which when completed 
will effectually secure a communication with 
the Continent, and enable us to defend that 
most valuable Island." 

But the confidence which the people of 
Newport had in the strength and value of 
these works to withstand " all the Frigates 
in the British Navy," was destined to be 
shattered ; for a few months later every one 
of them was occupied by the enemy, with- 
out a shot being fired to resist their capture. 
Besides this fort at Brenton's Point, another 
work, which was called the North Battery, 
was built on the site of the present Fort 
Greene, at the end of Washington Street. 
To make room for this, the house of Daniel 
Austin, standing on the spot, was removed to 
another location ; this work with the fort on 
Goat Island commanded the entrance to the 
harbor from the northward. Across on the 
island of Conanicut, a battery was established 
at the Dumplings, of eight 1 8-pound guns. 

Early in the month of January, 1776, the 



84 REVOLUTIONARY DEFENCES 

General Assembly ordered " that a number 
of men not exceeding fifty, be stationed at 
Warwick Neck, including the Artillery 
Company in Warwick ; the remainder to 
be minutemen ; that Col. John Waterman 
have the command, and appoint proper offi- 
cers to act under him ; that they continue 
there and be kept upon pay, until the 
enemy's fleet shall go down the river, and 
then be discharged, if his honor the Gov- 
ernor shall think proper. 

" And that His Honor the Deputy Gov- 
ernor, General West, and Mr. Joseph Brown 
or either of them, be appointed to lay out 
such fortifications upon the said Neck as 
they shall think necessary ; and that the 
troops be employed in erecting them, while 
continued there." 

Colonel Waterman, who was assigned to 
the Warwick post, was a prominent man 
of that town, and active in the civil and 
military affairs of the colony. He was at 
this time a member of the town council of 
Warwick and Colonel of its militia, and had 
been a field-officer of the Kent County regi- 
ment since 1760. His military experience, 
however, had been limited to that obtained 
with the troops in the colony. 



IN RHODE ISLAND 85 

This action was taken on account of the 
British fleet of twelve sail coming up the 
river as far as Prudence Island and landing 
a large body of men. These vessels a few 
days later returned to their anchorage in 
Newport harbor. At this time artillery 
companies of two guns, with fourteen men 
to each gun, were formed in all the sea- 
board towns, and the greatest excitement 
prevailed. The next month Captain Thomas 
Gorton's Company of Warwick was ordered 
to report to Colonel John Waterman at the 
Warwick Neck fort, and Captain Josiah 
Gibb's Company was despatched to Quid- 
nessett Neck to relieve a number of minute- 
men who had been occupying this station. 

A watch-house was ordered to be built on 
Cranston Neck or Long Neck, now called 
Pawtuxet Neck, twelve feet long and eight 
feet wide, for the accommodations of the 
guard stationed at the fort. Here was lo- 
cated a battery of two 1 8-pound guns. 
Faint outlines of the works at Pawtuxet 
are still to be seen, although most of this 
fortification has been obliterated, to make 
room for the cottages now located on the 
Neck. The Warwick Neck fort has entirely 
disappeared. 



86 REVOLUTIONARY DEFENCES 

The battery at Pawtuxet was on land 
owned by Captain Remington of that place. 
When the authorities took possession of his 
property to build this work, they tore down 
his fences and otherwise damaged his prop- 
erty, but the General Assembly subsequently 
made reparation by paying the amount 
which he claimed. This fort was under 
the command of Colonel Samuel Aborn and 
for a great part of the time was garrisoned 
by the Pawtuxet Rangers, another of the 
chartered independent military companies. 

At first it was occupied by some of the 
Providence companies and was in April, 
1777 ; for on the 19th of that month William 
Rhodes, William Wall, Samuel Chace, Jr., 
Paul Allen, Samuel Godfrey, Arthur Craw- 
ford, Lewis Peck, James Munro, James Hill, 
Gideon Crawford, Jr., Joseph Nightingale, 
Aaron White and William Russell, pre- 
sented a petition to the town meeting of 
Providence, then in session, representing that 
they were " on Military Duty at Pawtuxet 
for the Defence of our Country," and protest- 
ing against the town's taking action on a 
question reflecting on the " Conduct of the 
Present Assessors of Rates " until they could 
be present. All of these men were members 



IN RHODE ISLAND %j 

of the Providence Company of Cadets com- 
manded by Colonel Joseph Nightingale. On 
the sixth day of the next month the first di- 
vision of the Pawtuxet Rangers was drafted 
to go on duty at the Neck, consisting of the 
following officers and enlisted men : 1 — 

Benjamin Arnold, Colonel. 
James Sheldon, Captain. 
William Greene, Clerk. 
Elisha Carpenter, Sergeant. 
Stephen Fenner, Sergeant. 

Privates. 

Zuriel Waterman John C. Greene 

James Harris Philip Arnold 

John Randall William Holdridge 

Benjamin Babcock Henry Randall 

Benjamin Waterman John Stone 

Oliver Payn Caleb Corpe 

Rhodes Greene William Greene 

Charles Rhodes David Barros 
Samuel Perce 

This division was relieved by the second 
detachment composed of 2 

Oliver Arnold, Lieutenant-Colonel. 
Sylvester Rhodes, Major. 

1 Rhode Island Historical Society Military Papers. 

2 Ibid. 



go REVOLUTIONARY DEFENCES 

and from time to time detachments of the 
minutemen or alarm companies in the county 
were ordered to report there for duty. The 
warrants issued for bringing in these detach- 
ments are as curious in their construction as 
they were effective in results. One of them 
reads thus : : — 

" Warwick in the County of Kent, &c. 

" To Thomas Warner corporiel of the first 
Company or Train band in the above s'd 
Town Greeting by virtue of a warrant from 
the Colo you air hear by required to warn in 
the Second Division of said Compny a grea- 
bel to the draught maid from said company 
the sixth day of January 1777. 

" N.B. to warn the said persons to appear 
with a good Gun bagunet Catrix box blancket 
and nap sack and to Let each and every per- 
son now that if they doth not appear at hed 
Qorters in Warwick the eighth day of this 
instant at two of the clock after noon or an 
abel bodyed man in Each of the delinkqents 
sted thay may depend that thay shall pay a 
fine as the Law of this Stait directs hear of 
fail not but maik a true return of your doings 
to Colo John Waterman at hid Qorters War- 

1 Warner Papers. 



IN RHODE ISLAND 



91 



wick. Given under my hand in the year of 
our Lord one thousand seven hundred and 
seventy six. 

" Job Randall, Captn. 

" A List of the Naimes of those that air to 
be Warnd, 

Lieutenant James Arnold 
Ensign James Carder 
Sergeant Anthony Low 
Corporal Thos. Warner 

Nathaniel Hackston Christopher Vaughn 

Stephen Low Beriah Allen 

Benjamin Battey Barrit Allen 

John Coal Edward Gorton 

Robert Bagnal Mosis Lippitt 

Jeremiah Westcott Godfrey Greene 

"Warwick, february the 4th day 1777 
"then warned those men that I was com- 
manded Thomas Warner, Corpril." 

On the 7th of January the following, men 
were ordered to report for duty at this 
post: 1 — 

Benjamin Bennett, Jr. Richard Mathewson 
Isaac Carr Ichabod Smith 

1 Rhode Island Historical Society Military Papers. 



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98 REVOLUTIONARY DEFENCES 



CHAPTER VII. 

Fortifications ordered at Bristol Ferry and Howland's Ferry. 
— Fort Barton. — List of Officers and Men stationed at 
Howland's Ferry. — Coast-guards established. — Tonomy 
Hill Fort. — Fortifications at Bristol Harbor. — Alarm at 
Bristol. — List of Barrington Men appearing. — Fort Dan- 
iel. — List of Officers and Men located at East Greenwich. 
List of Captain John Whipple's Company on Rhode 
Island. — Kingstown Reds. 

In February, 1776, Deputy-Governor Brad- 
ford, William Ellery, John Mathewson, Henry 
Marchant, and Gideon Marchant were ap- 
pointed a committee " to cause fortifications 
to be erected, as soon as possible, upon 
Rhode Island and at Bristol, sufficient to 
command and keep open a communication 
at Bristol Ferry." The troops stationed at 
Bristol and on Rhode Island were employed 
in this work. These fortifications were at 
each end of Bristol Ferry, and the one on the 
island can, even now, be easily distinguished. 

Having made provision for keeping open 
this means of communication between the 
island and the mainland, the attention of 
the colony was then directed to taking care 



IN RHODE ISLAND 99 

of Howland's Ferry on the east side of the 
island. 

About this time a communication had 
been received from the General Court of 
Massachusetts, signifying its willingness to 



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5 Stf 



lend its assistance in the construction of a 
fort at Howland's- Ferry. This aid was 
gratefully accepted ; and William Bradford 
and Simeon Potter were appointed to confer 
with the Massachusetts authorities, and given 



100 REVOLUTIONARY DEFENCES 

full power to carry into effect such plans as 
might be agreed upon. A fort was erected, 
commanding this ferry, on the high land at 
Tiverton, which has since borne the name 
of Fort Barton. Its outlines are even now 
well defined. 

From December i, 1777, to March 10, 
1778, Captain Christopher Dyer's Company 
was stationed at Howland's Ferry, the com- 
pany roll being made up of 1 

Christopher Dyer, Captain. 

Barker Peckam, First Lieutenant. 

Samuel Champlin, Second Lieutenant. 

Randall Rice, Ensign. 

Benoni Foster 

Martin Child 

Charles Hewit 

Elisha Potter 

William Smith 

Clark Hopkins 

Samuel Barker 

Benjamin Hodg 

Edmund Hewit, Fifer. 

James Chappel, Drummer. 

Privates. 

Caleb Tifft Hugh Osbond 

Eleazer Nichols Eli Lake 

1 Revolutionary Rolls, State Archives. 



Sergeants. 



Corporals. 



IN RHODE ISLAND 101 

Charles McMillion Job Chase 

Joshua Davis Edward Johnson 

James Tannant Leary Crandall 

John Lewis Benjamin Eagleston 

Amos James William Babcock 

Stephen Charles John Stanbury 

Amos Drummer Samuel Butten 

Ebenezer Smith John Smith 

Thomas Chappel Job Wait 

Adam Cooper Stephen Wheeler 

James Ervin Nathan Lewis 

George Osbond Samuel Babcock 

In March, 1776, the committee that had 
been appointed by the General Assembly 
relative to the military defences of the col- 
ony made its report. Among the recom- 
mendations made by this body, it was 
provided, 

" That one company be placed at Point 
Judith ; one company at Boston Neck be- 
tween Narrow River and the South Ferry ; 
one company at Quonset Point in North 
Kingstown, one company at Pojack Point 
in North Kingstown and Potowomut Neck 
in Warwick, one company at Warwick Neck, 
half a company at Pawtuxet in Cranston 
(Pawtuxet Neck), one company at Barring- 
ton, two companies at Bristol, one company 



102 REVOLUTIONARY DEFENCES 

at Bristol Ferry on Rhode Island side and 
one third of said company on Tiverton side, 
one company in Tiverton and Little Comp- 
ton near Fogland Ferry, four companies and 
one half on the island of Jamestown," and 
seven companies with a company of artillery 
on the island of Rhode Island. 

F°RT ON [BEAC3H HILL] ToAIOMY 



m 



1i\y? 



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% m^# 




This committee also recommended that a 
fort be erected on Tonomy Hill by Colonel 
Putnam, "according to his best skill and 
judgement," and another on the Bristol side 
of Bristol Ferry " at the place selected by 
Col. Putnam." 

The high land at the northern part of 
Newport is called Tonomy Hill, and consists 
of two spurs or hills, one of which — the 
highest — is now called Tonomy Hill, while 
the other is known as Beacon Hill. 



IN RHODE ISLAND 103 

Fortifications are still remaining on each. 
It was on the lower spur that the Tonomy 
Hill beacon was built in 1776, and hence 
its name. 

