
For about one week in
1781, the American Revolution centered its vengeance and complexity on Fort
Lee, New Jersey. It was not the clash of major armies, but the combat of civil
war, as Colonel Theunis Dey’s Bergen County Militia fought against the Loyal
Refugee Volunteers under Captain Thomas Ward. Many of Ward’s corps were former
Bergen County residents who had been driven from their homes by the new State
of New Jersey—hence the term “Refugee.” They were out for vengeance against
their former neighbors, the men who made up the militia under Dey.
Many are familiar with
the role that Fort Lee played during the 1776 Campaign, when with Fort
Washington across the Hudson River, it guarded against British shipping. The
fort fell to the British on the morning of November 20, 1776, after which the
British demolished most of the works. While the former post and its ferry
below would be used in raids into Bergen County, no permanent post was
contemplated there. Until 1781.
The New York City area,
garrisoned by over 10,000 British, Loyalist, and German troops, along with
thousands of Loyalist Refugees—not to mention a large civilian
population—consumed large amounts of fuel in the normal course of the year. In
the eighteenth century, “fuel” was primarily wood. Thomas Ward’s corps was
raised in 1780 to address this need: to cut wood in areas of Bergen County
nominally under British control. The corps established a post at Bull’s Ferry,
several miles below Fort Lee and north of the British post at Paulus Hook
(Jersey City). Despite a dramatic victory over a force of ten times their
number under General Anthony Wayne in July of 1780, the corps found the post
too dangerous for their taste, and they removed to Bergen Point (Bayonne). At
each post the corps built a “blockhouse” for their defense. A blockhouse was a
thick wooden structure, generally two stories high, with slits to fire
musketry out of; often, small cannon were also mounted.
While Bergen Point was
better protected against attack, defending the post still took time, and
raiding northern Bergen County from this southern outpost was difficult. This,
coupled with legal disputes regarding compensation for the inhabitants whose
wood they cut, induced the corps to look for a new post. They chose Fort Lee.
On the morning of May 14,
1781, a fleet of small vessels carrying over two hundred Refugees arrived off
Fort Lee. After landing with their artillery and horses, the troops marched
into English Neighborhood (as the general area was known) and dispersed a
militia picket posted there. A party of militia returned later that day to
find the Refugees had started work on a new blockhouse, built upon the remains
of old Fort Lee. They commenced firing from a “stone house” a hundred yards
away, but the Refugees stormed the house and drove them out.
Colonel Dey, from his
home in Preakness (Wayne), put out the call for the militia. In a gathering
not seen since the beginning of the war, hundreds of militia flocked from
across the county, joined by state troops stationed at Hackensack. They knew a
post at Fort Lee would give Ward’s men a perfect vantage point to range far
into the countryside, bringing the war into every corner of the county. The
fort was, as Private Harman Blauvelt of Harrington recalled it, “a nest of
Tories, Refugees and British.”
After rendezvousing at
the Liberty Pole in Englewood, Colonel Dey led his men, as many as four
hundred, to attack the Refugees at Fort Lee. They engaged in a spirited
contest, but the militia was again driven off, once more retiring to Liberty
Pole to lick their wounds and count their losses. (Among them was Private John
Devoe of Hackensack, who was taken prisoner after being shot,
bayoneted, clubbed, and cut down by a cavalryman’s sword. He not only survived
his ordeal but was exchanged and serving again in about seven weeks.)
For the next couple of
days there was a lull in the fighting—giving Ward and his Refugees a chance to
fortify their position. For security, they retired to their ships each night,
rather than stay on shore and be open to a surprise attack. Each morning the
troops would land from the shipping and march up to the works, probably from
the area that is now Edgewater. The militia, taking note of this routine, laid
an ambush for them in the defiles leading up to the works. After initially
capturing a lieutenant and a private of the Refugees, the militia pursued the
fleeing Loyalist advance guard. Ward countered by bringing his artillery to
bear on them; this, coupled with a flanking maneuver and bayonet charge,
forced the militia to retire from the field. After five days, each side was
stalemated: the militia could not force the Refugees away, and the latter
could not spend enough time building their blockhouse.
George Washington, from
his headquarters at New Windsor, New York, was apprised of the situation by
May 17, when he ordered Colonel Alexander Scammell to proceed to Fort Lee and
drive off the Refugees. Colonel Scammell was at the time in Westchester
County, putting in order a new corps of Continentals formed to handle events
such as this. This force proceeded across the river to Nyack, where to their
surprise, no food was waiting for them. With no food of their own, Scammell
and his men were delayed some time before provisions arrived from West Point.
The British high command
in New York City was well aware of the fighting at Fort Lee, as well as
Colonel Scammell’s moves and his intention of attacking the Refugees. Sir
Henry Clinton, the British commander, ordered almost two thousand crack troops
in motion, including cavalry, Hessian riflemen, and the Loyalist New Jersey
Volunteers, many of whom were also from Bergen County. Sir Henry at the same
time dispatched his adjutant general, Lieutenant Colonel Oliver DeLancey Jr.
to Fort Lee to assess the situation for himself. DeLancey reported that the
Refugees had made little progress in fortifying their position, and that he
doubted their ability to do so in the future. Clinton ordered Ward to cease
his efforts and return to their shipping. Grudgingly, the Refugees left Fort
Lee for good. The other troops were ordered to return to their quarters, thus
ending the chance for a major clash of armies.
Scammell and his men,
finally fed, remained unaware that the Refugees were on the point of
withdrawing. From Nyack his corps proceeded south as far as Closter, where an
immense rain storm not only soaked the men, but wetted their ammunition. There
he would have to stay, spending the night in wet clothes, sharing barns with
the farmers’ livestock. On the morning of May 22, examining the state of his
men and their arms, he determined they were in no shape for any action, and he
reluctantly ordered them north to Tappan. He was heartened, however, to hear
from an officer he had sent to scout Fort Lee that the Refugees had abandoned
their position and were on board their shipping, which by this time had fallen
somewhat down the river. Scammell remained in the Tappan area until May 28,
when Washington ordered him to return to Westchester.
The Battle of Fort Lee
was over.
This series of clashes
was not the last of the fighting in Bergen County, but it was the last
involving over five hundred men. Colonel Dey and his men would resume their
nightly vigils of keeping guard against Refugee forays. Ward was made a major
for his efforts. After establishing a new post to the south of Fort Lee, which
was named Fort DeLancey, the Refugees resumed their wood cutting and their
raids, striking at such places as New Bridge, Moonachie, English Neighborhood,
and Closter. Colonel Scammell would not live to see the end of the war: he was
killed during the Siege of Yorktown the following October. Thomas Ward and
many of his men would settle on free land provided by the King in Digby, Nova
Scotia.
Todd Braisted,
who is coordinating the events in May,
is a past president of the
Bergen County Historical Society. He continues to
extensively research the Revolution in Bergen County, particularly from the
often overlooked Loyalist perspective.

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