29 April 1776 A.D. Nathaniel Greene takes command of Long Island
29 April 1776 A.D. Nathaniel Greene takes command of Long Island
Editors. “Nathaniel Greene takes command of Long
Island.” History.com. 2009. http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/nathanael-greene-takes-command-of-long-island. Accessed 28 Apr 2015.
On this day in 1776, shortly after the
American victory at Boston, Massachusetts, General George Washington orders
Brigadier General Nathanael Greene to take command of Long Island and set up
defensive positions against a possible British attack on New York City.
Greene’s troops were arranged to defend
themselves against a frontal attack in Brooklyn Heights across from Manhattan.
On August 26, 1776, the British took the vast majority of Long Island with
ease, as the island’s population was heavily Loyalist. On August 27, the troops
at Brooklyn Heights disintegrated under an unexpected attack from their left
flank. In a British effort to earn goodwill for a negotiated peace, they
allowed American survivors to flee to Manhattan. Otherwise, the War for
Independence might easily have been quashed less than three months after it
began.
Born in Rhode Island in August 1742, Greene was
elected to the Rhode Island legislature at the age of 28 in 1770. Overcoming
his Quaker scruples against violence and warfare, Greene joined a local militia
at the outbreak of the American Revolution in 1774 and was promoted to the rank
of brigadier general of the Continental Army by Congress in 1775.
At the siege of Boston in March 1776, Greene was
assigned to General Washington’s brigade and a lifelong friendship between the
two men began. Shortly after several American losses in and around New York in
the summer and fall of 1776, Greene was promoted to major general of the
Continental Army under Washington.
After leading troops into several successful
battles, including the Battle of Trenton in December 1776 and the Battle of
Germantown in October 1777, Greene succeeded Thomas Mifflin as quartermaster
general in March 1778. Greene was named commander in chief of the Southern Army
in October 1778; he commanded troops on the battlefield throughout the rest of
the revolution. After twice turning down offers to become secretary of war,
Greene retired from the military in 1785. Less than one year later, in June
1786, Greene died at his Georgia home.
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