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| Revised: October 02, 2007.
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The Village of Hurley During
the Revolutionary War
By Members of the Hurley Heritage Society
October 16,1777 through December 18,1777
When the British forces under General John Vaughan burned the village of
Kingston on October 16,1777, they found the village vacated, with the exception
of a few stragglers and the militia forces who were defending it. The residents
of Kingston had fled southward, through the lower section of the Town of Hurley
the evening before, and those who did not, did so the following morning when the
artillery battle between the American and British ships began around 9:00a.m.
During the afternoon of the 17th, a party of British regulars had
started down Hurley Avenue, burning houses and barns as they went. The last
house they burned was the Schoepmoes house on the Town Line. At the time of the
Revolution, that house was in plain sight of Hurley's Main Street (trees near
homes had been cut for firewood). The billowing smoke from the burning buildings
on Hurley Avenue would have been very noticeable in Hurley, and those who saw it
would have fled in fear, knowing that they were next, as there were no forces to
stop or slow the advance of the British.
Hurley and it's grain crop was saved from destruction when the British
soldiers on Hurley Avenue heard the "retreat" signal blown on a
whistle and were called back to the Strand to board their ships. The other
reason the British did not reach Hurley was the four hour artillery fight that
had been made by the militia of the first Ulster regimen under Colonel Johannes
Snyder and Major Adrian Wynkoop. This battle delayed the British from advancing
on Kingston and Hurley. There is little doubt that General Vaughn had intended
to destroy the granaries of Kingston and Hurley on his way to assist t general
John Burgoyne in Saratoga. The loss of the entire fall crop at Kingston, Hurley
and Marbletown, would have been a severe blow to the colony, New England and the
war effort that winter of 1777.
General George Clinton had anticipated the British advance up the Hudson to
Kingston, however, his Continental Army was in poor condition from the recent
battle at Forts Montgomery and Clinton on October 6yh and could not move as fast
as necessary. The Continental Army also ran into masses of people fleeing south
from Kingston on the evening of October 16th and was further delayed while that
traffic jam was sorted out.
The advance units of the Continental Army reached the outskirts of Kingston
during the British withdrawal on the 17th but did not engage the
enemy. General Clinton decided to encamp his troops at the village of Marbletown,
from where he could watch the movements of the British and temporarily establish
his headquarters at the Oliver House (on old 209). A reconnaissance of the
Kingston area the following morning revealed that the British force had moved up
the river. The need to be closer to Kingston and the Hudson River was recognized
and general Clinton moved his command to the village of Hurley that day,
however, the main body of the army remained at Marbletown.
Hurley village was an ideal location for a military outpost. Hurley avenue
provided ready access to the village of Kingston and areas south. Dewitt mills
road provided access to the strand an area on the Rondout Creek and the Hurley
Mountain Road was the back road to Saugerties and Kaatsbaan to the north.
Hurley Main Street became a military outpost with guards stationed at all the
roads leading into the village. There were also guards stationed at the A.B.
Houghtaling home, the Wynkoop Inn and the Dumond (Guard) House. These guards,
from Col Samuel Webbis Connecticut Regiment, were dressed in British uniforms - red
with yellow facing. The uniforms were originally slated to be replacement
uniforms for the regiments under British General John Burgoyne, but the ship
carrying them to Montreal had been captured by the American navy.
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