
Above, British soldiers occupy the
Kearney House on
Friday evening. Below, the 32-pounder (which would fire a 32-pound cannon
ball) is fired at Fort Lee
Historic Park on Sunday afternoon.

Click here to see more photographs
of this event!
Members
from over a dozen Living History groups will commemorate the 231st
Anniversary of the British Invasion of New Jersey at Fort Lee Historic Park
on the weekend of November 17th & 18th, 2007.
Reenactors representing Continentals, Militia, British, Hessian & Loyalist
troops will take part in different field and camp activities throughout the
weekend.
please click here for a schedule of
events
Click here to read an article about the event in the Record
Fort Lee
Historic Park, located on Hudson Terrace in Fort Lee, has added several new
attractions over the last eighteen months, including a replica blockhouse,
officer’s hut, and functional 32-pounder artillery piece.
Fort Lee
was originally constructed in 1776 to be used in conjunction with Fort
Washington, located diagonally to the north on the opposite side of the
Hudson River, as a means of closing the vital waterway to British shipping,
as shown in a letter from Fort Lee
in October 1776. The
fall of Fort Washington on 16 November 1776 rendered Fort Lee irrelevant.
The Crown Forces struck quickly in following their victory at Fort
Washington, capturing Fort Lee without a shot four days later,
as described
by a British officer on the scene.
While the
fort was demolished by the British, its strategic location proved useful at
other points in the war. During the British Grand Forage of 1778, the post
and ferry anchored the British right flank and provided an easy means of
landing provisions for the army,
as indicated in correspondence from Gen. Lord Cornwallis; two
years later the post was briefly occupied by Continental troops engaged in
their own foraging expedition,
as found in an extract from a letter from an officer
in August 1780. The only true “Battle of Fort Lee” however would come in
1781 when Loyalist woodcutters commanded by Major Thomas Ward attempted to
establish a blockhouse and post on the site. After a week’s worth of
skirmishing with the Bergen County Militia, the idea was abandoned,
as recounted
in a contemporary Loyalist newspaper account.
Please join
us in bringing history to life at Fort Lee Historic Park!