Posted on 02/11/2010 8:58:52 AM PST by Pharmboy
Jim Wright, a former staff writer for The Record, wrote an essay on John Fells prison diary for the recently published book Revolutionary Bergen County: The Road to Independence (The History Press.)
Last night I was taken prisoner from my house by 25 armed men
THUS BEGINS the Revolutionary War prison diary of John Fell of Allendale, the leader of the Bergen County insurgency against the king of England and his local sympathizers.
Fells 16-page diary, written in secret in the Provost Jail in Lower Manhattan from April 1777 to January 1778, is one of the most significant documents chronicling the horrific treatment of American prisoners of war in British-held New York City during the Revolutionary War.
The journal, written in black ink on now-sepia-tinted thick paper, can be seen at the Brooklyn Historical Society by appointment.
With George Washingtons birthday just around the corner and our Founding Fathers on our minds, my wife Patty and I recently made the trip to Brooklyn to view and photograph the document, which John Fell titled Memorandum in the Provost Jail.
The diary is a reminder of what the founders of our nation endured in the name of liberty.
Although few Americans know of John Fell, he was feared by northern New Jerseys loyalists during the Revolution. As head of the Bergen County Committee of Safety, Fell was known as the great Tory hunter.
Faced demolition
My wife and I live across the street from Fells house, which still stands atop a low hill on the Franklin Turnpike. My wife has been involved in the efforts to prevent this historic house from being demolished and replaced by 11 townhouses, and now that it looks likely that the house and property just might be saved, we thought we should see the historic diary first hand.
We felt a small adrenaline rush as we approached the Brooklyn Historical Society, an 1881 red-brick and terra cotta building in Brooklyn Heights.
When we got to the library on the second floor, the journal was waiting for us. The diary, stored in an archival box, was much smaller and thinner than we had envisioned. When I carefully placed the diary in a special cradle to be photographed, I felt as though I were reaching back 232 years to actually hold history in my hands.
The diary, weighing no more than a few ounces, contains all sorts of priceless historical data, all hand-written in tiny letters cramming so much material onto each page that no space is wasted.
The last two pages are nearly blank an indication that Fell did not know how much longer he might be imprisoned. As Fell later scrawled on the first page, he was held for 8 months, 15 days.
Fellow prisoners
On the cramped pages, each measuring four inches by six inches, are lists of Americans imprisoned with him and the horrid conditions they endured from whippings and dungeons to starvation and fatal illnesses.
I got to see, with my own eyes, John Fells actual signature on the first page of the slender diary a document that would have meant torture and perhaps even death if his British jailers had ever found it.
In his preface to Forgotten Patriots, Pulitzer Prize-winning historian Edwin Burrows writes that the number of Americans imprisoned by the British in New York City during the Revolutionary War may actually have exceeded 30,000 and that 18,000 (60 percent) or more of them did not survive well over twice the number of American soldiers and seamen who fell in battle, now believed to have been around 6,800.
Of Fells diary, Burrows writes: His terse notations, squeezed onto each page in a minuscule script, log the emotional ups and downs of the prisoners there as they struggled with overcrowding, hunger, sickness, appalling squalor and petty, capricious cruelties.
When I returned to Allendale and saw the Fell House once more, I viewed it with new eyes.
Northern New Jersey was caught in the crossfire between the British and George Washingtons patriots in the Revolutionary War. John Fells house is but one of the many testaments to our nations early history that stand in our midst so long as we remember and protect them.
Jim Wright, a former staff writer for The Record, wrote an essay on John Fells prison diary for the recently published book Revolutionary Bergen County: The Road to Independence (The History Press.)
Last night I was taken prisoner from my house by 25 armed men
THUS BEGINS the Revolutionary War prison diary of John Fell of Allendale, the leader of the Bergen County insurgency against the king of England and his local sympathizers.
Fells 16-page diary, written in secret in the Provost Jail in Lower Manhattan from April 1777 to January 1778, is one of the most significant documents chronicling the horrific treatment of American prisoners of war in British-held New York City during the Revolutionary War.
