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The fire that backfired: the British torching of Danbury, Connecticut, did not produce the desired effect--thanks in part to the midnight ride of 16-year-old Sybil Ludington.

Publication: The New American
Publication Date: 03-MAY-04
Format: Online - approximately 3009 words
Delivery: Immediate Online Access
Full Article Title: The fire that backfired: the British torching of Danbury, Connecticut, did not produce the desired effect--thanks in part to the midnight ride of 16-year-old Sybil Ludington.(History--Struggle For Freedom)

Article Excerpt
From the deck of the H.M.S. Senegal, Major General William Tryon surveyed the peaceful beach outside Fairfield, Connecticut, at sunset, on April 25, 1777. In the dying rays of the sun, the pastoral scene at the mouth of the Saugatuck River seemed at odds with the arrival of his 26 ships, carrying 2,000 of England's best soldiers and six pieces of artillery. There was no sign that the rebels intended to offer any resistance. Nonetheless, he intended to give Connecticut a lesson it wouldn't soon forget. He had, in fact, carried a grudge against the rebellious colony ever since Connecticut patriot Captain Isaac Sears descended upon New York with 75 dragoons, entered Tory publisher James Rivington's office, destroyed his press and--with unforgivable audacity--converted the iron type into bullets.

Tryon, the royal governor of New York, now commanded the invasion of Connecticut. At 52 years of age, Tryon was an officer in the regular British army as well as commander of the loyalist provincials in New York. With many successful military operations under his belt, he surely must have felt that this one would be no different.

The British landing was uneventful, and all were ashore by 10:00 p.m. The beach being a less than satisfactory bivouac spot, Tryon started his men marching inland in the bright moonlight, toward Redding, Connecticut. Tryon intended to castigate the Connecticut rebels, and to endear himself to Admiral Lord Richard Howe, by destroying the food and ammunition his Tory spies assured him lay in Danbury. Suddenly, there was a shout from the darkness ahead.

"Who goes there?"

"You will know soon," replied Tryon, scornfully.

Instead of continuing the conversation, the hidden challengers replied with rifle shots, killing several of Tryon's men and wounding others. The advancing British column returned fire, but their challengers melted away into the surrounding woods. Tryon paused his men long enough to load his dead and wounded into an oxcart, sending them back to the ships. Then he pushed on into the night. This encounter with the rebel Captain Disbrow and his "Gallant Seventeen" taught Tryon that marching in the dark through enemy territory wasn't without risks. He needed to find a secure spot in which to spend the night.

Tryon's March to Danbury

The next morning, while Tryon breakfasted royally in Redding at William Heron's house (a generous Tory), his men searched the town for prominent patriots. They seized three--Stephen Betts, James Rogers and Jeremiah Sanford. The latter was only 10 years old. Get the young boys, Tryon had instructed his men, for they "would very soon grow into rebels." (Young Jeremiah never had the opportunity to grow into a rebel. Though Betts and Rogers were released several days later,...

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