On September 15, 1776, the British army under General William Howe invaded
Manhattan Island, landing at an open field on the banks of the East River,
roughly where the United Nations sits today. George Washingtons Continental
Army, still in disarray after its miraculous escape following the disastrous
Battle of Brooklyn some two weeks earlier, retreated north to Harlem Heights,
leaving New York in British hands. Control of the city was Howes primary
objective; located at the mouth of the strategically vital Hudson River,
it had become the centerpiece of Englands strategy for putting down
the American rebellion. However, as Barnet Schecter reveals in his stirring
narrative, far from furnishing a key to the colonies, New York proved to
be the fatal albatross that strangled the British war effort.
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The Battle for New York tells the story of how the city became the
pivot on which the American Revolution turnedfrom the political and
religious struggles of the 1760s and early 1770s that polarized its citizens
and increasingly made New York a hotbed of radical thought and action; to
the campaign of 1776, which turned todays five boroughs and Westchester
County into a series of battlefields; to the seven years of British occupation
and martial law, during which time Washington and Congress were as focused
on getting the city back as the British were on holding it. The extraordinary
campaign in the fall of 1776, which forms the dramatic heart of Schecters
chronicle, has been overshadowed by more famous engagements at Bunker Hill,
Saratoga, and Yorktown, and by the winter at Valley Forge. Yet the contest
for New York was by far the largest military venture of the Revolutionary
War; it involved almost every significant participant in the war on both
sides; and there can be little doubt that during this campaign, the fate
of America hung in the balance on several occasions. Moreover, the outcome
had a direct impact on the major turning points of the rest of the war.
Schecter delights in linking eighteenth-century events with the citys
modern landscape, illuminating the forgotten battlefield that remains in
our midst. He skillfully weaves into his narrative the memorable and passionate
voices of those who were thereAmerican private Joseph Martin, British
second-in-command Henry Clinton, patriot-turned-Tory William Smith, minister
Ewald Shewkirk, Nathan Hale, Benedict Arnold, and many othersthereby
tracing the impact and meaning of the revolution in personal terms and giving
his story a powerful human dimension. A profound and memorable saga in its
own right,
The Battle for New York offers valuable new insight into
the American Revolution.