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Coordinates: 39°52′31″N 75°12′47″W / 39.8753°N 75.213°W / 39.8753; -75.213
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During the Civil War the Union used Fort Mifflin to house Confederate prisoners of war, as well as [[Union (American Civil War)|Union soldiers]] and civilians accused of breaking the law. Numerous Confederate prisoners occupied Fort Mifflin from 1863 to 1865 and were housed in the largest casemate, designated #1. The Union Army used three smaller casemates to hold political prisoners during the same period. Various people wrote graffiti inside the cell doors and on the inner walls of "casement #11" during the 1860's. They also left a wine token and penny, both dated 1864 and in remarkable condition.
During the Civil War the Union used Fort Mifflin to house Confederate prisoners of war, as well as [[Union (American Civil War)|Union soldiers]] and civilians accused of breaking the law. Numerous Confederate prisoners occupied Fort Mifflin from 1863 to 1865 and were housed in the largest casemate, designated #1. The Union Army used three smaller casemates to hold political prisoners during the same period. Various people wrote graffiti inside the cell doors and on the inner walls of "casement #11" during the 1860's. They also left a wine token and penny, both dated 1864 and in remarkable condition.


The Union Army accused [[William H Howe]], one of its soldiers, of desertion, found him guilty of murder, and imprisoned him famously at Fort Mifflin from January 1864. Howe led an attempted escape of two hundred<ref>"Philadelphia Inquirer" February 26, 1864 "Excitement at Fort Mifflin"</ref> prisoners from casemate #5 in February 1864. Afterwards, Howe was housed in a solitary confinement cell in casemate #11, where he left his signature. Despite his illiterate reputation, Howe twice wrote letters (filled with bad grammar and run-on sentences) to President [[Abraham Lincoln]] asking for clemency, signing them with his own hand. In April 1864 Howe was transferred to [[Eastern State Penitentiary]] then, on 26 August of the same year, was transferred back to Fort Mifflin. The condemned prisoner was briefly held in the fort's wooden guardhouse, prior to his execution on the gallows, which were steps away from the guardhouse. Howe's hanging was before an audience of persons who paid for tickets to watch the execution. Of the three other men executed at Fort Mifflin, none had a paid public audience.<ref>''Stop the Evil: A Civil War History of Desertion and Murder'', by Robert I. Alotta, Presidio Press, 1996. Original from the University of Michigan. Digitized Sept. 19, 2008. ISBN 089141018X, 9780891410188, 202 pages</ref>
The Union Army accused [[William H Howe]], one of its soldiers, of desertion, found him guilty of murder, and imprisoned him famously at Fort Mifflin from January 1864. Howe led an attempted escape of two hundred<ref>"Philadelphia Inquirer" February 26, 1864 "Excitement at Fort Mifflin"</ref> prisoners from casemate #5 in February 1864. Afterwards, Howe was housed in a solitary confinement cell in casemate #11, where he left his signature. Despite his illiterate reputation, Howe twice wrote letters (filled with bad grammar and run-on sentences) to President [[Abraham Lincoln]] asking for clemency, signing them with his own hand. In April 1864 Howe was transferred to [[Eastern State Penitentiary]] then, on 26 August of the same year, was transferred back to Fort Mifflin. The condemned prisoner was briefly held in the fort's wooden guardhouse, prior to his execution on the gallows, which were steps away from the guardhouse. Howe's hanging was before an audience of persons who paid for tickets to watch the execution. Of the three other men executed at Fort Mifflin, none had a paid public audience.<ref>''Stop the Evil: A Civil War History of Desertion and Murder'', by Robert I. Alotta, Presidio Press, 1996. Original from the University of Michigan. Digitized Sept. 19, 2008. ISBN 089141018X, 9780891410188, 202 pages</ref>


The Army proposed adding a sallyport on the west side in 1864.
The Army proposed adding a sallyport on the west side in 1864.