The exact spot selected for the Bristol 
work is not known. A map of the opera- 
tions on Rhode Island shows two works at 
this point, one on the high land north of 
where the lighthouse now stands, while an- 
other was nearer the water, under the hill. 
There is no evidence of them now to be 
seen. 

When this report was presented to the 
General Assembly, it provoked some dis- 
cussion, and before the recommendations 
therein were adopted some changes were 
made, and it was finally voted " that the com- 
pany ordered to be stationed at Tiverton 
and Little Compton, near Fogland Ferry, be 
stationed in the said towns as Col. Thomas 
Church and Lieut. Col. John Cooke shall 
think proper, that the company ordered to 
be stationed at Quonset be stationed at 
Wickford; that the company stationed at 
the South Ferry, in South Kingstown, be so 
distributed as to guard as far as the north 
end of Boston neck; and that Capt. Job 
Pierce's company station be in Bristol." 



104 REVOLUTIONARY DEFENCES 

This company was located at what was 
called the " mud battery," which consisted 
of a breastwork "high enough for a man 
standing on tiptoe to rest his piece on the 
top and take aim at the men or officers " on 
the decks of the enemy's vessels; it was 
located near the water's edge, a short dis- 
tance west from the corner of Hope and 
Church streets, where St. Michael's Church 
now stands. Action had been taken by the 
town authorities at Bristol some months 
before the committee of the General Assem- 
bly made its report. On December 12, 1775, 
it was " voted, that some intrenchments be 
made near the harbor in this town to pre- 
vent the enemy from landing." William 
Bradford, Simeon Potter, Benjamin Bos- 
worth, and Jeremy Ingraham were appointed 
a committee to build these works. They 
were constructed " along the shore, extend- 
ing south from the foot of State Street, down 
as far as the foot of Burton Street, near Rich- 
mond's wharf. They were composed of a 
wall five feet high, built of turf and stones, 
filled up on the inside with loose earth and 
small stones." -Included in this line of 
works was the " mud battery " previously 
referred to. 



IN RHODE ISLAND 105 

On the 1st of April, 1776, there was an 
alarm at Bristol occasioned by a report, 
which afterwards proved to be false, that the 
British fleet were entering the bay. It occa- 
sioned much anxiety, however, and urgent 
requests were made by Governor Cooke to 
General Washington for aid in protecting 
the state. 

To this alarm the Barrington Infantry 
Company and the Artillery Company re- 
sponded, the following roll showing the names 
of those who marched to Bristol on this 
occasion. 

" Barrington, April y e 1 ad 1776. 

" The following is a List of the Persons 
who Appeared on the Alarm at Bristol this 
day : * — 

Thomas Allen, Captain. 
Viajl Allen, Lieutenant. 
Daniel Kinicut, Ensign. 
Nathaniel Smith, Sergeant. 
George Salsbury, Sergeant. 
Benjamin Drown, Jr., Corporal. 
Nudigate Adams, Corporal. 
Josiah Humphrey, Jr., Corporal. 

1 Private manuscript belonging to Hon. Thomas W. Bick- 
nell. 



io6 



REVOLUTIONARY DEFENCES 



Thomas Grant, Corporal. 
Samuel Short, Drummer. 
Joseph V. Allen, Fifer. 



Ebenezer Tiffany 
Joshua Kent 
William Kelley 
John Short, Jr. 
Amos Peck 
Nathanel Clarke 
Samuel Barnes 
Samuel Adams 
Josiah Bowen 
David Luther 
John Watson 
Joshua Bicknell, Jr. 
William Harden 
Samuel Conant 



Daniel Drown 
John Shelden 
Jonathan Bosworth, Jr. 
James Goff 
Abiel Grant 
Benjamin Marten 
Joseph Bullock 
Samuel Marten 
Moses Horten 
William Andrews 
Benjamin Horten 
Edward Marten 
Ebenezer Grant 
Simeon Titas 



Artillery Comp y . 
Samuel Bosworth, Captain. 



William Jones 
Joseph Adams 
Nathanel Peck 
Samuel Viall 
Selvester Viall 



Privets. 



Solomon Peck, Jr., Clk. 

Nath 1 Smith & Jon'n Bosworth Jun Did Duty in 
the Militia and are Reckoned with them. 



Per T. Allin." 



IN RHODE ISLAND \0J 

Across the bay at East Greenwich was 
another fort called Fort Daniel. This, says 
Wanton Casey of that town, who was one of 
the charter members of the Kentish Guards, 
was built by that organization " to prevent 
the boats from the British fleet getting into 
the harbor." It " had eight or ten guns 
mounted," and a guard was maintained here 
during the whole time that the British were 
encamped within the state. From the col- 
ony records it appears that nine guns were 
mounted at this fort. It was located on the 
high bank, near the entrance to East Green- 
wich harbor, about a quarter of a mile north 
of the present railroad station, nearly oppo- 
site Long Point. 

Strictly speaking, it was not in the town 
of East Greenwich, but was in Warwick or, 
as the town records of East Greenwich say, 
" in the borders of Warwick." An aged citi- 
zen of the town who remembers seeing it, 
for it was long ago obliterated, says that " it 
was a straight breastwork with holes in it 
for the guns." It is stated that the guns 
formerly located there, upon the termination 
of hostilities, were shipped to West Point. 

The Kentish Guards were located at Fort 
Daniel during most of the time that the 



108 REVOLUTIONARY DEFENCES 

enemy was within the state. But on occa- 
sions of alarm, troops were hurriedly sent to 
all the towns on the seaboard, and on such 
occasions the force at Fort Daniel was in- 
creased by detachments from the different 
regiments. 

The arrival of a British fleet, consisting 
of sixteen ships of war, off Newport in July, 
17S0, produced a season of alarm through- 
out the state. The forts and batteries along 
the shore were manned, and the several com- 
panies of militia in the state were despatched 
to support them. 

It was not until the middle of the next 
month that the enemy's fleet withdrew. 

During a portion of this time Captain 
Robert Rhodes' Company was stationed at 
East Greenwich ; the company, when it re- 
sponded to this alarm, consisted of : * — 

Robert Rhodes, Captain. 
Hopkins Cooke, Lieutenant. 
Philip Whitman, Ensign. 

Privates. 

John Miller Arnold Stafford 

Thomas Sweet Amos Kimball 

Joseph Chase William Gorton, Jr. 

1 Rhode Island Historical Society Military Papers. 



IN RHODE ISLAND 



109 



Joseph Battey 
William Hall 
Ephraim Weeden 
William Greene, son of 

Nathaniel 
Silas Spencer 
Joseph Cornell 
Yelverton Briggs 
Job Comstock 
Thomas Spencer, son of 

Abner 
Samuel Tarbox 
Ezekiel Warner 
William Bailey 
Job Straight 
Thomas Reynolds 



Jesse Arnold 
James Aborn 
Sylvester Rhodes 
Nathan Westcott 
Josiah Stone 
Edward Coddington 
Joseph Brown 
Stephen Arnold 
William Matteson 
Olney Baker 
William Sayles 
Daniel Fisk 
James Miller 
William Helm 
William Sweet, Jr. 
Remington Kinnon 



About the first of March, 1781, the enemy 
having withdrawn from the neighborhood of 
Rhode Island, most of the troops that had 
been stationed at Newport and on the island 
were dismissed with the exception of about 
three hundred men, who were still continued 
doing guard duty. 

Among this body of troops was the bat- 
talion of Providence and Kent counties, 
commanded by Brigadier-General Nathan 
Miller. One of the companies belonged in 
the town of Providence, and the roll of this 
company included the following officers and 
men : — 



no 



REVOLUTIONARY DEFENCES 



Pay Abstract of Captain John Whipple's 
Company in Lieutenant-Colonel Comman- 
dant George Peck's Regiment, Doing Duty 
on Rhode Island in March, 1781. 1 

John Whipple, Captain. 
Joseph Snow, Jr., Lieutenant. 
Christopher Robinson, Ensign. 

Benjamin Keen 1 



Benjamin Keen, (Jr.) j 



Jabez Gorham 
Charles Wheaton 



1- Sergeants. 



Ebenezer Foresight 1 ,. 

„ „, . 1 Corporals. 

George btamer J 



William Larcher ) 
Benjamin Andrews J 

Job Stone 
Stephen Corps 



Fifers. 



Drummers. 



Privates. 



Jacob Field 
Elijah Hewes 
Daniel Brown 
Tilly M. Olney 
Peter Field 
Abner Keen 
George Brown 
Tobias Brown 



Isaac Barker 
Joseph Salisbury 
William Davis 
John Field 
Jeremiah Williams 
Zachariah Mathewson 
William Hutson 
Timothy Berry 



1 Providence Town Papers No. 2526. 



IN RHODE ISLAND 



III 



Joseph Whipple 
John Burch 
John Sheldon 
Ruben Anthony 
John Luther 
Elisha Calendar 
John Gilson 
Simeon Hunt 
John Griffith 
Uriah Hopkins 
David Libby 
William Peck 
Jesse Jones 
Jeremiah Spears 
William Shearburne 
David Tift 
Stephen Aplin 
Isaac Mason 
Ezekiel Burr 
Micajah Bennet 
John Teale 
Thomas Teale 
Isaac Bartlett 



Benjamin Low 
Prince Potter 
Asa Allen 
Oliver Brown 
William Turtelot 
George Young 
William Sheldon 
William Verry 
Bernon Tripe 
Charles Cushing 
Elijah Walker 
John Russell 
John Allen 
Joseph Adams 
James Smith 
John Hawkes 
Levi Wilmoth 
Joseph Basset 
John Gonsolve 
Stephen Williams 
Luther Hawkins 
Joseph Burke 



The amount due the soldiers according to 
this pay abstract was '' One hundred thirteen 
pounds and eighteen shillings," which was 
ordered paid at a town meeting held in 
Providence, August 30, 1781. 

At this time the French army and fleet 
were located at Newport and afforded with 



112 RE VOL UTIONAR Y DEFENCES 

these state troops ample protection to the 
colony in case of an attack. 

A few weeks later, however, it was decided 
to withdraw the French forces from Rhode 
Island and attach them to the troops about 
to operate against New York. In order to 
transport the great quantity of guns, stores, 
and baggage, Rochambeau presented a peti- 
tion to the General Assembly asking for the 
aid of the state in this work ; in answer to 
his request, George Irish, Esq., was ap- 
pointed a committee to attend to the matter 
as far as Bristol Ferry and was authorized to 
impress teams for the purpose ; through his 
services this material was carted up to the 
north end of the island to Bristol Ferry, 
where it was put on boats and floated over 
to Bristol, where Nathaniel Fales, Esq., who 
had also been appointed a committee for a 
similar purpose, attended to its transporta- 
tion to Providence where the army was to 
start on its march to the westward. In the 
midst of these preparations, and while the 
troops were under marching orders, it was 
reported that the enemy's fleet under Admi- 
ral Arbuthnot was off Block Island standing 
towards Newport. 

A council of war was hastily summoned 



IN RHODE ISLAND 1 1 3 

and the order of departure somewhat 
modified. 

The fleet was ordered to remain at New- 
port while the army was sent on its journey, 
but a detachment of five hundred men was 
left behind to form with a body of state 
troops a sufficiently strong force to resist 
any attack that might be made. Nearly the 
whole military force of the state had been 
dismissed, and the men had returned to their 
homes to get some rest after their arduous 
duties for a long period. 

