Revolutionary War British Coin – Battle of Stony Point

Revolutionary War British Coin – Battle of Stony Point

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Revolutionary War British coin found at the Battle of Stony Point (1781)

Rare excavated Revolutionary War British coin that was recovered in the 1980s by the late Dean Thomas at the Revolutionary War Battle site of Stony Point NY – July 16-19, 1779. It is a British Half-Penny, circa 1740-1754. It is made of copper, having the bust of King George II, 28mm.

Verplanck’s Point was on the east side of the Hudson River, with Stony Point on the west side. Since the British controlled New York City for most of the war. This area was the southern-most crossing point for American soldiers and supplies. It was also a very important communication line, therefore a very strategic target for the British.

In March of 1777, five hundred British soldiers landed at Lent’s Cove on their way to attack Peekskill where the British burned military supplies and destroyed quite a bit of property. In October 1777, Clinton again dispersed the American forces at Verplanck’s Point and landed 3,000 troops to secure the area for an attack up river. On the highest ground at Verplanck, just east of Kings Ferry, Fort Lafayette was begun in the spring of 1778 and finished in May 1779 as a modest four-gun earthwork. The British landed 6,000 troops and captured it in June of 1779 in connection with operations at Stony Point.

In 1781, the Continental Army of General George Washington encamped at Verplanck’s Point as a staging area for crossing the Hudson River at Kings Ferry. From there they headed south, beginning the long march to Yorktown, Virginia, where Washington received the surrender of General Charles Cornwallis on October 19, 1781.

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