Revision as of 03:34, 12 November 2011

39°52′31″N 75°12′47″W / 39.8753°N 75.213°W / 39.8753; -75.213

Fort Mifflin
A painting of Fort Mifflin by Seth Eastman commissioned by the US Army in 1870
Fort Mifflin is located in Pennsylvania
Fort Mifflin
LocationFort Mifflin Road
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
ArchitectJohn Montresor
Pierre Charles L’Enfant
Louis de Tousard
NRHP reference No.70000554[1]
Added to NRHPAugust 29, 1970

Fort Mifflin, originally called Fort Island Battery and also known as Mud Island Fort, was commissioned in 1771 and sits on Mud Island (or Deep Water Island) on the Delaware River below Philadelphia, Pennsylvania[nb 1] near Philadelphia International Airport. During the American Revolutionary War, the British Army bombarded and captured the fort as part of their conquest of Philadelphia in autumn 1777. The United States Army began to rebuild the fort in 1794 and continued to garrison and build on the site through the 19th century. It housed prisoners during the American Civil War. The Army decommissioned Fort Mifflin in 1962 and returned it to the City of Philadelphia. Historic preservationists have restored the fort.

Colonial defenses of Philadelphia

Upon foundation of Philadelphia in 1681, people recognized Mudd Island near the confluence of the Delaware River and Schuylkill River as strategically important for the defense of the settlement.[2] William Penn, a Quaker with religious objections to military life, however, left Philadelphia undefended. Whenever European colonists established permanent settlements, fortifications in or near those settlements commonly provided protection. Quakers founded the only significant European settlements without fortification.[3] As the Quakers rejected the military, they sought to make peace with the Native Americans in the area to avoid the need for fortifications. While other colonies suffered from conflict and warfare, Philadelphia prospered.

By the 1740s, it ranked as the richest British port in the New World. French and Spanish privateers then entered the Delaware River, threatening the city. During King George's War (1744–1748), Benjamin Franklin raised a militia, because the legislators of the city decided to take no action to defend Philadelphia "either by erecting fortifications or buildings Ships of War". He raised money to create earthwork defenses and to buy artillery.[4] At the end of the war, commanders disbanded the militia and left derelict the defenses of the city.[5] With renewed colonial warfare in the 1750s, people drew up plans for a fort on Mudd Island but did not implement any such plan.[6] Only in the 1770s did the city acquire permanent fortifications.

By 1771, Philadelphia ranked as the largest British port and dockyard in North America. Locals then rose in protest against British economic policies and imports. In response to complaints by the Secretary of State for the Colonies, Philadelphia Governor John Penn asked General Thomas Gage to send someone capable of designing defenses for the city. He intended a fort on Mudd Island to help to regulate traffic entering and exiting the port.[6] Gage assigned Engineering Captain John Montresor to the task. Montresor presented six designs to Penn and the Board of Commissioners; the board proposed constructing a fort on Mud Island (also known as Deep Water Island).[7][nb 2]

The Commissioners reviewed the plans, found all too expensive, and insisted on economy despite protestations of Montresor about budget.[8] Montresor stated that his preferred plan cost about £40,000 and that he intended to mount "32 pieces of cannon, 4 mortars and 4 royal howitzers ... which at 6 men each make 240 men required, 160 musketry, in all 400 garrison."[8] The colonial General Assembly passed a bill releasing £15,000 for the construction of the fort and the purchase of Mud Island from Joseph Galloway, the Speaker of the House.[9] The board instructed Montresor to begin construction but failed to provide him with the funds that he considered necessary to do so properly. The rooms in the farthest interior of "casemate #11" probably date from the original construction in 1771. On 4 June 1772, Montresor left the head workman in charge of the construction project and returned to New York disgruntled. The project floundered onward for about a year, when it stopped for lack of guidance and funding.[10] The crews completed only the south walls, built in stone.[11]

History

American Revolutionary War

Following the adoption of the Declaration of Independence, Benjamin Franklin headed a committee to provide for the defense of Philadelphia. The Philadelphia Committee of Public Safety quickly thereafter restarted construction on the fort and finally completed it in 1776. The committee simultaneously also constructed Fort Mercer, New Jersey, on the eastern bank of the Delaware River across from Fort Mifflin.[12] The Americans intended to use Fort Mifflin and Fort Mercer to control the activity of the British Navy on the Delaware River.[13]

Defenders of Philadelphia assembled "chevaux de frise,[12]" obstacles placed in "tiers" spanning the width of the Delaware between Forts Mercer and Mifflin. These defenses comprised wooden-framed "boxes", 30 feet square, constructed of huge timbers and lined with pine planks. Defenders lowered these frames onto the riverbed and filled each with 20 to 40 tons of stone to anchor it in place. They placed two or three large timbers tipped with iron spikes into each frame, set underwater and facing obliquely downstream. They then chained the boxes together to maintain continuity. The chevaux de frise presented a formidable obstacle that could impale unwitting ships. The system design contained gaps to allow passage of friendly shipping. Only a select few patriot navigators knew the locations of safe passage through this barrier. Soldiers at Forts Mercer and Mifflin could fire at anyone attempting to dismantle these obstacles.

