The Story of Manhattan by Charles Hemstreet
page 90 of 149 (60%)
page 90 of 149 (60%)
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The ground occupied by the British soldiers was then Vandewater Heights.
Much of this high ground still remains and is now called Columbia Heights, and Columbia University and Grant's Tomb are upon it. The American forces were scattered over what was then Harlem Heights, as far as Washington's head-quarters in the country mansion overlooking the Harlem River above Harlem Plains. It was the house of Roger Morris, a royalist who had fled at the approach of the American soldiers, and it still stands at 160th Street close by St. Nicholas Avenue. On the heights and in the valley a battle was fought, beginning with a light engagement quite early in the day, with more and more men of both armies gradually joining in until there were 5,000 Americans against 6,000 British, with several thousand of each side held in reserve. [Illustration: Map of Manhattan Island in 1776, Showing the American Defences &c.] The battle ended in the afternoon with the defeat of the British, who lost 200 of their number. This was a great victory for the Americans, who fought against superior numbers--great because the men had lost heart after the defeat on Long Island, and the forced retreat from the city. There was sorrow for the dead, for even victories have a sad side. Every one of the 100 American soldiers who were killed that day were brave men, and though all their names are not written in history, the manner of their death urged on their companions in the days that followed. |
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