Posted on 08/30/2009 8:57:48 AM PDT by Pharmboy
MILFORD -- A 1907 catalog of the New Haven County Historical Society listed several rare and odd items, including a necklace from an Egyptian mummy, slave chains, a small block of wood from the Old South Bridge in Concord, Mass., which the British guarded at the start of the Revolutionary War.
But lot 23 in the inventory -- "a skull of an American soldier, one of 42 who died of the 200 in a destitute and sickly condition that were brought from a British prison ship ... and suddenly cast upon the shore of the town of Milford on the 1st of January, 1777" -- has sparked contemporary patriots to ride to the rescue.
Local history buffs Gary Gianotti and Tom Beirne have tracked down the skull, which has been in the possession of the University of Connecticut's archaeology department in Storrs since the early 1990s, when a state law prohibited private museums from owning human remains.
Nicholas Bellantoni, the state archaeologist, will have students do a forensic study of the skull and write a report of its condition.
Bellantoni told Beirne that when that project is complete, in mid-September, he would not oppose plans to return the skull to Milford "for proper burial."
City Historian Richard Platt said that although the remains of an American soldier who had been a POW and has been missing in action since 1777 have apparently been found, "we don't know which of the 46 it is. And none of the soldiers were from Milford."
Platt said that he also favors a proper interment for the soldier's remains. The most appropriate spot, local history buffs agree, is at the obelisk erected in 1852 in the Milford Cemetery that is believed to be over a mass grave for the victims. The 46 soldiers, not 42 as the 1907 inventory stated, died of smallpox, as did their caretaker, local merchant Steven Stow.
Stow is also believed to be buried with the Continental Army soldiers in what cemetery superintendent Raymond Scholl described as a long row of graves. Beirne said that a Milford resident who is a direct descendant of Stow has agreed to give a DNA sample so that it can be compared to the skull. "There's a 1 in 46 chance that the skull belongs to Stow himself," Beirne said.
An account of the 1852 dedication also mentions that a time capsule was buried as part of the memorial, and the men have arranged for the monument and the grounds surrounding it to be X-rayed. That could happen as soon as this week, Beirne said.
Scholl said that once he had a man with a dowsing rod demonstrate his ability to find graves, and his skill was impressive. "He took a Y-shaped stick, that you normally use to find water, and was able to outline the grave. The stick pulled down to indicate where the borders were."
The time capsule had been forgotten and no record of what is in it or when it was supposed to be opened can be found. Perhaps recalling the highly publicized fiasco several years ago when Geraldo Rivera opened Al Capone's vault and found it empty, the men say that any plans to open the time capsule will wait until X-rays confirm its existence -- and that something is in it.
As the superintendent, Scholl will have the responsibility of keeping the skull once it is turned over by the state and before it can be interred. "I've never had to do that before; it'll be a first," he said. Although the cemetery has a mausoleum-like repository for bones, "I'll probably keep the skull in my safe," the superintendent said.
How Milford's Revolutionary War mass grave came to be The 200 Continental Army soldiers, sick with smallpox and abandoned by the British here on Jan. 1, 1777, were likely captured during the Battle of Long Island, or the losing fight for Manhattan. They had been held since August in a British naval base at Wallabout Bay, which later became the Brooklyn Navy Yard. As many as 1,000 men were crammed into the steaming hulk of a prison ship, and up to 20 would share a single cell in the New York jail. The abandonment of the POWs here was not a humanitarian act but a dumping of dying men by captors trying to avoid becoming sick themselves. None of the 46 men who died here were from Milford. The closest was from Stratford, the farthest from Spain. Many more likely died on their way home, some walking as far as Middletown. Local merchant Steven Stow cared for the ill men in a "pest house" located on the present site of City Hall. Stow died of smallpox himself and is buried with the soldiers. A 30-foot obelisk made of Portland sandstone was erected in 1852 to mark the spot of the common grave in Milford Cemetery. The Soldier's Monument, as it was known, was paid for with $600 in state funds appropriated by the General Assembly and by contributions from the people of Milford. More than 3,000 people marched from Town Hall to the cemetery, accompanied by the New Haven Brass Band, for the laying of the cornerstone on Oct. 28, 1852. The featured speaker that day was Lt. Gov. Charles Hobby Pond, a Milford resident who would be elected governor the following year. Among those attending the ceremony, which included the burying of a time capsule, were several people who had attended the soldiers' burial 75 years earlier. The soldiers were abandoned on Fort Trumbull Beach. The Milford Historic Preservation Trust, led by Regina Cahill, holds a re-enactment every New Year's Eve at the more accessible Gulf Beach, where the trust has also placed a marker. The incident led to a treaty between the United States and Prussia in 1785 that mandated the humane treatment of prisoners of war, and thus indirectly to the Geneva Convention. Prussian soldiers had served as mercenaries on behalf of the British during the Revolution. Sources: Forgotten Patriots by Edwin Burrows, Basic Books, 2008; Connecticut Historical Collections, John Barber, 1838; Milford Trust for Historic Preservation.
Second Regiment Connecticut Light Horse Militia
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They need to contact their local SAR chapter to make sure that the burial is conducted in the most proper and honorable manner possible.
I agree, catfish.
Thanks for the ping Pharmboy.
I had a great-great-great-great-great-grandfather who died on one of those notorious British prison ships in NY harbor...
More patriot POWs died in those death-galleons than died in battle in the whole War of Independence—something over 10,000.
Nah. To quote Protestant reformer Martin Luther's nemesis, Emperor Charles V, when he was asked to disinter Luther's body, "We make war on the living, not the dead."
Before we bury him, clone him. We sure could use more of him in this day and age.
Thanks
BTTT
Interesting story. Thanks for posting.
welcome home to an American Hero.
How ironic that a story about the British letting American prisoners die in captivity should come out on the same day of the revelation that the Libyan terrorist who murdered 280 Americans was released by the British as part of an oil deal.
Wonder what Ship he was detained aboard.
I know the JERSEY was perhaps the largest and the worst overall for mortality.
Most of the POWs were captured at the Battle of Long Island and at the fall of Fort Washington.
Interesting.
These man were true patriots who were lost early in the fight and have never truly received proper appreciation for
their sacrifices and valor.
“There’s a 1 in 46 chance that the skull belongs to Stow”
Actually, make that 1 in 47.
www.findagrave.com
Joined last night because of my interest in history.
They seem legit.
bttt
The Milford Historic Preservation Trust, led by Regina Cahill, holds a re-enactment every New Year's Eve at the more accessible Gulf Beach, where the trust has also placed a marker.
So what does the marker say? "This is NOT the place the soldiers were abandoned"?
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I very much appreciate you posting the informative, historical articles that you find.
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