The General Assembly, therefore, then in 
session, deeming it "highly expedient that a 
body of troops completely armed and accou- 
tred should be on the island of Rhode Island 
on or before Tuesday the 5th day of June, 
a.d. 1 78 1, to be stationed at such places as 
the commander of that post shall deem 
necessary " for the safety and defence of the 
colony, promptly voted, " that the following 
independent companies, to wit: the Artillery 
of Providence, the Kentish Guards, the 
Kingstown Reds and the Pawtuxet Rangers, 
forthwith turn out one-half of the men be- 
longing to their respective corps, to march 
to Newport, to be upon the ground by the 
said 5th day of June, there to do duty for 



114 RE V0L UTIONAR Y DEFENCES 

one month ; that the men so furnished by 
the said independent companies be accounted 
to the towns to which they respectively be- 
long, and be reckoned as so many men fur- 
nished towards their quota of five hundred 
men ordered to be raised at the present ses- 
sion, that the said independent companies 
be led by their own officers, that the town of 
Tiverton and Little Compton forthwith fur- 
nish one hundred and two men to be at 
Newport on the said 5th day of June." This 
force was under the command of M. de 
Choisy, a French officer, to whom was given 
the title " Brigadier of the forces to remain for 
the protection of the fleet and of the island." 
Among this body was the independent 
company called the " Kingstown Reds." It 
seems to have been a very active organiza- 
tion, and is frequently referred to in the 
events which occurred within the state. 
Only one roll of this company has been 
found among the public records and that 
refers to the company in May, 1776. It is 
believed to be the only list extant and for 
that reason is here printed. 



IN RHODE ISLAND 



"5 



Kingstown Reds, May, 1776. 1 

John Gardiner, Captain. 
Thomas Potter, First Lieutenant. 
Rouse T. Helme, Second Lieutenant. 
Rowland Brown, Ensign. 



Privates. 



John Weight 
James Cottrell 
Richard Gardiner 
Jeremiah Sheffil 
John Rose 
James Pearce 
John Petrill 
Allin James 
James Rose 
James Helme, Jr. 
George Teft 
Nathan Gardiner 
Benjamin Perry- 
Walter Watson 
William Rodman 
Joseph Purkins 
Frederick Gardiner 
William Aplin 
Thomas Champlin 
William Dyer, Jr. 



Nathan Cotrelle 

Jeremiah Brown 

Henry Reynolds 

Christopher Brown 

George Wilson 

Caleb Waistcoat 

Robert Helm 

John Weeden 

Lory Gardiner 
John Tory 
David Duglass 
James Tefft, 3d 
William C. Clarke 
Solomon Tefft 
James Potter 
Nicholas Easton Gardiner 
Allin Gardner 
Ephraim Gardiner 
John Clarke, Jr. 



1 Revolutionary Rolls, State Archives. 



1 1 6 RE VOL UTIONAR Y DEFENCES 

The force at Newport was kept up until 
late in the summer and was augmented from 
time to time by drafts from the militia of the 
state. 

Sergeant Job Whaley of Coventry was one 
of the men drafted on this service and years 
afterwards wrote an account of his military 
experiences during the war, in this he says: 
"Next tour in 1781 in August at Newport 
20 days in Capt Allen Johnsons Company 
(East Greenwich) Col. T. Tillinghast & was 
present when the french fleet went out 
to join degras to go to Yorktown to take 
Cornwallis." 

After the departure of the fleet the troops 
were withdrawn, and the events which trans- 
pired in Virginia a few weeks later put an 
end to the service which the militia of 
Rhode Island had for years been called 
upon to perform. 



IN RHODE ISLAND 117 



CHAPTER VIII. 

Fort at Beaver Tail. — List of Officers and Men guarding 
the Charlestown Shore. — Story of the Wickford Gun. — 
Order for the Guard at Quonset. — Rum as a Munition of 
War. — Distribution of Cannon in the State. — Forts at 
Popasquash and Bullock's Points. — Table of Defences in 
Narragansett Bay. — Fortifications at Warren. — Colonel 
Israel Angell's Regiment stationed at Warren. — Roll of 
Captain Tew's Company. 

In May, 1776, a fort was ordered built 
" at Beaver Tail, on Conanicut, to contain 
six or eight heavy cannon," while a coast- 
guard was established at Point Judith, Sea- 
connet Point, Westerly at Watch Hill, 
Charlestown, at the South Ferry in South 
Kingstown, and at North Kingstown. 

The commanding officers of the several 
military companies seldom noted on the 
muster-rolls the locality or station where 
the duty was performed ; but from a roll of 
Captain Peleg Hoxsey's Company, in the 
state archives, it appears that the company 
was stationed on the Charlestown shore, 
August 10, 1777, and the following names 
are found upon it : x — 

1 Revolutionary Rolls, State Archives. 



n8 



REVOLUTIONARY DEFENCES 



Peleg Hoxsey, Captain. 
William Gardner, Lieutenant. 
John Hall, Sergeant. 
Augustus Sunderland, Sergeant. 
Thomas Reynolds, Corporal. 
Job Johnson, Corporal. 
Henry Stanton, Fifer. 



Vernon Stanton 
Uriah Harvey 
Edward Greene 
John Wappy 
Augustus Sanders 
Aaron Babcock 
William Coon 
Paul Harvey 
Moses Kinyon 
Joseph Sheffield 
Henry Hazard 
James Wells 
Silas Hall 
Samuel Greene 
Benjamin Millard 
Edward Clarke 
Nathaniel Bendick 
Thomas Barber 



Privates. 



John Champlin 
Stephen Allin 
Daniel Saunders 
Cary Clarke 
Benjamin Hall 
John Coon 
Roger Clarke 
Simeon Crandall 
Arnold Wording 
Silas Harvey 
William Wording 
Stephen Wilcox 
George Austin 
Gideon Crandall 
Theodate Johnson 
Thomas Cross 
Asa Crandall 
Samuel Elbert 



In addition to ordering guards to be main- 
tained at several places along the seaboard, 
the General Assembly ordered field-pieces 



IN RHODE ISLAND 



119 



to be distributed to the several towns, for 
use in case of attack. By vote of that body, 
made in March, 1776, one of these field-pieces 
sent to South Kingstown was ordered trans- 
ferred to North Kingstown. The wisdom of 
this was soon manifested. " The story of 
this old gun," says the historian of North 
Kingstown, "is as remarkable as it is inter- 
esting. It once saved Wickford from de- 
struction ; and again, as if to repay the debt, 
won great glory for the town, which origi- 
nally loaned it. In 1777, a company was 
sent out in a barge, from the British fleet, 
to burn the village of Wickford, which was 
supposed to be undefended. 

" They proceeded unmolested until they 
arrived at the mouth of the harbor, when, to 
their great surprise, the old gun, which had 
been stationed on the point where the light- 
house now stands, fired into them, killed 
one man, and caused them to hastily retrace 
their course. Soon after this occurrence, 
news came that a British man-of-war had 
grounded on Point Judith. Excitement ran 
high, and the old gun was again resorted to ; 
but, upon examination, it was discovered that 
the Tories had spiked it. 

" This difficulty was speedily removed. 



120 REVOLUTIONARY DEFENCES 

Samuel Bissell drilled it out, and in a few 
hours, drawn by four oxen, it was on its way 
to the ' Point,' where it was mounted on the 
shore, behind the rocks ; and, after a vigorous 
firing of a few minutes, the ship, which proved 
to be the Syren, a twenty-eight-gun frigate, 
surrendered, and her crew of a hundred 
and sixty-six officers and men were carried 
prisoners to Providence." 

The °;uard at Quonset Point, where is now 
located the state's Military Camp Ground, 
was established, in 1779, by the following 
order : — 

"East Greenwich, 6th June 1779. 

" Order: 

" A sergeant and six privates are to go 
immediately to Quonset Point with their 
arms and accoutrements to remain there 
until Tuesday morning and then return. 
They are to take what provisions they 
have on hand with them. 

" The sergeant will draw Twenty one 
gills of rum for himself and men for the 
Tower of Duty the sergeant will Take 
Directions from Col Dyer as to placing 
Sentries the whole of the Guard are to be 
out from 12 Till Day Break each night. 
The like number will go to the same 



IN RHODE ISLAND 121 

place on Tuesday afternoon and be Re- 
lieved in three days." 1 

Rum seems to have been more essential to 
this " Tower of Duty " than powder. 

On the 1 8th of July, 1776, the committee 
appointed by the General Assembly " to 
ascertain the places for fixing the cannon 
belonging to the state " made its report, rec- 
ommending that the twenty-seven cannon 
made at the Hope furnace " be mounted as 
soon as possible and placed as followeth " : — 

"At Jamestown — Three twelve-pounders 
on field carriages. 

" South Kingstown — Four, viz. : two 
eighteen-pounders, and two nine-pound- 
ers ; all on field carriages. 

"Warwick Neck — Two eighteen-pounders. 

" Field's Point — Three nine-pounders. 

" On the opposite shore (Kettle Point) 
Two nine-pounders. 

"Warren — Two nine-pounders. 

" Bristol harbor — Two nine-pounders. 

" Bristol Ferry — Five nine-pounders, viz.: 
one on the main, and four, on the 
island. 

1 Rhode Island Historical Society Military Papers. 



122 REVOLUTIONARY DEFENCES 

" Howland's Ferry, on the main — Four 
nine-pounders. Twenty-seven in all." 

This committee also recommended that 
the cannon now in the state, in addition to 
those assigned at the places aforesaid, be 
distributed in the state in the following 
order : — 

" Newport County : Five twenty-four- 
pounders, fourteen eighteen-pounders ; 
twelve twelve-pounders ; one nine- 
pounder, nine six-pounders ; ten four- 
pounders ; four three-pounders. Total, 
fifty-five. 

" Providence County: Five eighteen-pound- 
ers ; sixteen two, three, and four pound- 
ers, mounted on field carriages, for the 
several towns on the seacoast, and which 
lie now ready for them. Two three- 
pounders and two four-pounders, old 
and not mounted. Total twenty-five. 

" Bristol County : One twenty-four-pound- 
er ; three eighteen-pounders ; eleven 
three and four pounders. Total fifteen. 

" Kent County : One nine-pounder, sixteen 
three, four, and six pounders. Total 
seventeen." 



IN RHODE ISLAND 123 

This report was signed by William Brad- 
ford, John Brown, and Charles H olden, Jr., 
members of the committee. 

It will thus be seen that the state had one 
hundred and thirty-nine cannon of various 
calibre to be located along the seaboard, 
with which to resist any attack from the 
enemy. But these were not all ; there were 
a number of others located in King's County 
(the present Washington County), of which 
no account was taken, and these were scat- 
tered from Quidnessett Neck to Westerly. 
A battery was established on Barber's 
Height, a commanding eminence overlook- 
ing the bay in North Kingstown ; two field- 
pieces were stationed " near the sea, on the 
land of Nathan Babcock 2d, Esq.," at West- 
erly, and a nine-pounder at Colonel James 
Noyes' Neck in the same town. 

Before the close of the year 1776, the 
whole shore of Narragansett Bay was well 
protected. The order of the General Assem- 
bly, establishing artillery companies in all 
the seaboard towns, had been complied with, 
and for the protection of these batteries, 
breastworks had been thrown up at Barring- 
ton, Nayatt Point, Quidnessett, Wickford, 
Boston Neck, Watch Hill, Noyes' Neck, and 



124 



REVOLUTIONARY DEFENCES 



at Point Judith, while, besides the more for- 
midable works already referred to, there was 
a battery at Popasquash Point, of six eigh- 
teen-pounders, and another substantial work 
at Bullock's Point. When and under whose 
direction these latter works were built, a 
persistent investigation has failed to dis- 
cover. It is certain, however, that they had 
been thrown up before 1777. 

According to Blaskowitz's Chart of Narra- 
gansett Bay, made in 1777, there existed the 
following forts and batteries which had been 
erected by the American forces: 1 — 





GUNS. 


CALIBRE. 


Providence Fort 


S° 


18 and 24 pds. 


Popasquash Battery 


6 


18 pounders. 


Bristol Fort 


8 


18 pounders. 


Batteries at either end of Bristol Ferry 


3 


18 pounders. 


Howland Ferry defenses 


7 


18 and 24 pds. 


Fort Liberty, Goat Island, in Newport 






harbor 


25 


18 and 24 pds. 


North Point Battery (site of present 






Fort Greene) 


20 


18 and 24 pds. 


Dumplings Rock Battery 


8 


18 pounders. 



A year later, in May, soon after the British 
attack on Warren, fortifications were erected 



1 Cullum's Historical Sketch of the Fortification Defenses 
of Narragansett Bay, Washington, 1884, page 10. 



IN RHODE ISLAND 125 

on Burr Hill, in that town, " upon the west 
end of the second hill from the north," and a 
guard was maintained here both night and 
day during the remainder of the war. Noth- 
ing remains to-day of these fortifications. 

