Where Was Crompond?
The name "Crompond" appears in Revolutionary War despatches, maps, and Loyalist letters as if it were a well-known fixed point in the landscape — "at Crompond," "the guard at Crompond," "the Crompond road," "the Presbyterian Church at Crompond." Two generations later, a reader looking at a modern New York State atlas will not find it. Crompond is not a town, not a village, not an incorporated place. It is a lost name.
Revolutionary-era Crompond is in the area of present-day Yorktown Heights, the hamlet in the Town of Yorktown in northern Westchester County. The McDonald Interviews, consistently and without qualification, treat "Crompond" as the obvious name for this settlement. The Presbyterian Church at Crompond, the Crompond burying ground, the Crompond road (running north from Pines Bridge toward the Putnam County border), the Crompond militia guard house — these are fixed geographic references in the 1845–1850 interviews that every witness expects McDonald to understand.
In the 19th century the place name slowly migrated. The hamlet became Yorktown Heights; the church name changed; the burying ground was absorbed into St. Mary's Cemetery. When Lincoln Diamant's late-20th-century research on Westchester place names went looking for "Crompond," he had to reach back to the 1868 F.W. Beers atlas and the McDonald manuscripts themselves for its original location. The 1860s usage "Crompond" / "Crom Pond" was already antiquated.
On the morning of June 24, 1779, Crompond was a small but named settlement with a Presbyterian church, a cluster of houses along the main road north from Pines Bridge, a militia guard house, and a burying ground that would, two years later, receive the uninscribed graves of Colonel Christopher Greene and Major Ebenezer Flagg after the Pines Bridge attack. It was about 18 miles southeast of West Point and 30 miles north of Manhattan Island. And it was burned by Banastre Tarleton's British cavalry.
Six Witnesses to the Raid
We have six McDonald Interview witnesses whose testimony touches the burning of Crompond:
| Witness | Date | WCHS item | Testimony | |---|---|---|---| | James Mandeville | 1847 | [1289](https://collections.westchestergov.com/digital/collection/mcdonald/id/1289) | Names Tarleton; gives the date (June 24); names the ford (Vail's); describes the "semi-circle" approach | | Nathaniel Montross | 1848-10-17 | [1489](https://collections.westchestergov.com/digital/collection/mcdonald/id/1489) | Names Cudney's ford; documents John Shaw killed and the Presbyterian Church burned | | Benjamin Kipp (solo) | 1847-11-20 | [666](https://collections.westchestergov.com/digital/collection/mcdonald/id/666) | "Vail's or some other ford"; the "unexpected quarter" approach | | Lydia Vail | 1847-11-19 | [1353](https://collections.westchestergov.com/digital/collection/mcdonald/id/1353) | Eyewitness to the retreat across Pines Bridge; "all horse" | | Sylvanus Townsend | 1847-10-22 | [655](https://collections.westchestergov.com/digital/collection/mcdonald/id/655) | Captain Keeler's fingers severed trying to surrender, June 1779 | | Benjamin Acker | 1847-11-20 | [982](https://collections.westchestergov.com/digital/collection/mcdonald/id/982) | Separate 1779 night raid with 200 horse plus infantry |
Thomas Strang's October 1845 interview (WCHS 380) is a seventh source for the burying ground at Crompond and the later graves of Greene and Flagg, but is not about the 1779 raid itself. For Strang's testimony see Story 22, [At Davenport House, Before Sunrise](/story/22_pines_bridge).
Mandeville Names the Commander and the Route
James Mandeville's 1847 interview is the best single source on the tactical shape of the Crompond raid. Mandeville, a longtime Peekskill hotel keeper (1760–1848) whose family had been deeply embedded in the Revolutionary-era community around the upper Croton, gives a route description with rare specificity:[^1]
<em>"On the 24th of June, Tarleton came up by a circuitous route, going up the Croton above Pines Bridge one mile and a half or more above, crossed at Vail's ford, advanced upon Crompond from the east by a road which bends like a semi-circle."</em>
[^1]: WCHS McDonald Interviews item 1289, Mandeville James interview of 1847. Hufeland Mss. Book 1, Vol. 4. Digital record: https://collections.westchestergov.com/digital/collection/mcdonald/id/1289 . Full transcription: [history.croton.news/mcdonald/mcdonald_mandeville_james](https://history.croton.news/mcdonald/mcdonald_mandeville_james).
