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Historic Pelham Blog Archive
February 28, 2005
350TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION
BOOK: "THOMAS PELL
AND THE LEGEND OF THE PELL TREATY OAK" -- $11.95 (PROCEEDS AFTER
PRINTING COSTS WILL GO TO
BARTOW-PELL MANSION MUSEUM).
CLICK HERE TO BROWSE BEFORE YOU BUY!
LEARN MORE.
Monday, February 28, 2005
Glover's Rock on Orchard Beach Road Does Not Mark the Site of the Battle
of Pelham
I receive about four or five e-mails and/or letters each week with
questions about the history of Pelham and surrounding areas. I try my best
to respond to each one. Yesterday I received an e-mail from a resident of
the Bronx with a question that I have been asked numerous times during the
last several years. He wrote: "I have a question about Glover's Rock that
I hope maybe you can answer. Where exactly was the battle fought? Was it
behind the rock or across from it?"
The answer, oddly, is that the battle was fought nowhere near the boulder
called Glover's Rock despite what the plaque affixed to the boulder says.
The story about this mistake is quite interesting in its own right.
Little scholarly attention was given to the battle until 1901 when William
Abbatt published a book about the battle. A citation to the book appears
below:
Abbatt, William, The Battle of Pell's Point (or Pelham) October 18, 1776.
Being the Story of a Stubborn Fight. With a Map, and Illustrations from
Original Photographs and Family Portraits. (NY: William Abbatt, 281 Fourth
Ave. 1901) (Library of Congress Control Number 01027896, Library of
Congress Call Number E241.P3A2).
The contents of the book have entered the public domain and I have
transcribed much of its text and posted it on the HistoricPelham.com Web
site.
Click here to read that transcription.
Although this wonderful book, published in 1901, contains a wealth of
historically accurate information as well as interesting photographs, some
of the conclusions regarding the location of the battle and the progress
of the battle have been shown to be erroneous based on Abbatt's reliance
on the so-called "Sauthier Map" published in London in 1777.
The map, by Claude J. Sauthier, is entitled "A plan of the operations of
the King's army under the command of General Sir William Howe, K.B. in New
York and east New Jersey, against the American forces commanded by General
Washington from the 12th of October to the 28th of November 1776, wherein
is particularly distinguished the engagement on the White Plains the 28th
of October. By C. J. Sauthier." High resolution images of the map together
with a MrSID file to permit offline analysis (see my postings
dated Feb. 14, 15 & 16, 2005) are available from the Library of Congress
American Memory Collection
by clicking here.
Today it is widely believed by scholars of the battle that the map
inaccurately shows a large body of British troops landing at the tip of
Pell's Point on October 18, 1776 rather than higher on the point at the
location where Shore Road ended at the time. In addition, as others have
pointed out, the map is not a particularly accurate depiction of the area
and seems to have been intended to serve as a general depiction crafted
more to show general troop movements during the relevant period rather
than the true lay of the land. As Barbara Bartlett, Pelham resident and
local historian has said many times, the Sauthier Map might best be viewed
as though it were like a New York City Subway map that intentionally shows
some distortions of geography in an effort to simplify the presentation of
the truly important data compiled as part of the map: the various subway
lines that traverse the City beneath the surface of the land. Below is an
image taken from the Sauthier Map.

When he wrote his book, Abbatt apparently was unaware of the existence
in the collections of The Library of Congress of a map known as the "Blaskowitz
Map". The Blaskowitz map was created in 1776 by Charles Blaskowitz. It is
entitled "A survey of Frog's Neck and the rout[e] of the British Army to
the 24th of October 1776, under the command of His Excellency the
Honorable William Howe, General and Commander in Chief of His Majesty's
forces, &ca, &ca, &ca." High resolution images of the map together with a
MrSID file to permit offline analysis (see my postings dated Feb.
14, 15 & 16, 2005) are available from the Library of Congress American
Memory
by clicking here. The Blaskowitz Map is widely believed to be a
surprisingly accurate depiction of the area in which the Battle occurred.
In his book published in 1901, Abbatt analyzed the letter about the battle
written by Col. John Glover who led American troops during the battle. (The
complete text of the letter is available by clicking here and scrolling
down the page.) Col. Glover provided estimates of the distances that
the British and German troops traveled on known roadways before they
reached the oncoming American troops and began fighting.