The journal, written in black ink on now-sepia-tinted thick paper, can be seen at the Brooklyn Historical Society by appointment.
With George Washingtons birthday just around the corner and our Founding Fathers on our minds, my wife Patty and I recently made the trip to Brooklyn to view and photograph the document, which John Fell titled Memorandum in the Provost Jail.
The diary is a reminder of what the founders of our nation endured in the name of liberty.
Although few Americans know of John Fell, he was feared by northern New Jerseys loyalists during the Revolution. As head of the Bergen County Committee of Safety, Fell was known as the great Tory hunter.
Faced demolition
My wife and I live across the street from Fells house, which still stands atop a low hill on the Franklin Turnpike. My wife has been involved in the efforts to prevent this historic house from being demolished and replaced by 11 townhouses, and now that it looks likely that the house and property just might be saved, we thought we should see the historic diary first hand.
We felt a small adrenaline rush as we approached the Brooklyn Historical Society, an 1881 red-brick and terra cotta building in Brooklyn Heights.
When we got to the library on the second floor, the journal was waiting for us. The diary, stored in an archival box, was much smaller and thinner than we had envisioned. When I carefully placed the diary in a special cradle to be photographed, I felt as though I were reaching back 232 years to actually hold history in my hands.
The diary, weighing no more than a few ounces, contains all sorts of priceless historical data, all hand-written in tiny letters cramming so much material onto each page that no space is wasted.
The last two pages are nearly blank an indication that Fell did not know how much longer he might be imprisoned. As Fell later scrawled on the first page, he was held for 8 months, 15 days.
Fellow prisoners
On the cramped pages, each measuring four inches by six inches, are lists of Americans imprisoned with him and the horrid conditions they endured from whippings and dungeons to starvation and fatal illnesses.
I got to see, with my own eyes, John Fells actual signature on the first page of the slender diary a document that would have meant torture and perhaps even death if his British jailers had ever found it.
In his preface to Forgotten Patriots, Pulitzer Prize-winning historian Edwin Burrows writes that the number of Americans imprisoned by the British in New York City during the Revolutionary War may actually have exceeded 30,000 and that 18,000 (60 percent) or more of them did not survive well over twice the number of American soldiers and seamen who fell in battle, now believed to have been around 6,800.
Of Fells diary, Burrows writes: His terse notations, squeezed onto each page in a minuscule script, log the emotional ups and downs of the prisoners there as they struggled with overcrowding, hunger, sickness, appalling squalor and petty, capricious cruelties.
When I returned to Allendale and saw the Fell House once more, I viewed it with new eyes.
Northern New Jersey was caught in the crossfire between the British and George Washingtons patriots in the Revolutionary War. John Fells house is but one of the many testaments to our nations early history that stand in our midst so long as we remember and protect them.
Jim Wright, a former staff writer for The Record, wrote an essay on John Fells prison diary for the recently published book Revolutionary Bergen County: The Road to Independence (The History Press.)
The Fell House
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Thanks Pharmboy....caught in the crossfire between the British and George Washington's patriots in the Revolutionary War. John Fell's house is but one of the many testaments to our nationâs early history that stand in our midst --- so long as we remember and protect them.Word. |
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“..well over twice the number of American soldiers and seamen who fell in battle, now believed to have been around 6,800.
I never knew it was that small of a number. And you say this is on the high end? It’s really quite unbelievable. Although I know we had help from the French.
“Third-grade students at the Allendale school, who have been studying the borough’s history, raised money at a strawberry fair and chose to donate the proceeds to the Save The Fell House campaign, run by the non-profit group Concerned Citizens of Allendale.
Group members, the students and Allendale Mayor Vince Barra came together Dec. 9 at Hillside for a ceremonial handing-over of the $240 check and a presentation about John Fell by Concerned Citizens member Peter Fenzel.”
Lovely...thanks for posting. Corzine’s loss and that picture help restore my faith in The Garden State.
The official battlefield death total is given at about 4600. Perhaps 4 times that many died in Brit prisons.
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