Colonel Israel Angell's Rhode Island Regi- 
ment of General Varnum's Brigade was 
located at Warren, from the summer of 1778 
to the spring of 1779. This regiment con- 
sisted of nine companies, six of, them be- 
ing commanded by Captains William Tew, 
Coggeshall Olney, Stephen Olney, William 
Allen, Thomas Hughes, and William Hum- 
phries, while the other three were known as 
the Colonel's Company, the Lieutenant-Colo- 
nel's Company, and the Major's Company. 

Captain William Tew's Company, in April, 
1779, consisted of the following rank and 
file : — 

William Tew, Captain. 

Ebenezer Macomber, Lieutenant. 

William Proctor, Sergeant-Major. 

Nathan Whittlesey, Quartermaster-Sergeant. 

William Davis, Drum-Major. 

George Clark, Fife-Major. 

William Pratt, Sergeant. 

John Macomber, Sergeant. 

Nathaniel Harris, Sergeant. 



126 



REVOLUTIONARY DEFENCES 



Knight Springer, Drummer. 
Reuben Smith, Corporal. 
Philip Justin, Corporal. 
Edward Easterbrooks, Corporal. 



Privates. 



Robert Allbrow 
Jonathan Briggs 
Jotham Bemus 
Asa Bovvdish 
Benjamin Blanchard 
William Bennett 
Edward Cole 
John Chadwick 
Levi Cole 
John Crandall 
John Exceen 
Charles Gray 
Stephen Hazard 
Jonathan Hill 
Peleg Johnson 
Samuel Loring 



Reuben Macomber 
Magnus Nice 
William Nichols 
William Parker, Sr. 
William Parker, Jr. 
Abraham Rose 
William Salsbury 
Thomas Smith 
Michael Stafford 
Amos Thurber 
Reuben Thompson 
Darius Thurber 
John Usher 
Abial Weaver 
Samuel Jordan 



Full lists of the other companies in this 
regiment are among the Revolutionary rolls 
in the office of the Secretary of State. 



IN RHODE ISLAND 



127 



CHAPTER IX. 

Arrival of the British Fleet at Newport. — Governor Cooke's 
Letter to General Washington. — Evacuation of the Island 
of Rhode Island by the Americans. — British erect Addi- 
tional Works. — Forts at Coddington's Point and Cove. — 
Loss of the Spitfire. — William Pearce loses his Cider. — 
The Owl's Nest. — Butt's Hill Fort. — Dumplings Bat- 
tery. — Eldred's One-gun Battery. — The Battery at the 
Bonnet. 

Early in December, 1776, Job Watson, 
from his watch tower on Tower Hill, saw far 
out on the ocean the dread object for which 
he had been watching so long. The news 
that a squadron of vessel was headed toward 
Narragansett Bay was hurriedly sent through 
the colony. The alarm companies assembled 
at their stations, and excitement ran hi^h. 
On Saturday, the seventh day of December, 
" the British fleet of eleven vessels of war, 
convoying seventy transports, having on 
board six thousand troops," sailed into Nar- 
ragansett Bay, up the west passage, around 
the north end of Conanicut Island, and 
anchored in Newport harbor. 

As soon as the intelligence of the arrival 
of the British fleet, and their occupation of 



128 REVOLUTIONARY DEFENCES 

the island of Rhode Island, reached Governor 
Cooke at Providence, he despatched a letter 
to General Washington, apprising him of the 
threatening situation in Narragansett Bay. 
It was dated at " Providence December 8 
1776 Past 10 o'clock p.m." It had been a 
day of trouble and anxiety to the people of 
Rhode Island. Messengers had brought to 
the Governor the latest accounts of affairs 
on the island, and now, well into the night, 
he wrote : — 

" Sir : — It is with great concern, I give 
you the disagreeable intelligence that the 
enemy with a fleet consisting of seventy- 
eight ships of war and transports, entered 
the harbor of Newport yesterday. 

" We had about six hundred men upon 
Rhode Island, who were obliged to evacu- 
ate it, with the loss of about fifteen or 
twenty heavy cannon ; having taken off 
the ammunition and stores, and the 
greatest part of the stock. The enemy 
have full possession of the island. 

" I am informed by General West and 
Lieutenant Barron, of the Providence, that 
they landed this morning about eight 
o'clock, with eight thousand men, who 



IN RHODE ISLAND 129 

marched in three divisions ; one towards 
Newport, the second towards Howland's 
Ferry and the third to Bristol Ferry; 
where they arrived time enough to fire 
upon the boats that brought over our 
last men, but without doing damage. 

" I have sent repeated expresses to the 
Massachusetts Bay and Connecticut. 

" The forces of the former are upon the 
march as I believe the latter are, also. 

" In great haste 
" I am your Excellency's most obedient 
humble servant 

" Nicholas Cooke." 

Sunday morning, the troops, under the 
command of Sir Henry Clinton, disem- 
barked, part of them landing at Long Wharf, 
in Newport, while the main body of the army 
landed at Greensdale, in Middletown, near 
the residence of the Hon. Nathanael Greene, 
a grandson of General Greene. The island 
of Rhode Island was now practically in the 
hands of the enemy. That Sunday night 
was devoted to excesses of the wildest kind, 
for the soldiers celebrated their first hours 
ashore in revelry and pillage. 

Many of the islanders hurriedly left their 



130 RE VOL UTIONAR Y DEFENCES 

homes, taking only such personal effects as 
they could conveniently get together, while 
those who remained were subjected to all 
manner of abuse and insults, and were com- 
pelled to take into their homes the officers 
of the Kind's regiments. The arrival of the 
army produced the greatest consternation 
through the state ; the fortifications along 
the shore were manned and strengthened, 
and the whole state " became a vast camp 
confronting the enemy." 

The British at once commenced to 
strengthen the works which had fallen into 
their hands, and to build additional defences. 
A redoubt was thrown up on the east side 
of the island at Fogland Ferry, another on 
the west side of the island, on the south side 
of Lawton's Valley, while a formidable work 
was erected on Butt's Hill, near the north 
end of the island. 

A part of the earthwork thrown up at 
Fogland Ferry, near the " Glen," may be 
seen on the Taylor farm, between McCurry's 
Point and Sandy Point, while on the west 
side of the island, on the Redwood farm, 
may be found the remains of the redoubt at 
Lawton's Valley. 

Upon the completion of these, " they in- 




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~.£U 


f, 


"T 


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IN RHODE ISLAND 



131 



trenched Newport with a strong, continuous 
line, which ran northerly along the crest of 
the height rising above the right bank of 
the inlet at Easton's Pond, then turned west- 
erly towards Tonomy Hill, and continued 



FoRT°/\| CoDDlNGTOAlb 



Point 







north of this height to Coddington's Cove." 
The forts which the American army was 
forced to abandon at Tonomy Hill were 
strengthened, and a heavy battery was erected 
at Coddington's Point. The works at the 



132 REVOLUTIONARY DEFENCES 

most important positions along this line are 
yet well preserved. 

The eastern terminus was at Bliss Hill 
at what is called Green End. This is in the 
town of Middletown, not far from the New- 
port city line, and directly opposite Honey- 
man's Hill, where on the 17th of August, 
1778 the American army erected a fort in its 
advance on Newport, remains of which may 
yet be seen on the crest of the hill south- 
erly from the Honeyman Hill road. The 
Bliss Hill fort is to-day in a remarkable state 
of preservation, and from its ramparts an ex- 
tensive view of ocean and undulating coun- 
try can be had, while Easton's Pond, the 
source of water supply for the city of New- 
port, lies at its base. 

From this point the line of intrenchments 
ran northerly towards Coddington's Point. 
Within the past dozen years all have disap- 
peared ; portions of it in 1884 could be seen 
at the Van Renssellaer place, Collin's place, 
and Bailey's farm. 

Continuing westward are Tonomy Hill 
and Beacon Hill, and the lines of the works 
there are clear and distinct. Tonomy Hill 
consists of huge boulders and outcroppings 
of conglomerate rock, making it a veritable 






mm" 







IN RHODE ISLAND 



133 



fortress. Its summit on the north, east, and 
west rises abruptly, while there is an easy 
ascent from the south, making a good road 
over which heavy guns could be hauled. A 
dense growth of cedars now cover these 



F&RT AT CopDINGTOM5 



Covn 




"^/(IIUI^ 



hills. In the centre of Tonomy Hill fort 
there is an observatory which replaces an 
old one blown down many years ago, from 
which an extensive view of Newport and its 
harbor can be seen. Northwesterly from 
these hills faint indications of part of this 
outer line of intrenchments are still visible. 
This line terminated at a point near the 



134 RE V0L UTIONAR Y DEFENCES 

corner of Coddington Avenue and Maple 
Avenue, and here are the remains of an 
elliptical fort built by the British in 1778. 
Its proportions and formidable appearance 
are best seen by approaching it from Maple 
Avenue. 

That in the best state of preservation, 
however, in this vicinity, is the Coddington's 
Point fort. Time has dealt leniently with 
this historic work, and, notwithstanding its 
exposed situation, even some of the points at 
which the guns were located may be easily 
identified. 

On the east side of the island, at Barker's 
Hill, was a large redoubt, while near it was 
a smaller one erected " to guard the ap- 
proach to the right of the British intrench- 
ments." Throughout the southern end of 
the island other earthworks were constructed 
at advantageous points about the British 
lines ; all these have now been obliterated. 

Upon the commencement of the works 
on Honeyman's Hill, by the Americans, in 
August, 1778, the British at once began an 
inner line of intrenchments ; these started 
near the foot of the present Narragansett 
Avenue at the "Cliffs," where a strong 
redoubt was constructed, and which formed 




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o 

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IN RHODE ISLAND 135 

the southern terminus ; and from this point 
wound northerly, sweeping towards the North 
Battery on the harbor front, where it ended. 
A portion of the redoubt at the Cliffs was 
visible in 1884, when General Cullum made 
his investigations, but since then it has 
entirely disappeared. In the compact part 
of the city this line crossed Kay Street at 
a point near the estate of Mrs. Judge Gray, 
of Albany; and there may be seen even 
now, on the lawn of this place, a rise in the 
ground which marks the location of a part 
of this line. 

The two armies did not come in contact 
with each other in a general engagement 
until August, 1778, when Sullivan's Expedi- 
tion against the enemy took place. Skir- 
mishes had occurred at several points on the 
bay side before this, and many attacks had 
been made by the British on unprotected 
houses, but it was not until this time that 
the engagement, which has been known as 
the battle of Rhode Island, took place. 

There is preserved in the archives of the 
state of Rhode Island an old map which 
shows the details of the operations on Rhode 
Island during Sullivan's Expedition ; it is 
without title, but is in substance the same 



136 REVOLUTIONARY DEFENCES 

as another now in the possession of the 
Massachusetts Historical Society, which has 
the title " Map of the Military Operations 
in 1777-78 on Rhode Island." These maps 
show the location of the fleets and armies 
during these operations on the island, and 
thus become particularly valuable in identi- 
fying the various historic points in connec- 
tion with the Revolutionary struggle in 
Rhode Island. 

Taking this map for a guide, it is com- 
paratively easy to identify nearly all of the 
historic places in the neighborhood. 

Commencing at the north end of the 
island is Common Fence Point. Here, on 
the evening of the 13th of March, 1777, the 
row galley Spitfire, commanded by Cap- 
tain Isaac Tyler, grounded in the night, or, 
as the entry in the records of the Council 
of War says, " struck the bottom." Near 
her at the time was the row galley Wash- 
ington. 

The captain of the Spitfire endeavored to 
get the assistance of the Washington to 
haul him off, but this aid was not forthcom- 
ing, on account of differences between the 
two commanders. When morning dawned, 
the position of the Spitfire was discovered 



IN RHODE ISLAND 



137 



by one of the enemy's boats patrolling the 
bay. 

