way, taken possession of some works we had at Hood’s,
by which two or three of their vessels received some
damage, but which were of necessity abandoned by the
small garrison of fifty men placed there, on the enemy’s
landing to invest the works. Intelligence of their
having quitted the station at Jamestown, from which
we supposed they meant to land for Williamsburg, and
of their having got in the evening to Kennon’s,
reached us the next morning at five o’clock,
and was the first indication of their meaning to penetrate
towards this place or Petersburg. As the order
for drawing miliatia here had been given but two days,
no opposition was in readiness. Every effort was
therefore necessary, to withdraw the arms and other
military stores, records, &c. from this place.
Every effort was, accordingly, exerted to convey them
to the foundery five miles, and to a laboratory six
miles, above this place, till about sunset of that
day, when we learned the enemy had come to an anchor
at Westover that morning. We then knew that this,
and not Petersburg was their object, and began to
carry across the river every thing remaining here,
and to remove what had been transported to the foundery
and laboratory to Westham, the nearest crossing, seven
miles above this place, which operation was continued
till they had approached very near. They marched
from Westover, at two o’clock in the afternoon
of the 4th, and entered Richmond at one o’clock
in the afternoon of the 5th. A regiment of infantry
and about thirty horse continued on, without halting,
to the foundery. They burnt that, the boring mill,
the magazine, and two other houses, and proceeded
to Westharn; but nothing being in their power there,
they retired to Richmond. The next morning they
burned some buildings of public and private property,
with what stores remained in them, destroyed a great
quantity of private stores, and about twelve o’clock,
retired towards Westover, where they encamped within
the Neck, the next day.
The loss sustained is not yet accurately known.
As far as I have been able to discover, it consisted,
at this place, of about three hundred muskets, some
soldiers’ clothing to a small amount, some quarter-master’s
stores, of which one hundred and twenty sides of leather
was the principal article, part of the artificers’
tools, and three wagons. Besides which, five
brass four-pounders, which we had sunk in the river,
were discovered to them, raised and carried off.
At the foundery, we lost the greater part of the papers
belonging to the Auditor’s office, and of the
books and papers of the Council office. About
five or six tons of powder, as we conjecture, was thrown
into the canal, of which there will be a considerable
saving by re-manufacturing it. The roof of the
foundery was burned, but the stacks of chimneys and
furnaces not at all injured. The boring mill was
consumed. Within less than forty-eight hours
from the time of their landing, and nineteen from
our knowing their destination, they had penetrated