Greenwich Village eBook

Anna Alice Chapin
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 220 pages of information about Greenwich Village.

Greenwich Village eBook

Anna Alice Chapin
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 220 pages of information about Greenwich Village.
“This Commodore Warren was one of those indefatigable and nervous spirits who did such wonders at Louisbourg, and it is with particular pride that his achievement should be remembered in a history of New-York, as he was the only prominent New-Yorker that contributed to Massachusetts’ greatest Colonial achievement.”

The capture of Louisbourg may be remembered by some history readers as a part of that English-French quarrel of 1745, commonly known as “King George’s War,” and also as the undertaking described by so many contemporaries as “Shirley’s Mad Scheme.”  The scheme was rather mad; hence its appeal to Peter Warren, who was exceedingly keen about it from the beginning.

Louisbourg was a strong French fortress on Cape Breton Island, commanding the gulf of the St. Lawrence.  Its value as a military stronghold was great, and besides it had long been a fine base for privateers, and was a very present source of peril to the New England fishermen off the Banks.  As far back as 1741 Governor Clarke of New York had urged the taking of this redoubtable French station, but it fell to the masterful Shirley, Governor of Massachusetts, finally to organise the expedition.  He had Colonial militia to the tune of four thousand men, and he had Colonial boats,—­nearly a hundred of them,—­and he had the approval of the Crown (conveyed through the Duke of Newcastle); but he wanted leaders.  For his land force he chose General Pepperrill, an eminently safe and sane type of soldier; for the sea he, with a real brain throb, thought of Captain Peter Warren.  Francis Parkman says:  “Warren, who had married an American woman and who owned large tracts of land on the Mohawk, was known to be a warm friend to the provinces.”  He was at Antigua when he received the Governor’s request that he take command of the “Mad Scheme.”  Needless to say, the Captain was charmed with the idea, but he had no orders from the King!  He refused almost weeping, and for two days was plunged in gloom.  Imagine such a glorious chance for a fight going begging!

Then arrived a belated letter from Newcastle in England, telling him to “concert measures with Shirley for the annoyance of the enemy.”  Warren was so afraid that some future orders would be less vague, and give him less freedom, that he set sail for Boston with a haste that was feverish.  He had with him three ships,—­the Mermaid and Launceston of forty guns each, and the Superbe of sixty.  But those two wretched days of delay!  He fell in with a schooner from which he learned that Shirley’s expedition had started without him!

I daresay, being a sailor and Irish, our Captain expressed himself exhaustively just then; but he recovered speedily and told the schooner to send him every British ship she met in her voyage; then he changed his course and beat straight for Canseau, determined to be in that expedition after all.  He certainly was in it, and a brisk time he had of it, too.

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Greenwich Village from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.