Everything about Evacuation Day New York totally explained
Following the
American Revolution,
Evacuation Day on
November 25 marks the day in
1783 when the last vestige of
British authority in the
United States — its troops in
New York — departed from
Manhattan. The last shot of the
American Revolutionary War was reported to be fired on this day, as a British gunner on one of the departing ships fired a cannon at jeering crowds gathered on the shore of
Staten Island, at the mouth of
New York Harbor (the shot fell well short of the shore).
Background
Following the first and largest major engagement of the
Continental Army and
British troops in the
American Revolutionary War, at the
Battle of Long Island (also known as the
Battle of Brooklyn) on
August 27 1776, General
George Washington and the
Americans retreated to Manhattan Island. The Continentals withdrew north and west and, following the
Battle of Fort Washington on
16 November 1776, evacuated the island. For the remainder of the Revolutionary War much of what is now
Greater New York and its surroundings were under British control.
New York City became, under
Lord Howe and his brother
Sir William, the British political and military center of operations in
North America. Correspondingly, the region became central to the development of an American
intelligence network, headed by Washington himself. The famous
Nathan Hale was but one of Washington's operatives working in New York, though the others were generally more successful. The city suffered two
devastating fires of dubious origin during the British occupation. These resulted in the British forces and prominent
Loyalist collaborators occupying the remaining undamaged structures, relegating the fire scarred ruins for the rest of the city's residents to live in squalor. In addition, over 10,000 American soldiers and sailors died through deliberate neglect on
prison ships in New York waters (
Wallabout Bay) during the British occupation — more than died in every single battle of the war, combined. These men are memorialized, and many of their remains are interred, at the
Prison Ship Martyrs' Monument in
Fort Greene Park,
Brooklyn, overlooking the nearby site of their torment and deaths.
The Evacuation
In mid-August 1783,
Sir Guy Carleton received orders from London for the evacuation of New York City. He told the President of the
Continental Congress that he was proceeding with the withdraw of refugees and military personnel as fast as possible, but it wasn't possible to give an exact date because the number of refugees entering the city had increased dramatically. More than 29,000 refugees were evacuated from the city. The British also evacuated former slaves and didn't return them to the Americans into slavery as the
Treaty of Paris had required them to do.
Carleton gave a final evacuation date of noon on November 25. Entry into the city by George Washington was delayed until after a British flag had been removed. Wounded British pride resulted in the nailing of a
Union Jack to the flagpole in the
Battery Park at the southern tip of Manhattan, and the greasing of the pole. After a number of men attempted to tear down the offending symbol of
tyranny, a veteran,
John Van Arsdale, was able to climb the pole with the use of
cleats, remove the flag, and replace it with the
Stars and Stripes before the British fleet had sailed out of sight.
Sir Guy Carleton, the governor
Andrew Elliot, and some other former British officials left the city on December 4. George Washington left the city immediately after the British departure.
Commemoration
For many years, until the warming of relations with Britain immediately preceding
World War I, this event was commemorated annually with boys competing to tear down a Union Jack from a greased pole in Battery Park, as well as the anniversary in general being celebrated with much adult revelry and corresponding beverages.
In the 1890's the anniversary was celebrated at Battery Park with the raising of the Stars and Stripes by Christopher R. Forbes, the great grandson of John Van Arsdale, with the assistance of a Civil War veterans' association from Manhattan — the
Anderson Zouaves.
John Lafayette Riker, the original commander of the Anderson Zouaves, was also a descendant of John Van Arsdale. Riker's older brother was the New York genealogist
James Riker, who authored
Evacuation Day, 1783 for the spectacular 100th anniversary celebrations of 1883, which were ranked as “one of the great civic events of the nineteenth century in New York City.”
In 1900 Christopher R. Forbes was denied the honor to raise the flag at the Battery on
Independence Day and on Evacuation Day and it appears that neither he nor any veterans' organization associated with the Riker family or the Anderson Zouaves took part in the ceremony after this time.
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