The Spitfire had been abandoned, so that 
it was a comparatively easy task to take pos- 



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AT 



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m, 



J* 



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session of her. This was done, and as it 
was difficult to float her, she was set on fire. 
The responsibility for this loss was made 
the subject of a searching investigation by 



138 REVOLUTIONARY DEFENCES 

the Council of War. Next, south of the 
point, is the Portsmouth side of the ferry 
from the island to Bristol ; it is called Bris- 
tol Ferry. Here, on the high land near 
the Stoddard place, a few rods south of the 
Bristol Ferry House, in a field off from 
the road to Stone Bridge, the outlines of 
the Bristol Ferry fort may still be seen. 
The plough has done much to obliterate 
this work, for the land on which it is located 
has been under cultivation for many years. 
It was erected, in 1776, by the troops sta- 
tioned here in conjunction with those at the 
other end of the ferry. 

When the British took possession of New- 
port, the fort at Bristol Ferry was evacu- 
ated ; near it was the home of William 
Pearce, and here some of the officers of the 
regiment were quartered. In Mr. Pearce's 
cellar was a quantity of fine cider, six barrels 
in all. This fact seems to have been well 
known to the soldiers ; for, when they left 
the island, they carried away with them 
Mr. Pearce's cider. For this depletion of 
his stock, this gentleman promptly presented 
his bill to the General Assembly, and that 
body honored it by payment in full. 

To the east of the ferry fort is Stone 



IN RHODE ISLAND 139 

Bridge, where Howland's Ferry was formerly 
located. On the neck of land forming the 
western approach to this ferry, the main 
body of the American army in Sullivan's 
Expedition landed on August 9, 1778, "be- 
ginning half after 6 o'clock a.m.," and from 
this point they embarked when they re- 
treated from the island, on " the 30th in the 
evening." This movement of the Continen- 
tals was covered by the fort on Tiverton 
Heights, called Fort Barton, and another 
on Gould Island called the " Owl's nest." 
Gould Island is the little wooded island 
south of Stone Bridge. Fort Barton was 
so called in honor of Colonel William Bar- 
ton, of the Rhode Island Line. It is in 
Tiverton, at the top of the terraced hill 
which rises from the stage-road leading to 
Little Compton, and is reached by following 
the road leading east by Stone Bridge Cot- 
tage. From its ramparts one of the most 
picturesque views of Narragansett Bay, Sea- 
connet River, and the island of Rhode 
Island can be obtained. Continuing south- 
ward, on the island, is Butt's Hill, ap- 
proached by a cross-road called Sprague 
Lane, connecting the two main highways, 
the East and West roads. 



140 REVOLUTIONARY DEFENCES 

On March 24, 1777, Colonel Stanton wrote 
to Governor Cooke : " The enemy on Rhode 
Island are indefatigable in fortifying the 
eminences on the north part of the island, 
particularly Butt's Hill." 

The centre work at this point is by far 
the most imposing and best preserved of 
those at the north end of the island. 

The embankments and ditch, with traces 
of ravelins, are even now well preserved. In 
1848, the ruts made by the heavy wheels of 
the cannon, says Lossing, were then clearly 
visible. This fort was constructed on a 
rocky ledge, which has done much to pre- 
serve its ancient appearance. Nothing re- 
mains of the other fortifications which were 
a part of the Butt's Hill system. 

All of these were built by the British in 
March, 1777, and were occupied successively 
by the British and American armies during 
the operations on Rhode Island. Here the 
American army encamped on the night of 
the 28th of August, 1778; in front of these 
works the army made its stand the next 
day ; and from here the retreat was made 
August 29, 1778. In November, 1780, after 
the evacuation of Newport and the island 
by the enemy, Butt's Hill fort and the 




D 
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IL, 

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w 

2 
O 

o 



IN RHODE ISLAND 141 

other forts were garrisoned by the French 
army. 

In October, 1861, the Butt's Hill fort was 
occupied for one night by a detachment of 
Battery F, First Rhode Island Light Artil- 
lery, while on a recruiting expedition. Here 
they had a drill, and the men obtained their 
first experience in firing solid shot from this 
old earthwork. 

Still farther southward are Turkey Hill 
and Quaker Hill, the former to the west- 
ward, the latter to the eastward of Butt's 
Hill. Between these three hills is a low 
stretch of country, rising gently toward the 
north and south. In this valley most of the 
fighting took place, and the main loss to 
both armies was sustained, in the battle 
which took place in August, 1778. The 
works on Turkey Hill and Quaker Hill are 
no longer visible. 

The land here has been cultivated for 
many years, and the industrious island 
farmer has not allowed sentiment to inter- 
fere with his crops. 

Continuing southward were the forts and 
intrenchments hitherto referred to in and 
around Newport. 

When the American army again occupied 



142 REVOLUTIONARY DEFENCES 

this territory, additional works were built 
and those already existing were strength- 
ened. A work was built on Coaster's 
Island, and another on Rose Island, armed 
with forty pieces of heavy artillery. 

In 1 78 1, a battery was erected on Halli- 
don Hill, " as this height commanded at short 
artillery range all the batteries at Brenton's 
Point and on Goat Island." 



#\II(l((l[((((((l([|(!f|[(/((l(lf////% 

^ ■• - iriim " i/// - 



^ji([iiii|iiiinii!fiinii!|iifi(iiiniHiiH% / ''' 5 m 



Chastlllux 



This fort was first called Fort Chastellux 
" after the Chevalier de Chastellux, one of 
Rochambeau's Mareschaux des Camps ; " 
after the Revolution it was called Fort Har- 
rison, being on the Harrison farm; and later 
it was called " Fort Denham, from some local 
association." General Cullum, in his work 
previously referred to, says that in 1884 a 
portion of this fort was situated in front of 
the Thorp cottage (between Berkley and 



142 REVOLUTIONARY DEFENCES 

this territory, additional works were built 
and those already existing were strength- 
ened. A work was built on Coaster's 
Island, and another on Rose Island, armed 
with forty pieces of heavy artillery. 

In 1 78 1, a battery was erected on Halli- 
don Hill, " as this height commanded at short 
artillery range all the batteries at Brenton's 
Point and on Goat Island." 

^\II[|[flll((l[[ll!!fi(ll!(/% 



^ 4W[iii[|[iiifiii!miiiii|imi[|iHiiiii"% v %, 

tort *%0 

Chasteillux 



This fort was first called Fort Chastellux 
" after the Chevalier de Chastellux, one of 
Rochambeau's Mareschaux des Camps ; " 
after the Revolution it was called Fort Har- 
rison, being on the Harrison farm; and later 
it was called " Fort Denham, from some local 
association." General Cullum, in his work 
previously referred to, says that in 1884 a 
portion of this fort was situated in front of 
the Thorp cottage (between Berkley and 



IN RHODE ISLAND 



143 



King streets), while yet another work was 
visible on the " Ocean drive " near the south- 
west extremity of the island, toward Castle 
Hill; both have since disappeared. 

To the west of Newport on Conanicut, 
was located, in 1777, the Dumplings Rock 
battery, having an armament of eight eigh- 
teen-pound guns. 

No vestige of this remains. The present 
old ruin called Fort Dumplings, and the 
Dumplings tower, is of later construction, 
it being built between the years 1 798 and 
1800. At that time, a new system of works 
for the protection of Narragansett Bay was 
projected, among which was the Dumplings 
fort. The construction of this system was 
placed under the supervision of Major Louis 
Tousard, a Frenchman, who had served gal- 
lantly with the American army during the 
Revolution, losing an arm at the action of 
Butt's Hill. This fort is often alluded to as 
a relic of the Revolution, and to correct this 
mistaken idea, this reference to it is made. 
South of the Dumplings tower, toward 
Beaver Tail, was another fort, which has 
since disappeared; while to the north toward 
Beaver Head on the west side of the island 
was another. This is yet well preserved 



144 



REVOLUTIONARY DEFENCES 



and is situated on the Clarke farm ; these 
completed the defences on Conanicut. 

Perhaps, however, it would be an injustice 
to omit from the Conanicut defences, men- 
tion of " Eldred's one-gun battery"; for it 



INLAND 



A SI 






_,...!,:. 



jr/ 



''""0,, 



fbRTO/MTHE J . 

or $ ** 



V 



■^ 






w 



8# 



S*^ 



: ^#t°AIAMCUT 



appears to have been of some consequence, 
after all. 

On the Eldred farm on the east side of 
Conanicut lived Farmer Eldred, a patriot of 
the purest type. On his farm there was a 
great rock on the high land overlooking the 



/.V RHODE ISLAND 145 

water; here Farmer Eldred planted one of 
the guns taken from the fort on the island. 
From time to time the patriotic old farmer 
would amuse himself by firing a shot at the 
British vessels as they passed up and down 
the east passage. 

One day he was fortunate enough to put 
a ball through the mainsail of one of the 
enemy's ships. This little pleasantry, on the 
part of Farmer Eldred, was not relished by 
the Britisher; a boat was lowered, and a 
force sent ashore to dislodge the company, 
which it was supposed occupied the station, 
and spike the gun. Upon seeing the boat 
lowered, Mr. Eldred quickly hid himself in 
the swamp on his farm, and when the boat's 
party arrived on the spot nothing was found 
but the gun mounted in the cleft of the 
rock. This they spiked, but the company 
they expected to capture had vanished as 
completely as though swallowed up by the 
earth. This was Eldred's one-gun battery. 

All these works on Conanicut were occu- 
pied by the British, from the time they landed 
at Newport, in December, 1776, until the 8th 
of August, 1778, but on this date, in antici- 
pation of the occupancy of the island by 
the French, the British forces spiked the 



146 REVOLUTIONARY DEFENCES 

guns, destroyed the magazines, abandoned 
the works, and retreated to Newport. 

Across the west passage on the mainland 
in South Kingstown, at what is called Bonnet 
Point, was an earthwork called the Bonnet 
battery; this was thrown up during the years 
1777 and 1778, about the time the forts on 
Conanicut were built. It was an elliptical 



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mt: xm 



#v- %m 



Fort 



at 



- 






QNAIEIT 1 J 



work and can be seen there to-day. It 
was continuously occupied by Rhode Island 
troops. 

The form of the fort at the Bonnet has, 
undoubtedly, been much changed since it 
was erected during the Revolution. Twice 
since that time has it been rebuilt and occu- 



IN RHODE ISLAND 



147 



pied for the defence of the state. During the 
War of 181 2 a battery was located here; and 
during the Civil War, when it was reported 
that the Confederate cruiser, Alabama, was 
off the coast, it was again strengthened, and 
an artillery company located here for some 
weeks. 

So far as a careful study of the records 
and authorities relating to the Revolutionary 
period will disclose, the various forts and 
means of defence, 1 here described, are all 
that were erected on Rhode Island soil dur- 
ing the struggle for American independence. 

During the war, on occasions of alarm, 
artillery companies were stationed at many 
points along the shore, and simple breast- 
works were thrown up to cover the guns, but 
they are hardly to be considered as fortifica- 
tions. 

While many of these works have entirely 
disappeared, there are yet enough left to 
recall those stirring days when a foreign foe 
menaced the Narragansett's shores, and our 
fathers fought for liberty. 

1 An account of the naval defences is purposely omitted. 



INDEX OF NAMES. 



Aborn, Anthony, 93. 

James, 92, 109. 

John, 89. 

John A., 89. 

Lorey, 89. 

Samuel, 93, Col., 86. 
Abram, John, 92. 
Adams, Ebenezer, Lieut., 80. 

Joseph, 106, in. 

Nudigate, Corpl., 105. 
Aldrich, Abel, 8. 
Allbrow, Robert, 1 26. 
Allen, Asa, m. 

Barrett, 91. 

Beriah, 91. 

John, 93, in. 

Joseph V., Fifer, 106. 

Paul, 31, 44, 86. 

Stephen, 118. 

Thomas, 38. 
Allen, Thomas, Capt., 37, 105, 
106. 

Viall, 38; Ensign, 38; Lieut., 
105. 

William, Capt., 125. 
Almy, Jeremiah, 10. 
Andrew, Benjamin, 92. 

