Military History – City of Smoke https://www.cityofsmoke.com New York in History and Anecdote Sat, 26 Dec 2015 02:28:42 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.2 Rebels on the Green https://www.cityofsmoke.com/archives/1041 https://www.cityofsmoke.com/archives/1041#respond Sat, 26 Dec 2015 02:00:30 +0000 http://www.cityofsmoke.com/?p=1041 Continue reading "Rebels on the Green"]]> https://www.cityofsmoke.com/archives/1041/feed 0 I Fights Mit Sigel https://www.cityofsmoke.com/archives/1106 https://www.cityofsmoke.com/archives/1106#comments Mon, 22 Jun 2015 05:13:34 +0000 http://www.cityofsmoke.com/?p=1106 Joseph Brodsky, in "Homage to Marcus Aurelius," describes the "etiquette of equestrian statuary: "...when a horse, for instance, rears up under the rider, it means that the latter died in battle. If all of its four hooves rest on the pediment, that suggests he died in his four-poster." Up at Riverside Drive and West 106th Street, Karl Bitter’s heroic bronze represents Major General Franz Sigel, U.S. Army, astride his stallion (it is, as the Spanish say, an entire horse), gazing toward the Palisades. The horse’s four feet are firmly planted in the ground. He is going nowhere, as if in protest to his rider’s latest imbecility.]]> https://www.cityofsmoke.com/archives/1106/feed 1 Sheridan’s Ride https://www.cityofsmoke.com/archives/1075 Sat, 07 Feb 2015 01:03:42 +0000 http://www.cityofsmoke.com/?p=1075 Continue reading "Sheridan’s Ride"]]> The Glorious November 25th https://www.cityofsmoke.com/archives/933 Wed, 04 Feb 2015 18:34:47 +0000 http://www.cityofsmoke.com/?p=933 The fighting ended when Cornwallis surrendered his army to George Washington at Yorktown on October 19, 1781. But the Royal Army held New York for another two years. They had taken the city in the fall of 1776. By 1782, New York City's population was less than 10,000 Most resided below Wall Street. Accident, disaster, and the war had disrupted civic life. The Great Fire of September 21, 1776, had burned everything between Whitehall and Broad Streets, as far up Broadway as Rector Street and as far up Broad as Beaver St. Rents rose 400 percent within the first year of occupation; the price of food and other goods and services 800 percent. The provincial assembly, city council and courts were dormant, although nothing indicates the politicians had stopped drawing their salaries. The city was governed by the Royal Army, and in the absence of a free press its government had become corrupt. ]]> Haughty Bill, Fighting Cock of the Army https://www.cityofsmoke.com/archives/808 https://www.cityofsmoke.com/archives/808#respond Wed, 04 Feb 2015 01:53:38 +0000 http://www.cityofsmoke.com/?p=808 Broadway and Fifth Avenue meet between 23rd and 25th Streets, across from Madison Square Park. North of the intersection stands a marble obelisk. On bands around the shaft are names of battles and wars: Monterey, Chapultepec, Chippewa, Molina del Rey, Churubusco, Contreras. On its southern face is a bronze relief]]> https://www.cityofsmoke.com/archives/808/feed 0 Trouble up in Harlem https://www.cityofsmoke.com/archives/713 Mon, 02 Feb 2015 04:13:48 +0000 http://www.cityofsmoke.com/?p=713 If warfare were boxing, General Sir William Howe had George Washington on points in early September 1776. Having driven the rebels off Long Island in eight days, Sir William now spent two weeks in peace negotiations with John Adams and Benjamin Franklin at Colonel Christopher Billopp's stone mansion in Tottenville, Staten Island, now called Conference House. Howe's secretary wrote, "They met, they talked, they parted. Nothing now remains but to fight it out..." Washington had reorganized his army, with 5,000 men in New York City, below Chambers Street in lower Manhattan; 5,000 along the East River; and 9,500 on Harlem Heights, the bluffs running from the Hudson at 135th Street to Point of Rocks at 127th Street and St. Nicholas Avenue to the Harlem River at 155th Street. On September 12, Congress authorized Washington to withdraw from New York City. The army began moving supplies to Harlem Heights via the West Side's Bloomingdale Road and the East Side's Post Road.]]> Napoleon’s Older Brother https://www.cityofsmoke.com/archives/543 https://www.cityofsmoke.com/archives/543#respond Sat, 31 Jan 2015 05:43:48 +0000 http://www.cityofsmoke.com/?p=543 On August 19, 1815, the Commerce, an American brig of 200 tons, Captain Misservey commanding, raced through the Narrows under full sail after outrunning two British frigates in the lower Bay.  Someone—Misservey never said who—had paid him 18,000 francs in gold to depart immediately from Bordeaux for New York, and]]> https://www.cityofsmoke.com/archives/543/feed 0 Honore Jaxon, Professional Rebel https://www.cityofsmoke.com/archives/340 https://www.cityofsmoke.com/archives/340#comments Fri, 30 Jan 2015 04:08:14 +0000 http://www.cityofsmoke.com/?p=340 In December 1951, a ninety-year-old man was evicted from 157 East 34th Street. The building's former live-in janitor and furnace tender, his old age and ill-health had precluded satisfactory performance and the landlord had fired him. Out on the sidewalk, his books and papers, neatly tied and wrapped in brown paper, were piled six feet high, eleven feet across, and forty feet long. Major Honoré Joseph Jaxon told reporters that]]> https://www.cityofsmoke.com/archives/340/feed 1 The Battle of Brooklyn https://www.cityofsmoke.com/archives/275 Thu, 29 Jan 2015 21:50:04 +0000 http://www.cityofsmoke.com/?p=275 At first light, Daniel McCurtin awoke. He checked the weather and then glanced down the Upper Bay toward the open sea. He paused. There had been a change during the night. It was June 19, 1776, and the British had come. General Sir William Howe, commanding His Majesty's forces in North America, had passed the Narrows with forty-eight men-of-war and transports. Neither McCurtin nor the hundreds of New Yorkers who soon lined the Battery and the waterfront piers had seen anything like it. They had seen nothing yet....]]> The Drunkard and the Dancing Master https://www.cityofsmoke.com/archives/1125 Wed, 14 Jan 2015 17:09:19 +0000 http://www.cityofsmoke.com/?p=1125 Even today, when people often change careers, General Edward Ferrero’s resume might seem startling. The son of Italian political refugees, the future general was practically raised on the shining floors of the dance academy’s his father ran at the northeast corner of 14th Street and 6th Avenue, becoming a dancer, choreographer, and teacher, even teaching dancing to the cadets at West Point. Yet the dance master was also a lieutenant colonel in the New York National Guard....]]>