Sunday, July 19, 2015







It Happened Here--The Marksman



General Simon Fraser was a good battlefield commander. He was out where you would expect a good battlefield commander would be—out with his men, observing, directing their officers, encouraging his men by his words and his example. Everywhere he went up and down the battle line, the units under his gaze seemed to respond to orders with a little more speed and precision, formed up and discharged their weapons with a little more alacrity, fought a little harder. With a practiced eye he looked out across the fields and scattered woodlands and observed where the enemy was gathering and advancing and where the weak spots were developing in the enemy's line.

General Benedict Arnold was also very much a front line-combat general. He saw what needed to be done and gave the order to Colonel Morgan who relayed it to a dozen of his best marksmen.

General Fraser probably noticed the small party of rebels roughly in front of him, hiding behind fallen logs and trees, but he probably didn't give them a second thought, firing, as they were, from an impossibly long distance. They certainly didn't look like soldiers, either, dressed in linen hunting shirts, and floppy farmers hats. One of them was even climbing a tree! Besides, he had more important concerns as the rebels had pressed them hard, pushing them out of the wheatfield, and his line was beginning to falter. When a rifle ball clipped the mane of Frasier's horse, one of the general's officers suggested he was their target and perhaps he should retire to a safer location.  Rejecting his junior officer's suggestion, he spurred his horse into a gallop to continue down the line, when another puff of smoke emerged from that tree top. A searing pain split the General's abdomen and he toppled from his horse. The General would die the next day.

General Fraser marker at the Barber Wheatfield Battlesite





  • THE SHOT THAT KILLED
    GEN. FRASER
    OCT. 7, 1777
    WAS FIRED FROM NEAR HERE
    BY TIMOTHY MURPHY
    OF MORGAN'S RIFLEMEN.
    Location: SARATOGA NATIONAL HISTORICAL PARK

    (Original NYSHM marker removed when new Signage was installed) 







 Where Fraser fell
at the edge of the
Wheatfield



Hibernian marker Honoring Murphy
The man in that tree top was a 26 year old farmer/frontiersman from the Minisink region along the Delaware River*. Though they didn't look the part, Timothy Murphy and his companions were battle hardened soldiers. Murphy had joined the Continental Army in June 1775, as part of Thompson's Rifle battalion, and marched to the siege of Boston in June or July. He fought in skirmishes before and during the Battle of Long Island and retreated with Washington's beaten army across New Jersey. In December he had crossed the icy Delaware River with Washington's troops to defeat the Hessians encamped at Trenton and fight the British at Princeton, a few days later, before retiring to winter encampment at Morristown. That winter, George Washington ordered Daniel Morgan, of the 11th Virginia Regiment to raise an elite corps of riflemen. Five hundred  of these men, including Murphy, were dispatched to the Northern Department to support the troops opposing Burgoyne's invasion in July 1777.




Following the Saratoga battles American artillery and Morgan's Riflemen kept up the pressure on the camp Burgoyne's army had retreated to, encouraging them to surrender

--Corner Rte 32 and Mennen Rd., Victory


After Murphy's detachment returned to the main army outside Philadelphia,  Morgan's riflemen
skirmished with the British during their withdrawal from Philadelphia, and the following year Murphy and other riflemen were again sent north to help garrison the forts along the New York frontier that were being thrown up to counter the threat of Indian attacks.  Murphy and others were sent to the Schoharie Valley where he was stationed at the Middle Fort, at the Dutch/Palatine settlement of Weiser's Dorf that would one day be renamed Middleburgh. From there he participated in
"scouts" to look for signs of Tory/Indian activity.  The following year he rejoined the rest of Morgan's Riflemen  in the Sullivan Campaign against the Iroquois.  Toward the end of that campaign, deep in Seneca territory he was with the ill-fated scouting party led by Lieutenant William Boyd that was ambushed. Murphy and a few others managed to escape but the others were killed and Boyd, and his Sargent were captured and tortured to death by the Iroquois.


