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Working with Partners to Preserve the Newtown Battlefield

A stream of slow-moving water makes a bend to the right in the photo. In the foreground is a rocky shore with trees and shrubs lining the water’s edge. As the stream bends, it diminishes in the background of more tree growth.
A tranquil stream on newly acquired acreage graces the Newtown Battlefield.

Courtesy of the American Battlefield Trust

Recipient: Town of Ashland
Amount: $860,278.00
Acres: 322.09

Following the defeat of British General John Burgoyne’s Army at Saratoga, the Revolutionary War in upstate New York shifted from large scale battles to smaller, more brutal, actions between American forces and Britian’s Haudenosaunee allies - the Iroquois Confederacy. In August of 1779, a combined force of Iroquois warriors and supporting British Loyalists attempted to stop the advance of American Major General John Sullivan’s Continentals at Newtown. American infantry acting on orders directly from General George Washington to inflict the “total destruction and devastation of [the Iroquois] settlements . . . [including the ruin of] their crops . . . and prevent [them from] planting more.” Actions that Washington believed would force the Iroquois to break their alliance with the British and end their involvement in the war.

Fighting behind a horseshoe shaped breastwork of cut-down logs on the morning of August 29th, the Iroquois and Loyalists were overwhelmed by the larger American line, forcing them to retreat. Causalities were relatively light, with combined losses amounting to less than a hundred dead, wounded, or captured. However, the aftermath of the battle was devastating. Unopposed by any organized force after Newtown, the Americans under Sullivan’s command burned more than 40 native villages over the next two months. Brutal scorched-earth tactics that knocked the Iroquois out of the war as Washington intended. Today, local governments in the state of New York intend to preserve the grave legacy of this important battle.

With the financial assistance of a Battlefield Land Acquisition Grant, the Town of Ashland, New York will support the preservation of 322-acres of the Newtown Battlefield through a fee-simple purchase of two properties. The Town will then transfer the land to the state, and have it incorporated as part of the Newtown Battlefield State Park, ensuring that both the historic and natural landscape of the battlefield are protected in perpetuity.

Battlefield Land Acquisition Grants from the National Park Service’s American Battlefield Protection Program empower preservation partners nationwide to acquire and preserve threatened Revolutionary War, War of 1812 and Civil War battlefields. In addition to this grant opportunity, the program provides financial assistance for related projects through Battlefield Interpretation Grants, Battlefield Restoration Grants, and Preservation Planning Grants, generating community-driven stewardship of historic resources at the state, tribal and local levels.

Last updated: September 19, 2024