Map/Chart > New York, NJ, LI & Connecticut
A plan of the operations of the King's Army under the command of General Sir William Howe against General Washington in New York and East New Jersey.
The chart shows New York Island and the Hudson River as far north as Pecks Kill and concentrates on the progress of the King's army between 12th October and 28th November 1776. It denotes American troop movements in blue and British in red.
| Technical Information |
| Reference: |
A204 |
| Date |
25th February 1777 |
| Hydrographer/Surveyor/Artist: |
Claude Joseph Sauthier |
| Size Of Original: |
w 23" x h 32" |
| Paper Type |
Hahnemuhle German Etching 310gsm (original size), Omnijet Superior Matt Graphic 180gsm (half size) |
Description
Drawn by Claude Joseph Sauthier and engraved by William Faden, this chart takes the viewer through all of the stages of the British advance and the American withdrawal through upper New York Island with the engagement at White Plains on the 28th October being especially detailed.
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As the war progressed the American Commander-in-Chief, George Washington, increasingly realized the importance of avoiding meeting the superior British forces in an open field engagement. At
White Plains he chose positions which would, hopefully, allow him to fight from behind defensive positions but he failed to secure the nearby high ground of Chatterton's Hill, which dominated the American lines. When the British arrived they made to secure the hill, hoping to dominate the American positions as the Americans had done to them in Boston when taking Dorchester Heights. The engagement at
White Plains was therefore more about the struggle to dominate Chatterton’s Hill than it was anything else. It also serves as an example of
Washington's inability as a military strategist.
As it turned-out the Americans were dogged in their resistance and lost only half of the 250 men lost by the British. The victory proved expensive for the British and ultimately achieved little, especially when General Howe, once again, hesitated in his pursuit of
Washington after a battle. Five days later, on the 3rd November, he turned his British army south again toward the Hudson River and King's Bridge.
The events after White Plains depicted on the map include the operations of the British under General William Howe and his generals to finally take Fort Washington (November 16th) and Fort Lee (November 20th) and finish with the routes taken in pursuit of Washington and his army through New Jersey on his way to Pennsylvania.
The chart is clearly drawn without the degree of geographic accuracy or detail found in the work of other cartographers of the time. Note that
Montresor
Island (now Randall's Island) and
Buchanan
Island (now Ward's island) are labelled the wrong way around. Of further note, Des Barres names
Buchanan
Island as '
Barran
Island' on his charts of the same area (see also Heritage Charts A207 & A208). Nowadays the two islands are land-filled and joined together. Despite this sort of error the map still provides a valuable, contemporary, record of events at that time.
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