Four tactical facts land in this one sentence:
1. Banastre Tarleton — the British Legion cavalry commander, at this point in his career still a major serving under Lt. Col. David Wemyss and not yet the famous "Bloody Tarleton" of the Southern campaign. Tarleton is explicitly named as the commander of the Crompond raid. 2. The date was June 24, 1779. Mandeville is categorical. (Tarleton was wounded at the Battle of Pound Ridge less than a week later, on July 2 — the two engagements belong to the same week of Tarleton's first independent operations in the Neutral Ground.) 3. The approach was "circuitous" — going up the Croton River "one mile and a half or more above" Pines Bridge, upstream of the obvious crossing, to reach Vail's Ford. This is the ford Lydia Vail's family is named for, and which the earlier research for [Story 13, Below the Dam](/story/13_croton_gorge_park) attempted to locate precisely; Mandeville's "above Pines Bridge a mile and a half or more" places Vail's Ford at approximately the same site the New Croton Reservoir now covers. 4. The final approach to Crompond was from the east "by a road which bends like a semi-circle." Tarleton did not ride straight in from Vail's Ford. He took a looping road that circled east of the village before coming in from an unexpected direction. This is a classic cavalry surprise tactic — approach from the direction the defender is not watching — and Mandeville's vivid phrase "a road which bends like a semi-circle" is the kind of topographic detail that only someone who knew the country personally would remember.
The semi-circle road Mandeville describes may be the old Croton/Peekskill ridge road that runs east-northeast from the Vail's Ford area and then curves back south toward modern Yorktown Heights. We do not have period maps precise enough to trace Tarleton's exact route — the Erskine 1778–1780 and Rochambeau 1782 maps give the major roads but not the local farm lanes — and the terrain has been so altered by the 1907 reservoir flooding that reconstructing the path on the ground is difficult.
Benjamin Kipp: "Vail's or Some Other Ford"
Benjamin Kipp's November 20, 1847 solo interview — recorded on a notebook page that also preserves the opening sentences of Benjamin Acker's account of ferrying Smith and André across the Hudson — gives an independent corroboration of the Crompond raid's approach:[^2]
<em>"The British party that burnt Crompond advanced circuitously, crossing the Croton at Vail's or some other ford, and coming from an unexpected quarter into the Crompond road at Halleck's then called Delavan's Mills."</em>
[^2]: WCHS McDonald Interviews item 666, Kipp Benjamin solo interview of November 20, 1847. Hufeland Mss. Book 1, Vol. 5, pp. 656–658. https://collections.westchestergov.com/digital/collection/mcdonald/id/666 . Full transcription: [history.croton.news/mcdonald/mcdonald_kipp_benjamin_666](https://history.croton.news/mcdonald/mcdonald_kipp_benjamin_666).
Kipp cannot quite remember the ford's name — "Vail's or some other ford" — but names the place where the British force re-entered the Crompond road: Halleck's, formerly called Delavan's Mills. This is a new geographic fix — the mill site of Delavan/Halleck is where Tarleton's circuitous approach rejoined the main road. The site is in the vicinity of the modern Pines Bridge / Baldwin Place area. Kipp's phrase "coming from an unexpected quarter" independently corroborates Mandeville's "approached from the east" — the surprise was not where the British came from but how they got there.
Nathaniel Montross Names the Ford and the Casualty
A third independent witness, Nathaniel Montross (1770–1858), gives the raid a different ford name and a named casualty:[^3]
<em>"When Tarleton came out to Crompond in 1779, he crossed the Croton at Cudney's ford… They then proceeded to Crompond… the killing of American soldier John Shaw and the burning of the Presbyterian church at Crompond."</em>
[^3]: WCHS McDonald Interviews item 1489, Montross Nathaniel interview of October 17, 1848. Hufeland Mss. Book 1, Vol. 3. https://collections.westchestergov.com/digital/collection/mcdonald/id/1489 . Full transcription: [history.croton.news/mcdonald/mcdonald_montross_nathaniel](https://history.croton.news/mcdonald/mcdonald_montross_nathaniel).
