Mount Hope Bay raids

Mount Hope Bay raids
Part of the American Revolutionary War

General Sir Robert Pigot (portrait by Francis Cotes), the organizer of the raids
DateMay 25 and 31, 1778
Location
Result British victory
Belligerents
 United States  Great Britain
Commanders and leaders
William Barton (May 25)
Joseph Durfee (May 31)
Sir Robert Pigot (Commander In-Chief)
John Campbell (May 25)
Edmund Eyre (May 31)
Strength
May 25: 500 regulars and volunteers
May 31: 40 militia
May 25: 500 regulars
2 frigates
May 31: 100–150 regulars
Casualties and losses
May 25: 69 civilian prisoners taken[1]
May 31: 1 captured[2]
May 25: 11 wounded, 2 captured[1]
May 31, at Freetown: 2 killed, 5 wounded[2]
May 31, at Bristol Ferry: 2–3 killed, 1–2 wounded[3][4][5]

The Mount Hope Bay raids were a series of military raids conducted by British troops during the American Revolutionary War against communities on the shores of Mount Hope Bay on May 25 and 31, 1778. The towns of Bristol and Warren, Rhode Island were significantly damaged, and Freetown, Massachusetts (present-day Fall River) was also attacked, although its militia resisted British attacks more successfully. The British destroyed military defenses in the area, including supplies that had been cached by the Continental Army in anticipation of an assault on British-occupied Newport, Rhode Island. Homes as well as municipal and religious buildings were also destroyed in the raids.

On May 25, 500 British and Hessian soldiers, under orders from General Sir Robert Pigot, the commander of the British garrison at Newport, Rhode Island, landed between Bristol and Warren, destroyed boats and other supplies, and plundered Bristol. Local resistance was minimal and ineffective in stopping the British activities. Six days later, 100 soldiers descended on Freetown, where less damage was done because local defenders prevented the British from crossing a bridge.

  1. ^ a b Cite error: The named reference Dearden27 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  2. ^ a b Cite error: The named reference Dearden28 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  3. ^ Cite error: The named reference PigotFreetown was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  4. ^ Lieutenant Frederick Mackenzie diary, May 31, 1778 entry
  5. ^ Journal of H.M. frigate Flora, Captain John Brisbane, May 31, 1778, transcribed in "Naval Documents of the American Revolution, Volume 12", p. 496-497

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