Abbatt attempted to use those estimates to place the site where the battle
began. In so doing, however, he measured from the very tip of Pell's Point
where he thought the bulk of the British and German troops had landed.
Abbatt's assumption that the bulk of the British and German troops landed
at the tip of Pell's Point, however, seems to have been inaccurate. It now
seems well-established that the bulk of the troops landed along the side
of Pell's Point at that place where Shore Road then ended when it reached
the Bay.
In his defense, William Abbatt was not the first to make such a mistake.
Earlier efforts to place the commencement and progress of the battle by
Henry B. Dawson in his book Westchester County During the Revolution, pp.
233-46 (Morrisania, NY: 1886), made a similar error.
By measuring 1-1/2 miles from the tip of Pell's Point (as suggested by a
distance estimated by Col. Glover in his letter), William Abbatt came to
the conclusion that the battle began near a spot marked by a large glacial
boulder located along what we know today as Orchard Beach Road. He placed
a photograph of the boulder in his book (Illustration 1 between pages 4
and 5) and labeled it "Glover's Rock". The name stuck. Below is a recent
image of Glover's Rock.

Not long after Abbatt published his book, patriotic citizens placed a
plaque on the boulder that adopted Abbatt's conclusions and commemorated
the battle that, it said, began "nearby". (That plaque later was
vandalized and, in 1960, was replaced by the plaque that remains affixed
to the boulder today.)
In 1926, local historian Otto Hufeland released a wonderful book
concerning Revolutionary War events in Westchester County. A citation to
the book appears below.
Hufeland, Otto, Westchester County During the American Revolution 1775 ~
1783 (Privately Printed 1926).
Once again, the book has now entered the public domain. I have transcribed
the text of Chapter V entitled "Fighting Begins in the County 1776" and
placed it on the HistoricPelham.com Web site.
Click here to read the chapter. Hufeland noted that Abbatt, Dawson and
others had relied on the Sauthier Map but had ignored the Blaskowitz Map.
He criticized their scholarship and traced the progress of the troops by
comparing Col. John Glover's letter to the Blaskowitz Map. He wrote, in
part, as follows (pages 118-19):
"For the details of the development of the battle there is practically but
one contemporary authority and that is the letter of the commanding
officer on the American side, Col. Glover, dated Mile Square October 22,
1776, to an unknown correspondent which was published in a number of
newspapers of the day. This, together with some memoranda in the diary of
President Stiles, afterward president of Yale College, who was a chaplain
in the army, the dispatch of General Howe, already quoted and the
Blaskowitz map is substantially all the contemporary information
available. Nearly all the historians treat the matter very briefly with
the exception of H.B. Dawson in his Westchester County, New York, During
the Revolution, originally written for Scharf's History of Westchester
County, and William Abbatt in The Battle of Pell's Point.
"Both writers base the location of the battle on Sauthier's incorrect map.
Mr. Abbatt in locating the first clash, intimates that the estimate of
distances made by Colonel Glover was faulty. Accepting the landing place
shown on the above map would compel the British column to pass through
tide marshes that still exist and are shown on the map accompanying Mr.
Abbatt's book. Stone walls, which played so important a part in the battle
are not generally built on marshes or salt-meadows where there are no
stones to build them with. Even today the salt-meadows extend over the
whole of this territory except where the roads have been raised above them
and the first upland begins several hundred feet west of the Harlem River
Branch Road on the Split Rock Road. The maps of the United States
Geological Survey show the topography with great accuracy and detail and a
comparison of the ground with these maps today, will show that the
original topography, except the filled-in highways, still exists."
Hufeland went on to conclude that the Battle was fought nowhere near
Glover's Rock. In effect, the place where the battle began today is a rise
near about the second tee of the Split Rock Golf Course. The Battle then
progressed across the remainder of today's Split Rock Golf Course toward
today's New England Thruway, crossing that Thruway where the troops
proceeded in the areas along today's Split Rock Road in the Village of
Pelham Manor, along Wolf's Lane to today's Colonial Avenue where it
essentially ended at the grounds of today's Pelham Memorial High School
where the British and German troops camped.
Please Visit the
Historic Pelham
Web Site
Located at
http://www.historicpelham.com/
posted by Blake A. Bell @
10:45 AM
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