Montross's "Cudney's ford" is either (a) a different name for Vail's Ford that Montross's family used, (b) a completely different crossing point further upstream, or (c) a second detachment's crossing. The three witnesses — Mandeville, Kipp, and Montross — collectively name Vail's Ford / Cudney's Ford / "some other ford" as the crossing, each using the name their own family knew. The modern reader cannot adjudicate between them without period maps that we do not have. But Montross adds two facts none of the others preserve:
- John Shaw — an American soldier — killed in the raid. This is a named casualty that the published histories of the Crompond raid do not preserve. We have not been able to locate "John Shaw" in any Westchester militia muster roll we have access to. His first and last name in Montross's interview is the only surviving reference to him we have. - The Presbyterian Church at Crompond was burned. The specific named building destroyed by Tarleton's raid. The Crompond Presbyterian Church (the ancestor of later churches in modern Yorktown Heights) is named by Montross as the specific target. Its burning on June 24, 1779 is a datable act of Revolutionary destruction that does not appear in most modern Yorktown histories.
Captain Keeler's Fingers
Sylvanus Townsend, interviewed in October 1847, adds what may be the most wrenching single detail about the Crompond engagement:[^4]
<em>"Captain Keeler taken at Crompond in June 1779, intended to surrender, but presenting his sword point foremost received a cut which cut off several of his fingers. He was from North Salem."</em>
[^4]: WCHS McDonald Interviews item 655, Townsend Sylvanus interview of October 22, 1847. Hufeland Mss. Book 1. https://collections.westchestergov.com/digital/collection/mcdonald/id/655 . Full transcription: [history.croton.news/mcdonald/mcdonald_townsend_sylvanus](https://history.croton.news/mcdonald/mcdonald_townsend_sylvanus).
A named American captain from North Salem — Keeler — was trying to surrender to Tarleton's cavalry. In 18th-century convention, surrendering an officer's sword was a formal ritual of submission: you reversed the blade and presented the hilt to the enemy commander, who would typically return it as a gesture of honorable captivity. Keeler presented his sword point foremost. Whether this was a tactical error, a deliberate provocation, or a miscommunication across the chaos of the raid is not in Townsend's testimony. What is in the testimony is the consequence: a British cavalryman, reading the point-first sword as an attacking gesture rather than a surrender, cut off several of Keeler's fingers with a single stroke. The wound disabled his sword hand but did not kill him. Keeler survived — long enough to be interviewed, or to have the story pass to his neighbors, long enough for Townsend to preserve it 68 years later.
Townsend dates the incident to "June 1779" without specifying the 24th. It is possible the incident happened on a different day of the same month — Tarleton's Crompond operation may have taken more than one day — but the month and the commander match Mandeville's date. It is the kind of small, specific atrocity that leaves no monument and enters the record only when an old man's family tradition reaches a chronicler who writes it down.
Lydia Vail Sees the Retreat
Lydia Vail, whose November 19, 1847 testimony is the key primary source for the May 1781 attack on Davenport House (see Story 22), was also — as a very young girl — an eyewitness to the retreat of Tarleton's force across Pines Bridge. Her account of the Crompond raid is brief but specific:[^5]
<em>"— The British party that burnt Crompond advanced circuitously, crossing the Croton at Vail's or some other ford, and coming from an unexpected quarter into the Crompond road at Halleck's then called Delavan's Mills. I saw Totten (or who ever commanded) and his troops (which were all horse) as they retired across the Croton by Pines Bridge. I think there were no negroes at Davenport house, but my grandfathers, when Greene was surprised."</em>
[^5]: WCHS McDonald Interviews item 1353, Vail Lydia interview of November 19, 1847. Hufeland Mss. Book 1, Vol. 5. https://collections.westchestergov.com/digital/collection/mcdonald/id/1353 . Full transcription: [history.croton.news/mcdonald/mcdonald_vail_lydia](https://history.croton.news/mcdonald/mcdonald_vail_lydia).
Vail's account of the Crompond raid (pre-1781) transitions directly into her account of the May 14, 1781 attack on her grandfather's house — the two stories are placed back-to-back in her 1847 interview because they both involve British cavalry crossing the Croton from the south side. Her eyewitness detail for the Crompond raid: the retreating force was "all horse" — no infantry — and she saw them "retire across the Croton by Pines Bridge" rather than back across the upstream ford they had used on the approach. Tarleton's force, having accomplished the surprise approach and the burning, used the main Pines Bridge crossing for the retreat — exposing themselves more openly on the way out than they had on the way in.