Hessian map showing campaign against Fort Mifflin and Fort Mercer (Redbank) in 1777.

After the defeat of Washington at the Battle of Brandywine, the British took control of Philadelphia in September 1777. The British forces then laid siege to Fort Mifflin and Fort Mercer in early October 1777.[14] The British Army intended the siege to open up its supply line.[12] Captain John Montresor, earlier designer and constructor of early Fort Mifflin, planned and built the siege works used against Fort Mifflin.[10] He then led the siege and destroyed much of Fort Mifflin.[12] During the siege, four hundred American soldiers held off more than two thousand British troops and 250 ships until 10 November 1777, when the British intensified their assault, launching an incessant barrage of cannonballs into the fort.[12] On 15 November 1777, the American troops evacuated the fort. Their stand effectively denied the British Navy free use of the Delaware River and allowed the successful repositioning of the Continental Army for the Battle of White Marsh and subsequent withdrawal to Valley Forge.[12] Fort Mifflin experienced the heaviest bombardment of the American Revolutionary War. The siege left 250 of the 406 to 450 men garrisoned at the Fort Mifflin killed or wounded.[15] Comrades-in-arms ferried these dead and wounded to the mainland before the final evacuation.[16] Fort Mifflin never again saw military action.[13]

Of the original Fort Mifflin, only the white stone walls of the fort still survive today. The pockmarks in these stone walls evidence the intensity of the British bombardment of 1777. Local residents know this siege and massive bombardment as The Battle of Mud Island.

Reconstruction through War of 1812

The commandant's house

The ruins of Fort Mifflin lay derelict until 1793. Pierre L'Enfant, also responsible for planning Washington, D.C., supervised the reconstruction and designed the rebuild in 1794 under President John Adams.[13] Reconstruction work began on the fort in 1795 under the auspices of Louis de Tousard, who from 1795 to 1800 traveled along the coast between Massachusetts and the Carolinas working on coastal defenses.[17] The Army probably built the outer room of "casemate #11" during the reconstruction of the fort from 1794–1798 and used it as a "proof room" to make cannon charges. The buildings at Fort Mifflin included barracks for soldiers in the 1790s, measuring 117 feet (36 m) by 28 feet (8.5 m) and consisting of two stories. The original barracks contained 7 rooms, 5 of them each designed to house 25 men. The Army officially named the fort after Thomas Mifflin in 1795.[18]

The Soldiers Barracks

Over a cross-shaped hole in the ground previously designated as a last-ditch defensive area near the center of the fort, the Army built the extant citadel structure to house the commandant in 1796. Lieutenant Colonel Stephen Rochefontaine replaced Pierre Charles L'Enfant as chief engineer at Fort Mifflin in 1798 and completed the citadel structure to house the commandant. Lieutenant Colonel Rochfontaine used but improved original designs of L'Enfant. The commandants house exemplifies Greek Revival architecture, rare on Army installations in the United States. The Army also built the six cavelike casemates as defensive structures in the case of an enemy siege during the reconstruction of 1798-1801. Soldiers used a "bake oven" just outside the main gate and the entrance to the bomb-proof casemate for baking bread, as a chapel, and as a mess hall. The Army designed the largest casemate (#1) as a barracks. The Army used three smaller casemates for storage. The architects intended casemate #5, about half the size of casemate #1, as the headquarters of Fort Mifflin in the time of attack.

The Army built blacksmith shop before 1802, probably the oldest surviving complete structure at Fort Mifflin. (RG77 NAB)

The Army built a two-story officers quarters, measuring 96 feet (29 m) by 28 feet (8.5 m), in 1814 (#475, RG 77, NAB).

Pre-Civil War period

The Army built a one-story brick structure 24 feet (7.3 m) by 44 feet (13 m) in 1815–1816 as a guardhouse and prison. Around 1819, north of the walls of the fort, the Army also built a hospital and mess hall.