In 1780 Murphy's enlistment was up and he chose not to reenlist, settling, instead, back in the Schoharie Valley where he was attracted by the rich farmlands and the young daughter of John  Feeck, perhaps the wealthiest man in the valley whose house, enclosed within a stockade, served as the central building in the Upper Valley Fort. The Feecks were unimpressed by this brave but illiterate frontier soldier whose future seemed destined to end with his scalp hanging on a trophy pole in some distant Iroquois longhouse. So, Timothy Murphy courted Margret in secret; had the banns of matrimony published at the Middle fort and with the connivance of friends and fellow soldiers manage to elope to Schenectady, where they were married. Only when Murphy threatened to leave with his bride to the Pennsylvania frontier, did Mr and Mrs Feeck warm to their new son-in-law, and Murphy and his bride settled near them after war's end.

Not surprisingly, Murphy joined the militia and volunteered for hazardous patrols deep in Iroquois territory, but he became best known for his actions when the Middle Fort was attacked late in October of 1780.

NY Rte 30, south of Middleburgh (both)
After raiding Johnstown in May of 1780,  Joseph Brant launched a second assault from the southwest, following the Indian trail that followed up the  Susquehanna, through the Charlotte valley, and the Panther creek to the upper (southern) end of the Schoharie Valley. Brant shared command with Lt. Col. Sir John Johnson and together they commanded a mixed force of 90 British Regulars, 130 Butler's Rangers, 250 King's Royal Regiment (Loyalists), 30 German Jagers, 80 Indian Department Men** (under Brant) and some 200 Mohawks, Onondagas, Cayugas, Senecas and Delawares.  With them on sledges they pulled a small bronze cannon on removable legs that fired a 3" solid ball, called a "grasshopper" and two mortars (probably Coehorns) that lobbed 4" hollow exploding cannon balls. Brant chose such a late date to begin his raid because a main objective was to destroy the grain harvest after it had been collected into barns up and down the Schoharie  and Mohawk Valleys.
                                                                                                                                                Schoharie Co. Rte 20, Summit          
             NY 30, Fultonham                                                                          
                         
                                                                                                                  





                        Replica Coehorns at a
Monument on the Ticonderoga Battlefield
Johnson's were slightly smaller 4"mortars.




In command of the three Schoharie Valley forts, stationed at the Middle fort, was a Continental officer, Major Melanchthon Lloyd Woolsey,  apparently a dashing, charming figure known for his equestrian jumping ability. Major Woolsey, however, had a flaw fatal for a military officer.

NY 145, Middleburgh
Brant and Johnson's force by-passed the Upper Valley Fort, hoping to get nearer the center of the valley to begin torching barns and homes before they were discovered. But then a party from the Upper fort stumbled into the rear of their column, and soon an alarm cannon was sounding from the Upper fort.  A scouting party, that included Murphy, was sent from the Middle fort to investigate,  and was forced to  make a fighting retreat back to their fort north of Weiser's Dorf.  The Crown forces quickly surrounded the Middle fort as the Indians and their Indian Department handlers fanned out to systematically burn and pillage, and the Regulars employed their meager artillery against the fort.  Johnson, after a short while, became disappointed at the seeming lack of effect his artillery was having on the Fort, so he attempted a different tactic--he would try to negotiate a surrender.

Meanwhile, inside the fort the exploding shells were having a negligible effect, except on the fort's commander.  Major Woolsey was gripped by fear--uncontrollable fear.  No doubt his fear was heightened by the knowledge that the fort had not received a promised allotment of gunpowder, and had precious little to withstand a determined or protracted assault. Perhaps from his vantage point he could get a sense of how outnumbered his garrison was. (There were actually less than 250 defenders to repel nearly 800 attackers.)  And of course there was the awful specter of the fort being overrun with the carnage and scalpings and mutilations and ritual tortures of survivors that characterized this war on the frontier. Woolsey must have shown a palpable sense of relief when he saw a green uniformed Tory officer coming forward with a fifer and flag bearer carrying a white banner to discuss surrender terms.  He retired to get ready to meet them when he heard a shot ring out from his own palisade warning them off. Enraged, he raced up on the firing platform, pistol in hand, demanding to know who had fired the shot. As the fort's officers gathered around, Timothy Murphy spoke up declaring he had. Woolsey threatened to shoot him if he attempted to fire again. Murphy responded that rather than see the flag enter the fort, he would put a bullet through the major's heart.  Woolsey ordered Murphy's arrest but the fort's officers were on Murphy's side, and no one moved.  Woolsey stormed off, hesitating only when he heard Murphy's rifle chasing back the Tory officer for a second time***.