The commander, she says, was "Totten (or who ever commanded)" — a misremembering or a family tradition that conflated Tarleton with the later Loyalist officer Gilbert Totten. This kind of name-drift is common in seventy-year-old oral testimony. Mandeville and Montross are clearer that the commander was Tarleton; Vail is speaking from a family vague association of "British cavalry raid" with "Totten."
A Separate Raid? Benjamin Acker on the October 1779 Night March
Benjamin Acker's testimony, recorded on the same notebook page as Benjamin Kipp's solo interview (WCHS item 666, pages 658 ff., immediately following Kipp's Crompond paragraph), may describe a different raid:[^6]
<em>"I belonged to the guard that was watching the road near Roswell's corner about two miles below Clark's corner, when the British went up to burn Crompond in 1779. We hid. It was a dark night. About two hundred horse passed, and then at some distance came the infantry. I don't know whether they advanced at this time through White Plains or by way of Tarrytown."</em>
[^6]: WCHS McDonald Interviews item 982, Acker Benjamin interview of November 20, 1847. Hufeland Mss. Book 1, Vol. 5, pp. 979–981 (continuing from the trailing fragment at the foot of item 666 p.665). https://collections.westchestergov.com/digital/collection/mcdonald/id/982 . Full transcription: [history.croton.news/mcdonald/mcdonald_acker_benjamin](https://history.croton.news/mcdonald/mcdonald_acker_benjamin).
Acker's description — about two hundred horse, then infantry at some distance, a dark night — does not match Mandeville's and Vail's accounts of a cavalry-only raid across Vail's Ford from the east. If Acker's testimony is about the same June 24 raid, then either (a) Tarleton had infantry support that Mandeville and Vail did not see, or (b) Acker's memory compressed two separate events. The more likely reading, we think, is that Acker is describing a second, larger British expedition to Crompond in 1779 — possibly the October 1779 raid by General Tryon's forces that burned additional houses and territory. The published record of Westchester raids in 1779 mentions multiple British incursions, and it is plausible that the June Tarleton raid and a larger autumn operation have been compressed into a single "the British burnt Crompond in 1779" tradition in some families while being remembered separately in others.
Acker's detail that the raid passed "Roswell's corner about two miles below Clark's corner" locates his guard post specifically on the road network south of Crompond. The "pitch dark night" and the sequencing (horse first, then infantry at a distance) suggest a coordinated force on the march — not a small cavalry raid but a divisional-scale British expedition. This fits the pattern of the larger 1779 operations more than the smaller Tarleton raid of June 24.
We present Acker's account here because it belongs in any conversation about the 1779 Crompond burnings, with the note that Mandeville and Montross give a tight, cavalry-only June 24 raid and Acker gives a mixed-arms night march that may have been a separate event weeks or months later.
The Crompond Burying Ground
One of the consequences of Tarleton's June 24, 1779 raid was that the Crompond burying ground — the graveyard attached to the Presbyterian Church Tarleton burned — was pushed into Westchester memory as a place where Patriots lay. When Colonel Christopher Greene and Major Ebenezer Flagg were killed at the Davenport House two years later, on May 14, 1781, their bodies were carried to Crompond and buried in that same burying ground. They were placed in uninscribed rough-stone graves because the Continental Army did not have the resources in the final months of the war for formal monuments. See Story 22, [At Davenport House, Before Sunrise](/story/22_pines_bridge), for Thomas Strang's testimony on the burial.
Crompond — the village, the church, the burying ground — becomes, across three McDonald interviews spanning two separate raids (June 1779 and May 1781), a single continuous locus of Revolutionary-era violence and Revolutionary-era American martyrdom. By the time McDonald arrived to interview the old men and women of the area in 1845–1850, the village was slowly becoming Yorktown Heights, the church had been replaced, the graves were being forgotten, and the lane system around Davenport House and the Widow Griffin's was about to be flooded by the New Croton Reservoir.
