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Revolutionary War Battles
"The
Battle of Stony Point" July 15, 1779
By 1778, the war had settled into a
stalemate. Washington was encamped around British-occupied New York.
The British were unable to attack Washington, and New York was too
strongly defended for Washington to attack. In the meantime, a war of
plunder took place, with British troops taking part in various attacks
on civilians that began to turn even many of the royalist supporters
against them. General Conway, speaking to the House of Commons in
1779, stated: O the robe and the mitre animating us in concert t
massacre, we plunged ourselves into rivers of blood, spreading terror,
devastation, and death over the whole continents of America;
exhausting ourselves at home became the objective of horror in the
eyes of indignant Europe! It was our reverend prelates who led on this
dance, which may be justly styled the dance of death!Such is the
horrid war which we have maintained for five years." In May 1779,
General Clinton led his troops up the Hudson River, capturing the fort
at Stony Point as well as the one at Verplanck. In response,
Washington personally prepared an assault to retake Stony Point. In
the early morning hours of July 15th, three columns of continental
soldiers, 1200 men in all, converged on the fort. The fort was swiftly
overwhelmed. Fifteen American soldiers were killed and 83 were wounded
. Of the redcoats troops, 63 were killed, 74 were wounded and 543 were
taken prisoner.