Mount Hope Bay Raids - Freetown Raid

Freetown Raid

Pigot next organized a smaller raiding force to go to lower Freetown (a portion that was later separated to form Fall River). On May 30, a force of 100 men led by Major Edmund Eyre (who had served under Campbell in the previous raid) sailed up the Taunton River into lower Freetown, where they landed near the mouth of the Quequechan River. The local militia was under the command of Colonel Joseph Durfee, a Continental Army veteran, and had established a watch. The British landing was spotted by a sentinel and the alarm was raised. Forty men, including militia from Freetown and nearby Tiverton, mustered to give resistance. Eyre's men fired grapeshot from a small cannon and slowly pushed the militiamen uphill. As this took place, some of his men proceeded to burn a house, grist mill and sawmill, nine boats, and 15,000 feet of planking. The militia eventually reached a bridge across a stream, where about 25 men established a defensive line behind a stone wall on the far side. In a battle lasting about 90 minutes, Durfee's men repulsed repeated attempts by Eyre's men to gain control of the bridge. The British soldiers then took one local resident prisoner, set fire to his property, and retreated to their boats. The militia followed, harassing the soldiers with musket fire. The prisoner was eventually released several days later. The British suffered two killed and five wounded in the battle, while the Americans suffered no casualties beyond the one captive.

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Famous quotes containing the word raid:

    Each venture
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    —T.S. (Thomas Stearns)