On a little patch of grass, wedged
between a half-sized basketball court and the entry to a short boat
ramp, in a small park on an out of the way road in a little town sits
a large stone embedded with a bronze plaque. Dedicated in October of
1913, the plaque tells the story of the Battle of Shelburne
Blockhouse, a little known skirmish that occurred on the Vermont
shore of Lake Champlain during the American Revolution.
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There's a monument over there. |
In 1770, a gentleman by the name of
Moses Pierson (or Peirson, or Person, depending on the source
document) built a house and barn on 1,000 acres of property that he
had bought in Shelburne in the New Hampshire Grants. Some sources
say the house was a cabin, most state it as a “blockhouse”. Mr.
Pierson's house must have been a well-known stopover point, as it is
mentioned in the journal of Lieutenant John Fassett, Jr. of Colonel
Seth Warner's Regiment in 1775, and during the day related here, two
men, described as travelers, were spending the night at the
house.
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Area of Moses Pierson's property - Today Shelburne Town Beach & private lands. |
As the monument states, on March 12, 1778, Moses
Pierson, his family, guests, and some militia from the
Rutland/Clarendon area were attacked by a band of Indians and
“British dressed as Indians”. The attackers came from the lake,
possibly on skates or snowshoes (accounts vary) likely with a target
of capturing wheat that the Piersons had harvested the season before.
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Shelburne Town Beach - Location of the Moses Pierson Monument |
The attack began roughly an hour before
dawn. The two travelers, named Woodward and Daniels, along with
Barnabas Barnum of the militia, were killed in the initial assault on
the blockhouse. One account states that Barnum was shot as he looked
out of a blockhouse window. Another states that he was killed
outside while trying to extinguish flames as the attackers tried to
set fire to the building.
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Meech Island, south of the cove - Burial place of Moses Pierson's son James. |
The men inside the blockhouse were able
to fight off the assault, which continued for about two hours.
During that time, the attackers did succeed in setting fire to the
building. One story goes that Thomas Sawyer, of the militia, offered
his pocket-watch to anyone who would go to extinguish the flames.
Corporal Joseph Williams took him up on his offer, but finding no
water, used a freshly brewed batch of Mrs. Pierson's beer to put out
the fire. Another version of the story says that a Captain Sanger
ordered the contents of the beer barrel to be used, and several men
went outside to kill the flames. Both accounts agree, however, that
the building was saved by beer.
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Area northwest of the monument - General area of the Pierson Blockhouse and barn. |
When the fight was over, it was found
that in addition to the three dead men in the Pierson's house,
several of the enemy had been killed, including the British commander
and an Indian Chief. Legend has it that the enemy had dragged some
of their dead to the Lake, where they tossed them in a hole in the
ice.
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Further west along the north side of the cove. |
Being a bad researcher, I've drawn this
story from several secondary sources, which, of course, I haven't
noted. Being a good researcher, I'm beginning to look into primary,
or at least period, accounts of the action. My youngest daughter and
I also visited the monument site today, so that I can have a better
picture of the landscape. Fortunately, most of the area is still
farmland, so it looks much like it may have then. Unfortunately,
that farmland is all private property, so we were restricted to
viewing the area from the Shelburne Town Beach.
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The Monument. |
Reading the
secondary accounts, it seems the attack was carried out by roughly 60
men (one account says 57, one says 64), and the blockhouse was
defended by roughly 24, including Moses Pierson's family. In some
aspects, the accounts are vague. In others, they are incredibly
detailed. For instance, one source that I read mentioned that Moses
himself wasn't wounded, but had taken a shot through his shirt that
passed just below his arm. Accounts also state that Pierson's young
daughters, who were lying on beds within the house, where not hurt,
though balls from the enemy muskets were found lodged in the
headboards. I look forward to researching this action more, through
both contemporary and period sources.