Fort Mifflin's hospital

After the construction of Fort Delaware in 1820, Fort Mifflin was relegated to secondary status. During the 19th century the area around the fort was drained and filled until Mud Island connected with the western bank of the Delaware River.[13] Nevertheless, the building and garrisoning of Fort Mifflin continued. In the early 1820's, the Army began meteorological observations at the fort.

The soldiers barracks building was extensively renovated by the Army in 1836, along with the officers quarters. At a later date the soldiers barracks was again renovated, at which time the roofline was changed to add the second floor. (HABS # PA-1225E). In 1837 the hospital and mess hall building was converted to a meetinghouse (ASP 7:632) and an artillery shed, for the storage and protection of cannon, was built on an interior raised platform.[19]

Artillery shed

By 1839, the Army designated the one-story brick guardhouse-prison as an arsenal. (Historic American Building Survey (HABS) #PA1225.) On December 27, 1842 the Army completed a brick, one-story sutler building/storehouse measuring 55 feet (17 m) by 20 feet (6,100 mm) (Tompkins to Jessup, Consolidated Correspondence, Box 662, RG 92 NAB). In the 1840's a two-story kitchen wing was added to the officers quarters building .

American Civil War

During the Civil War the Union used Fort Mifflin to house Confederate prisoners of war, as well as Union soldiers and civilians accused of breaking the law. Numerous Confederate prisoners occupied Fort Mifflin from 1863 to 1865 and were housed in the largest casemate, designated #1. The Union Army used three smaller casemates to hold political prisoners during the same period. Various people wrote graffiti inside the cell doors and on the inner walls of "casement #11" during the 1860's. They also left a wine token and penny, both dated 1864 and in remarkable condition.

The Union Army accused William H Howe, one of its soldiers, of desertion, found him guilty of murder, and imprisoned him famously at Fort Mifflin from January 1864. Howe led an attempted escape of two hundred[20] prisoners from casemate #5 in February 1864. Afterwards, Howe was housed in a solitary confinement cell in casemate #11, where he left his signature. Despite his illiterate reputation, Howe twice wrote letters (filled with bad grammar and run-on sentences) to President Abraham Lincoln asking for clemency, signing them with his own hand. In April 1864 Howe was transferred to Eastern State Penitentiary then, on 26 August of the same year, was transferred back to Fort Mifflin. The condemned prisoner was briefly held in the fort's wooden guardhouse, prior to his execution on the gallows, which were steps away from the guardhouse. Howe's hanging was before an audience of persons who paid for tickets to watch the execution. Of the three other men executed at Fort Mifflin, none had a paid public audience.[21]

The Army proposed adding a sallyport on the west side in 1864.

On 24 November 1864, the Union Army sent Lieutenant Colonel Seth Eastman, also a great American Western frontier painter, to Fort Mifflin to supervise the discharge of all civilian and military prisoners, then numbering more than two hundred. On 2 January 1865, Eastman reported that his garrison consisted of B Company, 186th Pennsylvania Volunteer Regiment, a detachment of recruits, and the hospital staff.

After the Civil War

On 20 August 1865, Captain Thomas E. Merritt with A Company, 7th United States Veteran volunteers, relieved Lieutenant Colonel Eastman. The Army completed west sallyport by 1866 (B-566, RG 77, NAB). In 1866, A Company, 7th United States Veteran volunteers, vacated the fort, and the District Engineer Office, Corps of Engineers, replaced the company. The Army discontinued the fort as an active post.

Between 1866 and 1876, the Corps of Engineers intermittently repaired and modernized Fort Mifflin and upgraded its armament. The Army constructed the detached high battery south of the fort from 1870 to 1875 but never finished it.

The Army built torpedo casement in 1874/1875; its entrance sealed off access to the unused magazine, "casement #11," preserving a trove of historical artifacts from the light of day. These artifacts include pottery, a tin cup, a tin chamber pot, period buttons, dozens of animal bones. The 1875 Annual Report "The construction of the torpedo casemate has commenced" notes east magazine torpedo casemate. The Army constructed this casemate in 1876.

From 1876 to 1884, the Philadelphia District Office of the Corps of Engineers took custodial responsibility of Fort Mifflin. East magazine (torpedo casemate) first appears on a map in 1886. (RG77, NAB)

The Army removed the two story kitchen wings from the officers quarters building before the 1920s (HABS #PA-1225F).