Whipple, 92. 
Andrews, Benjamin, Fifer, no. 

James, Jr., 10. 

William, 106. 
Angell, Daniel, n. 

Israel, Col., 125. 

James, Col., 70. 

John, Capt., 94. 

Joseph, 8. 

Nathan, 53. 

Nehemiah, Ensign, 6. 



Anthony, Daniel, 48. 

Reuben, in. 
Aplin, Stephen, in. 

William, 115. 
Arbuthnot, Admiral, 112. 
Arnold, Benedict, Col., n. 

Benjamin, Col., 6, 87, 8 

David, 95. 

George, 89. 

Israel, 89; Sergt., 88. 

Israel, Jr., Sergt., 88. 

Jabez, 6. 

James, 53; Lieut., 91. 

Jesse, 92, 109. 

Jonathan, 31; Col., 70. 

Joseph, 92. 

Lemuel, 89. 

Moses, 89. 

Oliver, Lieut. -Col., 87, I 

Othniel, Corpl., 6. 

Philip, 87, 88. 

Stephen, 109. 

William, Corpl., 6. 
Atwood, John, Sergt., 93. 
Austin, Daniel, S3. 

George, 118. 

Isaiah, II. 

Pasco, 8, 13. 

Babcock, Aaron, 1 18. 

Benjamin, 87. 

John P., 10. 

Joshua, Sergt, 9. 

Nathan, 2d, 123. 

Samuel, 101. 

William, 101. 
Bagnall, Robert, 91. 
Bailey, John, 92. 



349 



ISO 



INDEX OF NAMES 



Bailey, Lemuel, Lieut, 12. 

William, 109. 
Baker, Olney, 109. 
Barber, Thomas, 118. 
Barker, Isaac, no. 

Samuel, Corpl., 100. 
Barnes, Captain, 95. 

Samuel, 106. 
Barron, Lieutenant, 128. 
Barrows, David, 87. 
Bartlett, Isaac, III. 
Barton, William, 38; Col., 139. 
Bassett, Joseph, III. 

Zachariah, 6. 
Battey, Benjamin, 91. 

Joseph, 109. 
Bemus, Jotham, 126. 
Benedict, Nathaniel, 118. 
Bennett, Benjamin, Jr., 91. 

Edward, 8, 11. 

John, Jr., 10. 

Joseph, 8, 10. 

Micajah, in. 

William, 126. 
Berry, James, Warden, 54. 

Timothy, no. 
Bickford, Thomas, 6. 
Bicknell, Joshua, Jr., 106. 

Thomas, 26. 

Thomas W., 37, 105. 
Bigford, Thomas, Drummer, 93. 
Bishop, Naman, Corpl., 7. 

Oliver, 8. 
Bissell, Samuel, 9, 120. 

W., A. D. C, 72. 
Blackmar, Amaziah, 6. 
Blanchard, Benjamin, 126. 
Blancher, James, 6. 
Bliven, James, 9. 
Blodgett, William, 77. 
Booth, John, S. 
Boss, Benjamin, 6. 
Bosworth, Benajah, II. 

Benjamin, 104. 

Jonathan, Jr., 106. 

Joseph, 6, 13. 

Samuel, Capt. , 106. 
Bowdish, Asa, 126. 
Bowen, Jabez, Col., 22. 



Bowen, Josiah, 106. 
Bowman, Captain, 95. 
Bradford, William, Dept.-Gov., 

98, 99, 104, 123. 
Bridges, John, 12. 

Obadiah, 8. 
Briggs, Allen, 8. 

Jonathan, 126. 

Joseph, 8, 10. 

Yelverton, 109. 
Brightman, David, 92. 
Brown, Benedict, 9. 

Charles, 6. 

Christopher, 115. 

Daniel, no. 

Free, 92. 

George, no. 

Jeremiah, 115. 

John, 68, 123. 

Joseph, 43, 53, 70, 84, 93, 
109. 

Joseph, Master, 54. 

Moses, 67; Sergt., 12. 

Obadiah, 65. 

Oliver, in. 

Rowland, Ensign, 115. 

Samuel, 92. 

Tobias, 1 10. 
Bucklin, Joseph, 43. 

Squire, 6. 
Bullock, Joseph, 106. 
Burch, John, III. 
Burgess, Joseph, 89. 
Burke, Joseph, III. 
Burlingame, Jere, Corpl., 7. 

Solomon, 6. 
Burr, Ezekiel, III. 
Burrill, Captain, 73. 
Button, Isaiah, 10. 

Samuel, IOI. 

Calendar, Elisha, ill. 

Cambridge, John, 13. 

Cappell, Peter, 8. 

Capron, Oliver, 92. 

Card, Job, 92. 

Carder, James, Ensign, 91. 

Carlisle, John, 77. 

Carpenter, Elisha, Sergt., 87, 88. 



INDEX OF NAMES 



151 



Carr, Captain, 95. 

Isaac, 91. 
Carver, Oliver, 93. 
Casey, Wanton, 107. 
Chadvvick, John, 126. 
Champlin, John, 118. 

Samuel, Lieut., 100. 

Thomas, 115. 
Chapman, Rufus, 6. 
Chappell, James, Drummer, 100. 

Thomas, IOI. 
Charles, Stephen, 101. 
Chase, Job, 101. 

Joseph, 108. 

Samuel, Jr., 86. 
Child, Martin, Sergt., 100. 
Church, Joshua, 9. 

Thomas, Col., 103. 
Clarke, Asa, Drummer, 9. 

Cary, 118. 

Edward, 118. 

Eleazer, 8. 

Ethan, Capt., 9. 

George, Fife Major, 125. 

Jere, 93. 

John, Jr., 115. 

Nathaniel, 106. 

Nicholas, Sergt., 9. 

Roger, 118. 

William C, 115. 
Clinton, Sir Henry, 129. 
Cockran, Moses, Corpl., 12. 
Coddington, Edward, 109. 
Coggeshall, Caleb, 92. 

Joshua, 92. 

Thomas, 92. 
Cole, Edward, 126. 

John, 91. 

Levi, 26. 

Thomas, Lieut., 9. 
Colgrove, Caleb, 6. 
Collins, Christopher, 8, 10. 

Joseph, 10. 
Colt, Peter, Commissary, 35. 
Colvin, Peleg, 10. 

Thomas, Jr., 8. 
Coman, Zephaniah, 7. 
Compton, William, Town Sergt., 
56, 58- 



Comstock, Job, 109. 
Conant, Samuel, 106. 
Congdon, William, 10. 
Cooke, John, Lieut. -Col., 103. 

Nicholas, Gov., 24, 45, 89, 
ioi, 105, 108, 128, 129, 
140. 
Coon, Arnold, 9. 

John, 9. 

William, 118. 
Corkern, Morris, 7. 
Cornell, Ezekiel, 38. 

Gideon, Lieut., 93. 

Joseph, 109. 
Corpe, Caleb, 87; Sergt., 88. 

Stephen, Drummer, no. 
Cottrell, James, 115. 

Nathan, 115. 
Coyhues, William, 10. 
Crandall, Asa, 118. 

Gideon, 118. 

John, 126. 

Leary, 101. 

Nathan, 10. 

Simeon, 118. 

Thomas, 118. 
Crawford, Arthur, 86. 

Gideon, Jr., 86. 
Croton, Thomas, 92. 
Cullum, General, 135, 142. 
Curtis, Bethuel, 7. 
Cushing, Charles, in. 

Dailey, Solomon, 8. 
Davenport, Addington, 68. 
Davis, Joshua, 101. 

Seth, 89. 

William, 82, no. 

William, Drum Major, 125. 
Daw, Edward, 8. 
De Chastellux, Chevalier, 142. 
De Choisy, M., 114. 
Dolbey, Jonathan, 7. 
Douglas, David, 115. 

Thomas, 9. 
Drown, Benjamin, Jr., Corpl., 105. 

Daniel, 106. 
Drowne, Solomon, 53, 56. 

William, 54. 



152 



INDEX OF NAMES 



Drummer, Amos, 101. 

Dyer, Christopher, Capt., 100. 

Colonel, 120. 

Esek, 88. 

William, Jr., 115. 

Earle, William, Capt., 46, 48. 
Easterbrooks, Edward, Corpl., 

126. 
Eddy, Barnard, Capt., 26, 64, 65, 
68. 

Joseph, 65. 

Thomas, 93. 

William, 93. 
Edmans, William, 7. 
Edwards, Ephraim, II. 

John, Jr., II. 

Stephen, 8, 11. 

William, 8. 
Eggleston, Benjamin, 101. 
Elbert, Samuel, 118. 
Eldridge, Samuel, 11. 
Ellery, William, 25, 89, 98. 
Ellis, Thomas, Sergt. , 12. 
Emerson, William, Chaplain, 14. 
Ervin, James, 101. 
Exceen, John, 126. 

Fairbanks, Jonathan, 92. 
Fales, Nathaniel, 112. 
Fenner, Stephen, 89. 

Stephen, Sergt., 87. 
Field, Abner, 88, 89. 

Jacob, 1 10. 

Jeremiah, 88. 

John, 75, no. 

Nehemiah, Ensign, 7. 

Pardon, Fifer, 88. 

Peter, no. 

Thomas, 60. 

William, 61, 62, 64. 
Fiske, Caleb, Dr., 10. 

Daniel, 10, 109. 
Ford, Abel, 7. 

Foresight, Ebenezer, Corpl., no. 
Foster, Benoni, Sergt., 100. 

Elijah, 12. 
Franklin, Nathan, 11. 

Uriah, Jr., 11. 



Frink, Oliver, 9. 
Fry, Allen, 92. 
Fuller, Francis, Jr., II. 
John, 8. 

Gardiner, Allen, 115. 

Ephraim, 115. 

Frederick, 115. 

George, 9. 

John, Capt., 115. 

Lory, 115. 

Nathan, 115. 

Nicholas Easton, 115. 

Richard, 115. 

William, Lieut., 118. 
Gates, Horatio, Maj.-Gen., 35. 
Gerry, Elbridge, 25. 
Gibbs, Josiah, Capt., 85. 
Gills, John, 68. 
Gilman, Thomas, 56, 67, 68. 
Gilson, John, in. 
Goddard, William, 41. 
Godfrey, Samuel, 86. 
Goff, James, 106. 
Gonsolve, John, III. 
Good, Jacob, 12. 
Goodbed, Jonathan, 9. 
Gorham, Jabez, Sergt., 110. 
Gorton, Benjamin, 8. 

Edward, 91. 

Thomas, Capt., 85. 

William, Jr., 93, 108. 
Gouge, William, 12. 
Grant, Abiel, 106. 

Ebenezer, 106. 

John, Jr., 8. 

Thomas, Corpl., 106. 
Graves, Constant, 10. 
Gray, Charles, 126. 
Greene, Abraham, 92. 

Benjamin, 93. 

Benjamin, E., 89. 

Edward, 118. 

Godfrey, 91. 

Jacob, & Co., 39. 

James, 88. 

JohnC, 87. 

Joseph, 89. 

Lewis S., 89. 



INDEX OF NAMES 



i- 



153 



Greene, Nathanael, Hon., 129. 

Nathanael, Gen., 14, 38, 129. 

Rhodes, 87, 88. 

Richard, 88, 89. 

Samuel, 118. 

Stephen (son of John), 
Corp., 93. 

William (son of Nathl.), 
109. 

William, Clerk, 87, 88. 

William, 87. 
Griffith, George, 9. 

John, III. 

Hackston, Nathaniel, 91. 
Hall, Benjamin, 118. 

Ebenezer, 37. 

John, Sergt., 118. 

Silas, 118. 

Samuel, 37. 

William, 109. 
Hambleton, William, 92. 
Harden, William, 106. 
Harrington, Paul, Ensign, 9. 
Harris, Nathaniel, Sergt., 126. 

James, 87. 
Harvey, Paul, 118. 

Silas, 118. 

Uriah, 118. 

William, 9. 
Hawkes, John, ill, 
Hawkins, Jotham, 7. 