NY 30, south of Middleburgh on the roadside turnout



Johnson, perhaps observing the dissension in the fort, sent his officer out a third time, only to be chased back a third time by a shot from Murphy's rifle; and the battle resumed. The major sought cover in a protected area of the fort where the women and children were being sheltered but was driven out by their threats and derisive comments. Seeking shelter between buildings near a cellar that served as the fort's magazine, Woolsey encountered militia Colonel Peter Vroman****, bringing up powder and shot. (Vroman had chosen to carry the powder himself, so the defenders didn't realize how short they were of gunpowder.) Vroman asked  Woolsey why he wasn't up in the fort directing his men.  The Major abjectly replied that the men refused to follow his orders and now Vroman was in command. Just then a cannon shot from the Tories' 3" cannon ricocheted between the buildings and fell at the Colonel's feet. Vroman picked it up and playfully ordered Woolsey to return it to the Tories.
Burial site marker for P. Vroman at the Old Stone Fort Church
Woolsey made an obscene comment and Vroman replied he regretted he had left his sword behind when he came to fetch the gunpowder for otherwise he would run him through with it.

After the Brant's Indians and Tories had completed their work of destruction in the vicinity of Weiser's Dorf, Johnson's forces melted away as suddenly as they had come, continuing down the valley to Schoharie. They surrounded the Lower Fort, a palisade encircling the stone Schoharie Dutch Church, and commenced burning barns and houses in the area. They kept up a desultory fire for a few hours before moving on to set up overnight camp near what became Sloansville, and continued their raid up the Mohawk Valley. The following day, Major Woolsey mounted his horse and left the Schoharie Valley, never to return.

The "Old Stone (Lower Valley) Fort" Fort Rd., Schoharie
Rte 30A, Sloansville

Early the following year Timothy Murphy enlisted in the Pennsylvania Line, under "Mad" Anthony Wayne, participating in the Southern Campaign that culminated in the surrender of Cornwalis at Yorktown. After the war he returned to the Schoharie Valley, became a successful farmer, ran a gristmill, and although he never learned to read or write, entered local politics. He had several children with Peggy and after she died in 1807, he remarried and moved to the Charlotte Valley where he continued to farm and raised a second family.  In his final year he returned to Fultonham and when he died was buried in the Middleburgh Cemetery next to his first wife, in 1818.





                               At the Murphy home,
                                       Charlotteville, NY






Rte 145, south of Middleburgh



*In recent years historians have backed away from the assertion that Murphy was the rifleman that killed Gen. Fraser. The only evidence comes from Jeptha Simms who says he got the story from one of Murphy's sons who reported his father told him he had made the fatal shot. Another witness claimed he had seen an old farmer with an exceptionally long rifle shoot the General. (Rifles at that time were individually crafted, and could be made to a buyer's specifications.) Daniel Morgan, who spoke about the incident on several occasions never identified the shooter, however, there is no doubt that Murphy was at the battle, and acknowledged as one of the best marksmen in the corps, he would likely have been one of those chosen for the assignment.
**Indian Department men were quasi-military leaders whose job it was to accompany the Indians and act as liaisons between
the warriors and the British military. 
***Murphy was said to own a rare double barreled rifle which though perhaps to heavy to carry on long patrols, he probably had with him on garrison duty. 
****Also written as Vrooman.

1 comment:

  1. For the last year and a half I have had some health issues. But now I'm back and look forward to posting again. Watch for new posts beginning towards the end of May 2018. www.nyshmsithappenedhere.blogspot.com

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