Chapter Four: Played Out
:
November 1776 to the Spring of 1778
16 November 1776
Lieutenant Douglas Bester didn't retreat with George Washington's forces into New Jersey. The intelligence unit chief, Major Brady Lathrop, left him behind in the last Continental Army stronghold remaining on Manhattan, Fort Washington. In fact, it was Bester who Washington sent to the fort, located half way up the island on the banks of the Hudson River, near the mouth of the Harlem River, which divides Manhattan from the Bronx, to inform the fort commander, Colonel Robert Magaw, of the general retreat and pass on Washington's order one last time that the fort be abandoned. Washington had already ordered the previous commander at the fort, General Nathanael Greene, to abandon the stronghold that then housed twelve hundred men. Instead, the strength of the fort had been increased to three thousand men.
Magaw refused the order and declared he would hold the fort to the last man. Once there, barely having been able to ride through the forming British siege around the fort, Bester was trapped and had to remain. The situation for the colonialist in the fort was worsened in early November when, on the 2nd, William Demont, one of Magaw's own men, defected to the British, taking plans of the fort with him. It wasn't only the colonialists who were actively engaged in spying.
Not having heard from either Bester or Magaw, Washington started to return with forces to relieve the fort, but his progress was arrested with the news that the British had attacked and taken the fort on November 16th. The British forces, under the command of General William Howe, attacked the fort from three sides, the north, east, and south. The attack from the fourth direction, the Harlem River, was delayed by tides, but the fort defenses to the south crumbled almost immediately after the first softening up of the British artillery. The actual troops attacking the fort mainly were eight thousand mercenary Hessians under the command of Lieutenant General Wilhelm von Knyphausen. The Americans retreated to the northern sector of the fort for hand-to-hand fighting, but were forced to surrender. The Hessians lost three times the number of American soldiers killed, but over fifty of the colonialists were killed, nearly a hundred wounded, and nearly three thousand were captured.
The fort was renamed Fort Knyphausen and the captured Americans were marched to the tip of Manhattan and put on ships, which became the advent of the notorious use of British prison ships, floating in the mouth of the East River into New York harbor, that became pestilent hell holes holding rebel prisoners under foul conditions for the remainder of the Revolutionary War, to 1783.
Lieutenant Bester wasn't one of the men marched off to the prison ships from the last stand in the northern sector of the fort. He had been standing by a concrete wall inside the fort when the first artillery barrage began and was struck by and buried under a large chunk of concrete dislodged by a British shell.
The HMS
Yarmouth
became one of the prison ships that held the prisoners who had surrendered at Fort Washington, and the
Yarmouth
remained in that role until the end of the war. Neither Captain Owen Sheffeld nor his former dresser and server, Timothy Grady, were aboard the vessel when the prisoners started arriving in late November, however. Sheffeld was already on the high seas, returning to England, his wife, and another assignment in London. Timothy was in lower Manhattan, having amicably parted with his reassigned master. Thomas Hadley had been declared dead from the fire that destroyed his house on Stone Street and much of the surrounding town on the night of September 21st.
As Hadley was determined to have been a British sympathizer, as was Timothy Grady, and a will was produced declaring Timothy's indenture cancelled upon the death of Hadley and assigned Timothy as Hadley's heir, Timothy was suddenly a landowner—albeit of scorched earth—and had in hand a small fortune from the assets of Hadley's that had not burned. Thus, Grady was ashore in lower Manhattan in late November and busy with plans to build a tavern that he would name Nathan's on the Stone Street site of the former Hadley mansion. Grady's idea was to have a tavern downstairs and a male brothel upstairs. He could initially handle that trade himself, knowing it was a trade he was good at, and could add young men as demand increased. There was always some level, albeit rarely acknowledged, of demand for men pleasuring other men for a fee.
The first mate of the
Yarmouth
, Stanley Calvert, had been moved up to command of the ship upon Sheffeld's departure and subsequently was left in command when the
Yarmouth
was converted into a prison ship. Calvert had been one of the
Yarmouth
officers who had had sexual access to Timothy in the past, and Timothy counted on Calvert to permit his sailors and prison guards who were so disposed to avail themselves of the services of Nathan's and the services upstairs, so contact between the new commander of the
Yarmouth
and Timothy was maintained.
Also maintained was Timothy's work to collect whatever information he could on the British intentions and dispositions and to pass this on through the rebel spy network via Samuel Fraunces, whose own tavern had been saved from the September fire. As the most useful intelligence from the British was available from direct contact by Timothy with British officers, he continued to row out to the
Yarmouth
whenever he was invited and to give the new ship commander, Calvert, all of the same servicing that he previously had given Captain Sheffeld.
* * * *
February 1777
"I wonder what's going on out there," Samuel Fraunces asked, handing the spyglass back to Timothy Grady. They were standing on the widow's walk at the top of the three-story building, almost completed, being built as a tavern and male brothel on the Stone Street site of the previous Hadley mansion in lower Manhattan. People had wondered, some aloud, why Grady was building his tavern to tower above other buildings being constructed on the street that had been devastated by the September 21st fire of the previous year. Grady knew why, but he couldn't very well tell them that it was so that he could keep an eye from his rooftop on the British fleet standing in New York harbor as well as traffic at the mouths of the Hudson and East rivers.
What had caught the eyes of Timothy and Samuel today was the appearance of a third sixty-cannon ship at the mouth of the bay, along with several smaller ships, to add to the HMS
Asia
and
Yarmouth
prison ships that had been stationed in the harbor for more than a year. Skiff activity going out to this newly arrived warship had been observed from the tavern's widow's walk. The question was what was going on? Preparation for the augmentation of British forces here and perhaps a concentrated invasion of the New York colony by the British?
"I guess I'll need to go find out," Timothy said.
"You have a reason to go out there?" Samuel asked. "You know we cannot risk your capture. We could wait for the sailors to come into my tavern and let slip what is happening."
"I don't think we can afford to wait," Timothy answered. "And yes, I have reason. I have a regular service of sending my lads out to the ships to service the officers who want them. I haven't been to the
Yarmouth