Luther, ill. 
Hayden, James, Corpl., 12. 
Hazard, Henry, 118. 

Jonathan, Corpl., 9. 

Stephen, 126. 
Helme, James, Jr., 115. 

Robert, 115. 

Rouse T. , Lieut., 115. 

William, 109. 
Hemenway, Moses, 12. 
Hewes, Elijah, no. 
Hewit, Charles, Sergt., 100. 

Edmund, Fifer, 100. 
Higgarty, Cornelius, 12. 
Hill, Eben, 88. 

Ebenezer, 9. 

James, 86. 



Hill, John, 10. 

Jonathan, 126. 
Hines, Pain, 7. 

Reuben, 7. 
Hitchcock, Daniel, Col., 6, 7. 
Hodge, Benjamin, Corpl., 100. 
Holbrook, Felix, 20. 
H olden, Charles, Jr., 123. 
Holdridge, William, 87, 89. 
Holley, John, 13. 
Hooker, Silas, 12. 
Hopkins, Clarke, Corpl., 100. 

Ephraim, 7. 

Esek, Capt., 46, 48. 

Jeremiah, 25. 

Joel, 7. 

Oliver, 7. 

Peleg, 93. 

Samuel, n. 

Stephen, Hon., 70. 

Timothy, Sergt., 6. 

Uriah, in. 
Hornton, Abel, 7. 
Horton, Benjamin, 106. 

Isaac, 10. 

Moses, 106. 
Howard, Silas, Corpl., 7. 
Howland, Daniel, Jr., 92. 

John, 59, 61. 
Hoxsey, Peleg, Capt., 117, 118. 
Hudson, William, no. 
Hughes, Thomas, Capt., 125. 
Humphreys, William, Lieut., 12. 
Humphries, William, Capt., 125. 
Humphry, Josiah, Jr., Corpl., 105. 
Hunt, Simeon, in. 

Ingraham, Jeremy, 104. 
Irish, George, 112. 

James, Allen, 115. 

Amos, 101. 
Jeffers, Simon, 8. 

William, 8. 
Jenckes, Stephen, 26, 43. 
Jencks, Amos, Lieut., 7. 

Oliver, 8. 
Jillson, John, III. 
Johnson, Allen, Capt., 92, 116. 



1 54 



INDEX OF NAMES 



Johnson, Edward, 101. 

Job, Corpl., 1 1 8. 

Peleg, 126. 

Stephen, 9. 

Theodate, 11S. 
Jones, Abel, 92. 

Abraham, 7, 12. 

Elijah, 13. 

Jesse, III. 

John, 68. 

William, 106. 
Jordan, Samuel, 126. 
Justin, Philip, Corpl., 126. 

Keene, Abner, no. 

Benjamin, Sergt., 1 10. 

Benjamin, Jr., Sergt., HO. 

Captain, 73. 

Prince, 26. 
Kelley, William, 106. 
Kent, Joshua, 106. 
Kilton, John I., 10. 
Kimball, Amos, 93, 108. 

David, 93. 

Joseph, Capt, 93. 

Stephen, Capt., 6. 
King, George, 8. 

William, 8. 
Kinicut, Daniel, Ensign, 105. 
Kinnon, Remington, 109. 
Kinyon, Moses, 118. 
Knight, Christopher, II. 

David, 8, 10. 

Jonathan, Jr., 10. 

Joseph, Capt., 5, 7, 10. 

Rufus, 8. 

Thomas, 10. 

Thomas, Jr., Sergt., 7. 

William, 10. 

Lake, Eli, 100. 
Lane, Captain, 95. 
Larcher, William, Fifer, no. 
Latham, John, 12. 

Joseph, 10. 
Lawrence, David, 13, 31, 68. 
Lee, General, 96. 
Lewis, John, 101. 

Jonathan, 9. 



Lewis, Lubius, 9. 

Nathan, 101. 
Libby, David, ill. 
Lockwood, Abraham, 93. 
Lovell, General, 95. 
Low, Anthony, 93. 

Anthony, Sergt., 91. 

Benjamin, in. 

Samuel, 126. 

Stephen, 91. 

Thomas, Corpl., 12. 
Luther, David, 106. 

John, in. 

Macomber, Ebenezer, Lieut., 125. 

John, Sergt., 125. 

Reuben, 126. 
Malmedy, Francois Lellorquis, 96, 

97- 
Manchester, John, 8, 11. 
Marchant, Gideon, 98. 

Henry, 98. 
Martin, Benjamin, 106. 

Edward, 26, 27, 106. 

Samuel, 106. 
Marvin, James, Warden, 54. 
Mason, Isaac, 1 1 1. 

James B., 77. 
Mathewson, John, 31, 98. 

John, Col., 70. 

Richard, 41, 91. 

Zachariah, no. 
Matteson, William, 109. 
McMillion, Charles, 101. 
Medbury, Hezekiah, 7. 

Isaac, Sergt., 6. 
Millard, Benjamin, 118. 
Miller, James, 109. 

John, 10S. 

Nathan, 31. 

Nathan, Brig. -Gen., 109. 
Monk, James, 12. 
Morris, Philip, 8. 
Munro, James, 86. 

Nice, Magnus, 126. 
Nichols, Caleb, 8. 

Charles, 92. 

Eleazer, 100. 



INDEX OF NAMES 



155 



Nichols, William, 126. 
Nightingale, Joseph, Col., 70, 
86, 87. 

Samuel, Jr., 46, 48. 
Noyes, James, Col., 123. 

O'Daniel, Manie, 13. 

Olney, Coggeshall, Capt., 125. 

Elisha, 6. 

Isaac, 41. 

Jeremiah, Capt. 7. 

Nathan, Sergt., 6. 

Stephen, 38. 

Stephen, Capt., 125. 

Tilly M., no. 
Ormsbee, Henry, 54. 
Osbond, George, 101. 

Hugh, 100. 

Page, Ambrose, 46, 48. 

Thomas, Sergt., 12. 
Paine, Oliver, 89. 
Parker, James, 10. 

Thomas, II. 

William, Jr., 126. 

William, Sr., 126. 
Payn, Oliver, 87. 
Pearce, Benoni, 75. 

James, 115. 

Samuel, Jr., 93. 

Thomas, 6. 

William, 138. 
Peck, Amos, 106. 

Elihu, 26, 27. 

George, Lieut.-Col., no. 

Lewis, 86. 

Nathaniel, 106. 

Soloman, Jr., Clerk, 106. 

William, in. 
Peckham, Barker, Lieut., 100. 

Seth, 93. ' ' 

Peirce, Samuel, 87. 
Perigo, Robert, 9. 
Perkins, Homes, 6. 

Joseph, 115. 
Perry, Benjamin, 115. 
Petril, John, 115. 
Phettiplace, William, 20. 
Phillips, Abraham, Capt., 93. 



Phillips, John, 10. 

John, Drummer, 7. 
Picker, Jonathan, 92. 
Pickering, Timothy, Jr., 37. 
Pierce, Job, Capt., 103. 

Stephen, 92. 
Pike, Captain, 95. 
Plumb, Nathaniel, Fifer, 9. 
Pomp, John, 10. 
Popple, George, 9. 

John, 9. 
Potter, Elisha, Sergt., 100. 

Holiman, Sergt., 7. 

James, 115. 

Prince, in. 

Simeon, 99, 104. 

Thomas, Lieut., 115. 

Winsor, 93. 
Power, Nicholas, Capt., 45, 60, 

67. 
Pratt, William, Sergt., 125. 
Proctor, William, Sergt. -Major, 

125. 
Putnam, Colonel, 102. 

Ralfe, Nathan, 10. 
Randall, Eleazer, 8. 

Henry, 87. 

Jeremiah, 88, 89. 

Job, Capt., 91. 

John, 87, 89. 

Waterman, 8. 
Remington, Captain, 86. 

David, Corpl., 9. 

Joseph, 10. 

Thomas, 89. 
Remock, David, 6. 
Reynolds, Henry, 115. 

Thomas, 109. 

Thomas, Corpl., 118. 
Rhodes, Charles, 87. 

James, 88, 89. 

Joseph, Surgeon, 88. 

Peter, 88. 

Robert, Capt., 108. 

Sylvester, Major, 87, 88. 

Sylvester, 109. 

William, 86. 
Rice, John, 89. 



1 56 



INDEX OF NAMES 



Rice, Randall, Ensign, ioo. 
Richmond, Barzillai, 75. 

Barzillai, Capt., 73. 

Barzillai, Col., 70. 

Ichabod, 8. 
Riggs, Abimelech, Warden, 54. 
Roberts, Collins, 8, 10. 
Robinson, Christopher, Ensign, 
no. 

Elihu, 31. 

John, 12. 
Rochambeau, 112. 
Rockwell, Jabez, 32, ^2- 
Rodman, William, 115. 
Roger, Moses, 9. 
Rolfe, Obadiah, 10. 
Rose, Abraham, 126. 

James, 115. 

John, 115. 
Rue, Daniel, 92. 
Russell, Captain, 73. 

John, III. 

William, 86. 

Salisbury, Jonathan, 93. 

Joseph, no. 
Salsbury, George, Sergt., 105. 

Philip, Corpl. , 6. 

William, 126. 
Sanders, Augustus, 118. 
Sarle, Elisha, S. 

Thomas, Jr., 8. 
Saunders, Daniel, 11S. 
Sayles, William, 109. 
Seamans, Daniel, 93. 

John, Jr., 93. 
Scranton, Daniel, 9. 
Sheffield, Jeremiah, 31, 115. 

Joseph, 118. 
Sheldon, Christopher, Gunner, 46. 

James, Capt., 88. 

John, 106, in. 

William, in. 
Sherburne, Henry, Col., 23. 

William, III. 
Shippee, Peregrine, 6. 
Short, John, Jr., 106. 

Samuel, Drummer, 106. 
Shote, James, 9. 



Singleton, Samuel, 7; Sergt., 12. 
Skinner, David, 10. 
Slack, Lemuel, 93. 
Smart, Andrew, 92. 
Smith, Amos, 9. 

Benjamin, 88. 

Ebenezer, 101. 

Gideon, 10. 

Hope, Corpl., 93. 

Ichabod, 91. 

James, m. 

John, 101. 

Jonathan, Lieut., 6. 

Nathaniel, 106; Sergt., 105. 

Peregrine, 6. 

Reuben, Corpl., 126. 

Simon, 48, 88, 89; Capt., 46. 

Stephen, 88. 

Thomas, 126. 

William, Corpl., IOO. 
Snow, Captain, 73. 

Daniel, 75; Jr., 75. 

Joseph, 75; Jr., 75; Jr., 
Lieut., no. 
Spears, Jeremiah, in. 
Spencer, General, 72. 

George, 92; son of John, 
92. 

John, 92. 

Silas, 109. 

Stephen, 92. 

Thomas, son of Abner, 109. 

William, 92. 
Springer, Knight, Drummer, 126. 
Stafford, Arnold, 108. 

Daniel, Corpl., 9. 

Michael, 126. 

William, II. 
Stainer, George, Corpl., no. 
Stanbury, John, 101, 
Stanton, Colonel, 140. 

Henry, Fifer, 118. 
Stanton, Vernon, 1 18. 
Steere, Caleb, 8, 10. 
Stone, Benjamin, 93. 

James, 8, 13. 

Job, Drummer, no. 

John, 87, 89. 

Josiah, 92, 109. 



INDEX OF NAMES 



157 



Straight, Job, 109. 
Sullivan, John, Gen., 75. 
Sumner, Captain, 70, 71. 

Thomas N., 66. 
Sunderland, Augustus, Sergt., 1 1 
Swain, John, 6. 
Sweet, Benjamin, 88; Jr., 92. 

Daniel, 92. 

Oliver, 92. 

Samuel, Capt., 80. 

Thomas, 108. 

William, Jr., 109. 

Talbot, Silas, 38. 
Tallman, Captain, 60. 
Tannant, James, 101. 
Tanner, George, 9. 
Tarbox, Samuel, 109. 
Taylor, Ambrose, 89. 

Benjamin, 93. 