What the Published Record Missed
The Crompond burning of June 24, 1779 is mentioned in most modern Westchester Revolutionary War histories as "Tarleton raided Crompond." The McDonald primary sources specify:
- Tarleton's route was "circuitous": up the Croton "a mile and a half or more above" Pines Bridge, crossing at Vail's Ford (Mandeville) or Cudney's Ford (Montross), then approaching Crompond from the east "by a road which bends like a semi-circle." (Mandeville, WCHS 1289) - The British rejoined the main road at Halleck's, formerly called Delavan's Mills. (Kipp, WCHS 666) - The American militia guard at Crompond was commanded by Sergeant Crawford (a one-eyed man) and Captain Boyd — the same men who would later detain Smith and André overnight in September 1780. (Strang, WCHS 380; see Story 1) - An American soldier named John Shaw was killed in the raid. (Montross, WCHS 1489) - The Presbyterian Church at Crompond was burned. (Montross, WCHS 1489) - Captain Keeler of North Salem, trying to surrender, presented his sword point-first and was cut by a British cavalryman who misread the gesture — severing several of Keeler's fingers. (Townsend, WCHS 655) - The British force retreated across Pines Bridge openly, not via the upstream ford they had used for the approach. (Vail Lydia, WCHS 1353) - The force was "all horse" — Tarleton's Legion cavalry, no infantry. (Vail Lydia, WCHS 1353) - A separate 1779 raid with 200 horse plus infantry, at night, passing Roswell's Corner — possibly a different British expedition conflated with Tarleton's smaller raid in some family traditions. (Acker, WCHS 982)
Six independent McDonald witnesses preserve between them the commander, the date, the route, the crossing point, the target church, a named American casualty, the wound mechanism of a second named officer, the retreat route, the force composition, and a possible second raid from the same year. Bolton 1848, Scharf 1886, and Shonnard 1900 give us only the bare fact that "Tarleton raided Crompond." Everything else is in the manuscript pages.
Coda
Banastre Tarleton rode away from Crompond in the early afternoon of June 24, 1779 and was wounded at Pound Ridge eight days later. He recovered, returned to duty, and spent the next two years as the most feared cavalry officer in the British Army in America. The Presbyterian Church at Crompond was rebuilt — not at once, but within the generation — and the Crompond burying ground outlasted the village name itself. When Colonel Christopher Greene's body was carried to Crompond on May 14, 1781 and laid under a rough uninscribed stone, the church he was buried next to was the rebuilt successor to the one Tarleton had burned. The burying ground remembered.
Captain Keeler's name — we have no first name — survives in exactly one sentence from an old man named Townsend in 1847. John Shaw's name survives in one sentence from Nathaniel Montross in 1848. Neither man is on any published memorial to the Revolutionary War dead in Westchester County. They are here now.
Sources
All six McDonald interviews are transcribed in full at [history.croton.news/mcdonald](https://history.croton.news/mcdonald). Individual digital records linked in the footnotes above.
On Crompond as a lost place name: Crompond (sometimes spelled "Crom Pond" or "Cram Pond" in 19th-century sources) was a named settlement in the present-day Town of Yorktown, Westchester County, centered on the Presbyterian Church. By the time of the 1868 F.W. Beers atlas the hamlet was still labeled "Crompond" but the modern name "Yorktown Heights" was already replacing it. The McDonald Interviews consistently use "Crompond" because that was the name in use at the time of the Revolution and at the time of the interviews. This article follows the McDonald usage.
On Tarleton's June 24, 1779 raid: The standard published sources place the raid in the week after the June 19–20 skirmishes along the Croton line and in the week before Tarleton's July 2 wounding at Pound Ridge. Mandeville's "On the 24th of June" is consistent with the published chronology and should be treated as the most specific date in the primary-source record. Montross's "Tarleton came out to Crompond in 1779" is consistent but undated by month.
On the separate Acker incident: Benjamin Acker's November 20, 1847 interview describes a raid with 200 horse and a column of infantry, at night, which does not match the cavalry-only profile of Tarleton's June 24 operation. We tentatively identify this as a separate, larger British expedition to Crompond in the autumn of 1779 — possibly the General Tryon operation of October 1779 or a related movement — whose details the published Westchester histories have merged with the Tarleton raid.