In 1923 the Marine Barracks held the first recorded USMC Birthday dance.[22]

Second World War

During the Second World War, the Army stationed anti-aircraft guns at old Fort Mifflin to defend the nearby Fort Mifflin Naval Ammunition Storage Depot (NASD) and the United States Philadelphia Naval Shipyard. Marine Corps units from Philadelphia Naval Shipyard guarded Naval Ammunition Storage Depot at the northern end of the former Mud and Cabin Islands, while the Army assigned regular troops to the historic fort proper. By 24 April 1942, the Army stationed Battery "H" of the 76th Coast Artillery Regiment, the first Negro Coast Artillery unit in United States history, at the fort.[nb 3] By summer 1942, the Army stationed the 601st Coast Artillery at Fort Mifflin.

In 1954, the fort fell from use as a military post. Several documents reference "old magazine entrance " in the location of "casement #11," and the number 11 comes from a map legend, dated 1954 and associated with "old magazine entrance," but the only evidence extant appeared as nothing more than the cap of a chimney. Fort Mifflin closed, ranking among the oldest fort in continuous use in the country. G.E. Brumbaugh renovated interior of sutler storehouse in 1960; Harold Finigan, then executive director of the fort, renovated its exterior.

Decommissioning and restoration

In 1962, the federal government deeded Fort Mifflin back to the City of Philadelphia.[12] John Dickey restored interior of blacksmith shop in 1969; Harold Finigan, then executive director of the fort, restored exterior.

After a fire in 1983, people partially restored the commandants house, a rare Greek revival structure on an Army installation in the United States. ASP 1:11 Architect J. Dickey re-roofed restored artillery shed in the early 1980s. Harold Finigan, then executive director of the fort, restored artillery shed and hospital. He also in the 1980s did major restoration of quarters for officers and restored kitchen wings.

Harold Finigan restored arsenal in the early 1990s. He also in 1990s restored barracks of soldiers and sea wall.

Wayne Irby in 2006 rediscovered and unearthed the recently named "casemate #11" at Fort Mifflin. Doctor Don Johnson and a small group of volunteers in August 2006 uncovered and discovered the complexity of the inner rooms and the trove of historical artifacts inside "casemate #11."

Standing buildings

  • Arsenal
  • Artillery Shed
  • Blacksmith Shop
  • Sutler Building/Storehouse
  • Soldiers' Barracks
  • Officers Quarters
  • Commandant's House
  • Hospital/Messhall
  • West Sallyport
  • Casemates
  • East Magazine
  • Casemate 11

Haunted buildings

Apparently, Casemate 11 seems to be the main source of where paranormal activity inside the fort occurs, as well as the Officers' Quarters and the Blacksmith shop. Many famous ghost hunters have been there, such as Dave Juliano[23] and TAPS from the Syfy show Ghost Hunters and its follow up Ghost Hunters Academy, have declared Fort Mifflin haunted.

See also

References

Explanatory notes
  1. ^ The island's back channel has since been filled in.
  2. ^ The details for the six different designs can be found at the David Library; "Montresor Papers" catalogued by Harold Finigan.
  3. ^ The oral history of one of these soldiers, Mr. Isaac Wright, has been preserved in the Ralph J. Bunche Oral History Collection (RJB #665) at Howard University.
Citations
  1. ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. July 9, 2010.
  2. ^ Dorwart 1998, p. 7.
  3. ^ Dorwart 1998, p. 9.
  4. ^ Dorwart 1998, pp. 9–11.
  5. ^ Dorwart 1998, p. 12.
  6. ^ a b Dorwart 1998, p. 13.
  7. ^ Scull 1881, pp. 414–415.
  8. ^ a b Scull 1881, pp. 415–416.
  9. ^ Scull 1881, pp. 416–417.
  10. ^ a b Scull 1881, p. 417.
  11. ^ Liggett & Laumark 1979, pp. 41–42.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g City of Philadelphia. "The History of Fort Mifflin, the Fort that saved America". Phila.gov. Retrieved on 25 October 2010.
  13. ^ a b c d Liggett & Laumark 1979, p. 41.
  14. ^ Jackson 1986
  15. ^ Boatner 1966, p. 384.
  16. ^ "Olde Fort Mifflin Historical Society: A few facts about Fort Mifflin". Olde Fort Mifflin Historical Society. 2007. Retrieved on 28 October 2008.
  17. ^ Wilkinson 1960–1961, p. 179
  18. ^ Dorwart 1998, p. 29.
  19. ^ (As cited in a report from the Engineers Dept, 28 Nov 1837; American State Papers 7:580)
  20. ^ "Philadelphia Inquirer" February 26, 1864 "Excitement at Fort Mifflin"
  21. ^ Stop the Evil: A Civil War History of Desertion and Murder, by Robert I. Alotta, Presidio Press, 1996. Original from the University of Michigan. Digitized Sept. 19, 2008. ISBN 089141018X, 9780891410188, 202 pages
  22. ^ http://www.usmcpress.com/heritage/marine_corps_birthday.htm
  23. ^ http://www.southjerseyghostresearch.org/cases3/05023.html