William, 10; Jr., 8. 
Teale, John, in, 

Thomas, in. 
Tefft, David, in. 

George, 31, 115. 

James, 3d, 115. 

Solomon, 115. 
Tew, William, Capt., 125. 
Thayer, Eleazer, 12. 

Simeon, Capt., n, 12. 
Thompson, John, 12. 

London, 10. 

Reuben, 126. 
Thornton, Charles, 88. 

Stukely, 8, 10. 

Thomas, 6. 
Thurber, Amos, 126. 

Benjamin, 31, 43. 

Darius, 126. 
Tiffany, Ebenezer, 106. 
Tifft, Caleb, 100. 
Tillinghast, T, Col., 116. 
Titus, Simeon, 106. 
Tory, John, 115. 
Tourtellot, William, in. 
Tousard, Louis, Major, 143. 
Tripp, Bernon, in. 
Tummage, Jonas, 10. 
Tyler, Isaac, Capt., 136. 



Updike, John, 48 : Capt., 46, 

65. 
Usher, John, 126. 
Utter, Zebulon, 92. 

Varnum, General, 125. 
Vaughan, Amos, 92. 

Christopher, 91. 

Daniel, Lieut., 80. 

David, 92. 

Thomas, 92. 
Verry, William, in. 
Viall, Samuel, 106. 

Sylvester, 106. 
Von Heesingen, Colonel, 38. 

Waite, Job, 101. 

John, 115. 
Walker, Elijah, in. 

John, 6. 

Nathan, 6, 10. 
Wall, William, 86. 
Wallace, James, Capt., 44, 57. 
Walling, Jeremiah, 7. 
Wappy, John, 118. 
Warner, Ezekiel, 109. 

Samuel, Capt., 49; Lieut., 
46. 

Thomas, 89, 90; Corpl., 

9'- 

Washington, General, 20, 24, 

105, 128. 
Waterman, Asa, Capt., 35. 

Benjamin, 87. 

John, 88. 

John, Col., 84, 85, 89, 90, 

94: 95- 96- 

Nathan, 89. 

Nathan, Fifer, 7. 

William, 88. 

Zuriel, 87. 
Watson, Job, 55, 127. 

John, 106. 

Peleg, 10. 

Walter, 115. 

William, 9. 
Weatherhead, Comfort, 6. 
Weaver, Abial, 126. 

Thomas, 8. 



158 



INDEX OF NAMES 



Weeden, Ephraim, 109. 

John, 115. 
Weeks, Oliver, 8. 
Welch, James, 12. 
Wells, James, 118. 

John, 32. 

Thomas, 92. 

William, 92. 
West, General, 84, 128. 

Thomas, 93. 
Westcott, Caleb, 115. 

Eleazer, 10. 

James, 7. 

Jeremiah, 6, 91. 

Nathan, 109. 

Stukely, 8. 

Thomas, 89. 
Whaley, Job, Sergt, 116. 
Wheaton, Charles, Sergt., no. 

James, Warden, 54. 
Wheeler, Silas, Corpl., 12. 

Stephen, IOI. 
Whipple, Joel, 8. 

John, Capt., no. 

Joseph, in. 
White, Aaron, 86. 

Nathan, 8. 
Whiting, Nathan, 9. 
Whitman, David, 6. 

John, 6. 



Whitman, Philip, Ensign, 108. 

Stephen, 93. 
Whitmore, Benjamin, 11. 
Whittlesey, Nathan, Q. M. S, 

125. 
Wickes, Thomas, 94. 
Wilbor, Samuel, 10. 

Simeon, n. 
Wilcox, Stephen, 118. 
Williams, Benjamin, 88, 89. 

Jeremiah, no. 

Joseph, 6. 

Squire, 55. 

Stephen, III. 

Thomas, Drummer, 88. 

Waterman, 32. 
Willis, Jesse, 10. 
Wilmarth, Levi, III. 
Wilson, George, 115. 

Richard, 10. 
Winsor, Samuel, 65. 
Wood, Benjamin, 10. 

Benjamin, Capt., 7. 

Ezekiel, 10. 

James, 8. 
Wordin, Walter, 9. 
Wording, Arnold, 118. 

William, 118. 

Young, George, n. 



INDEX OF SUBJECTS. 



Alarm at Bristol, 105. 

East Greenwich, 108. 

Army of Observation to be 
raised, 3. 

Arrival of British fleet in New- 
port, 127. 

Attack on Bristol, account of, 

59- 

Wickford, account of, 119. 

Barrington companies respond to 

Bristol alarm, 105. 
Battery at Barber's Height, 123. 
Battery F, First R. I. L. A., oc- 
cupy Butt's Hill Fort, 141. 
Bayonet-maker exempt from mili- 
tary duty, 31. 
Beacon at Cumberland, 55. 
Providence, 43, 52, 53. 
Scituate, 55. 
Tonomy Hill, 55. 
Bill for the beacon at Providence, 

53- 

for equipments, 27; work at 
Field's Point forts, 67; Fox 
Hill Fort, 67. 
Blaskowitz's table of defences, 

124. 
Bounties provided, 19. 
British fleet threatens Newport, 
112. 
officers ridicule Continental 
officers, 37. 
British troops occupy Newport, 
68, 70, 129. 

ravage unprotected houses, 

69. 
land on Prudence Island, 85. 

Camp equipage for Warren mili- 
tia, 34. 



Cannon supplied to the towns, 39. 
Canteens, description of, 33. 
Cartridge boxes, description of, 

21. 
Census of males and arms in 

Providence, 26. 
Cider carried away by soldiers, 

138. 
Common Fence Point, Spitfire 

grounds on, 136. 

Distribution of cannon in the 
state, 121. 

Eldred's one-gun battery, 144, 
145. 

Fascines recommended for Paw- 

tuxet, 97. 
Form of enlistment, 20. 
Fort Anne, 79. 

Barton, 139. 

Chastellux, 142. 

Daniel, 107. 

Denham, 142. 

George, 79, 80. 

Harrison, 142. 

Independence, 63. 

Liberty, 79. 

"Owl's Nest," 139. 

Sullivan, 75. 

Washington, 79. 

William Henry, 7S. 
Fort at Barker's Hill, 134. 

Beacon Hill, 103. 

Beaver Head, 143. 

Beaver Tail, 117, 143. 

Bliss Hill, 132. 

Bonnet Point, 146. 

Brenton's Point, 146. 

Bristol, 104. 



'59 



i6o 



INDEX OF SUBJECTS 



Fort at Bristol Ferry, 98, 138. 

Bullock's Point, 124. 

Burr's Hill, 125. 

Butt's Hill, 130, 139, 141. 

Castle Hill, 143. 

Coaster's Island, 142. 

Coddington's Cove, 1 34. 

Coddington's Point, 131, 134. 

Dumplings, 83, 143. 

Field's Point, 61, 63. 

Fogland Ferry, 130. 

Fox Hill, 45, 48, 56. 

Goat Island, 79, 80. 

Hallidon Hill, 142. 

Hog Pen Point, 76. 

Honeyman's Hill, 132. 

Howland's Ferry, 99. 

Kettle Point, 61. 

Lawton's Valley, 130. 

Pawtuxet Neck, 61, 85. 

Popasquash Point, 124. 

Prospect Hill, 72, 73, 74. 

Quaker Hill, 141. 

Robin Hill, 59. 

Rose Island, 142. 

Sassafras Point, 45, 59. 

Tonomy Hill, 102, 103, 131, 
133- 

Turkey Hill, 141. 

Warren, 125. 

Warwick Neck, 84, 89. 
Forts on Conanicut abandoned, 

145. 
French army withdrawn from 
Rhode Island, 112. 

fleet ordered to remain at 
Newport, 113; Job Whaley 
notes departure of, 1 1 6. 

Green End, fort at, 132. 
Guard established at Boston Neck, 
103. 

Bristol, 113. 

Charlestown, 117. 

Fogland Ferry, 103. 

Fox Hill Fort, 56. 

Little Compton, 103. 

North Kingstown, 117. 

Point Judith, 117. 



Guard established at Quidnessett 
Neck, 85V 
Quonset, 120. 
Seaconnet Point, 117. 
South Ferry, 103, 117. 
Tiverton, 103. 
Watch Hill, 117. 
Wickford, 103. 
Guns and ammunition removed 

from Fort George, 80. 
Gun-makers exempt from military 

duty, 31. 
Gun-makers in Providence, 26. 

Handbills distributed to adver- 
tise trial of beacon, 49. 

Headquarters of Col. John Water- 
man, 93. 

Homestead of the Fields of Pum- 
gansett, 62. 

Intrenchments at Bristol, 104. 
Field's Point, 61, 63. 
Newport, 131, 134. 
Warwick, 96. 

Kay Street (Newport), intrench- 
ments cross, 135. 

Kentish Guards build fort at East 
Greenwich, 107. 

ordered to Newport, 113. 

Kingstown Reds ordered to New- 
port, 113. 

Letter of Governor Cooke to 
General Washington, 128. 
Solomon Drowne to William 

Drowne, 53, 57. 
General Spencer to town of 

Providence, 72. 
Capt. Asa Waterman to Peter 

Colt, 35. 
General Washington to Gov- 
ernor Cooke, 24. 
Liquor provided to encourage 

enlistments, 19. 
List of Barrington Artillery Com- 
pany, 106; Infantry Company, 
105. 



INDEX OF SUBJECTS 



161 



List of Capt. Ethan Clarke's Com- 
pany, 9. 

Capt. Peleg Hoxsey's Com- 
pany, 117. 

Capt. Stephen Kimball's 
Company, 6. 

Capt. Joseph Knight's Com- 
pany, 10. 

Capt. Jeremiah Olney's Com- 
pany, 7. 

Capt. Robert Rhodes' Com- 
pany, 108. 

Capt. Simon Thayer's Com- 
pany, 12. 

Capt. William Tew's Com- 
pany, 125. 

Capt. John Whipple's Com- 
pany, no. 

Kingstown Reds, 115. 

Pawtuxet Rangers, 87, 88. 

men ordered to Warwick 
Neck, 91, 92, 93. 
Lottery authorized to encourage 
manufacture of arms, 25. 

Massachusetts offers aid to build 
forts, 99. 

Memorial to Continental Con- 
gress, S2. 

Military companies ordered to 
work on fortifications, 73. 

Mud battery at Bristol, 104. 

Newport besieged by the British, 

44- 

town meeting authority ques- 
tioned, 82. 
inhabitants work on fortifica- 
tions, 81. 
North Battery, 83. 
North Providence Rangers at 

Warwick Neck, 94. 
Notice of trial of beacon, 50. 

Observatory at Tonomy Hill, 

133- 
Officers in command at Fort 
Liberty, 80. 



Paper mill workmen exempt from 

military duty, 32. 
Powder-horn at Valley Forge, 

description of, 32. 
Powder mills erected, 41. 
Projectiles supplied to the colony, 

39- 
Providence Company of Cadets at 

Pawtuxet, 87. 
Providence inhabitants work on 

fortification, 57, 73. 

Records of Newport referred to, 
80. 

Redoubts on road to Upper 
Ferry, 67. 

Rehoboth inhabitants build forti- 
fication, 76. 

Roof account at Providence, 26. 

Saltpetre mills erected, 41. 

Shoemakers, wigmakers, and bar- 
bers, 38. 

Spitfire galley ashore on Com- 
mon Fence Point, 116. 

Sullivan's expedition on Rhode 
Island, 135, 139. 

Table of defences in Narragansett 
Bay, 124. 

Tavern, David Arnold's, at War- 
wick, 95. 

Training days and ways, 2. 

Trial of beacon at Providence, 49. 
Tonomy Hill, 55. 

War of 1812, fortifications built, 

77- 

Warrant to Warwick company, 90. 

Warwick soldiers ordered to War- 
wick Neck, 91, 92, 93. 

Washington galley refuses aid to 
Spitfire, 136. 

Watch station at Tower Hill, 43, 

55- 
Whaley, Job, notes departure of 

French fleet, 116. 
Wickford gun, story of, 119. 



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