Bibliography

  • Boatner, Mark Mayo (1966). Cassell's Biographical Dictionary of the American War of Independence, 1763–1783. London: Cassell & Company. ISBN 0-304-29296-6.
  • Dorwart, Jeffery (1998). Fort Mifflin of Philadelphia: An Illustrated History. University of Pennsylvania Press. ISBN 9780812216448. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Jackson, John (1986). Fort Mifflin: Valiant Defender of the Delaware. Old Fort Mifflin Historical Society Preservation Committee.
  • Liggett, Barbara; Laumark, Sandra (1979). "The Counterfort at Fort Mifflin". Bulletin of the Association for Preservation Technology. 11 (1). Association for Preservation Technology International (APT): pp. 37–74. doi:10.2307/1493677. JSTOR 1493677. {{cite journal}}: |pages= has extra text (help); Invalid |ref=harv (help)CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  • Scull, G. D. (ed) (1881). "The Montroser Journals" (PDF). Collection for the Year 1881. New York Historical Society. {{cite journal}}: |first= has generic name (help); Invalid |ref=harv (help)CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  • Wilkinson, Norman B. (1960–1961). "The Forgotten "Founder" of West Point". Military Affairs. 24 (4). Society for Military History: pp. 177–188. JSTOR 1984876. {{cite journal}}: |pages= has extra text (help); Invalid |ref=harv (help)CS1 maint: postscript (link)

Further reading

  • Alotta, Robert I, “Old Fort Mifflin: The Chain of Command” Shackamaxon Society, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States of America 1977, 20 pages
  • Alotta, Robert I, “The Spirit of the Men of Mifflin” Shackamaxon Society, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States of America 1971,
  • Alotta, Robert I, “The Men of Mifflin” Shackamaxon Society, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States of America 1971
  • Alotta, Robert I, “Old Fort Mifflin (1772-77 to 1972-77) Living History: A Meaningful Bicentennial” Shackamaxon Society, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States of America 1972 10 pages
  • Alotta, Robert I, “Old Fort Mifflin: The Defenders” Shackamaxon Society, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States of America 1973
  • Alotta, Robert I, “Old Fort Mifflin: The Buildings and Structures” Shackamaxon Society, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States of America 1973 36 pages
  • Alotta, Robert I, “Historic Old Fort Mifflin” Shackamaxon Society, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States of America 1973
  • Alotta, Robert I, “A Glossary of Fortification Terms as they relate to Old Fort Mifflin” Shackamaxon Society, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States of America 1972 12 pages
  • Alotta, Robert I, “A Fort Mifflin Diary” Shackamaxon Society, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States of America 1973 36 pages
  • Hardway, Ronald V., Benjamin Lemasters of Nicholas County, West Virginia : his ancestry, his war record, his descendants
  • Jackson, John, The Pennsylvania Navy, 1775-1781 Rutgers University Press
  • Martin, Joseph Plum, Private Yankee Doodle Western Acorn Press, 1962
  • McGuire, Thomas J., The Philadelphia Campaign, Vol. II: Germantown and the Roads to Valley Forge, Stackpole Books, Mechanicsburg, PA, 2006. ISBN 978-0-8117-0206-5, pages 181 to 222.
  • Selletti, Anthony L, Fort Mifflin: A Paranormal History, Selletti Press, Chester, Pa, 19013 October 2008, ISBN 061522847X, 9780615228471 248 pages