Evacuation Day

November 24th, 2006 | by Walter Greenspan |

Tomorrow is the 223rd Anniversary of Evacuation Day.

Now almost forgotten, Evacuation Day was celebrated as a holiday long before the Fourth of July:

On November 25, 1783, the British Army boarded their naval vessels and evacuated New York City (then only coterminous with New York County), their wartime headquarters and their last military position in the United States during the Revolutionary War.

As the British sailed away south in retreat through the Narrows separating Staten Island on the west and Long Island on the east, the last thing they saw, as their ships sunk below the horizon, was the Flag of the United States of America flying atop the Liberty Pole (an extended flag pole) in the frontyard of the Dutch Reformed Church in the Hamlet of New Utrecht, Town of New Utrecht, in the south-central part of Kings County. Today this location is at Christopher Columbus Boulevard (18th Avenue) and Liberty Pole Boulevard (84th Street) in the Bensonhurst neighborhood in the south-central part of the New York City Borough of Brooklyn. (The NYC Borough of Brooklyn is coterminous with the NYS Kings County).

Replaced six times over the years, the 106′ Liberty Pole is the last remaining Liberty Pole in the original thirteen United States. On top of the Pole is the original eagle and weathervane. The eagle is made of wood and has a 5′ wingspan. After two hundred and twenty-two years, the weather has weakened it considerably and it has been reinforced with iron bands.

The eagle has looked over the bay and seen many sailing vessels, steamships and war ships. It has been said that the eyes of this golden eagle has looked upon more change in the world’s history than occurred from the days of Nebuchadnezzar to the day when the eagle was raised.

More information on the Liberty Pole and the New Utrecht Liberty Pole Association is available here and on the Dutch Reformed Church is available here.

  1. 3 Responses to “Evacuation Day”

  2. By Craig on Nov 24, 2006 | Reply

    Jay, Jay, Jay.

    Read.

    The.

    Byline.

  3. By Walter Greenspan on Nov 24, 2006 | Reply

    Jay, in addition to the mispecified byline, Evacuation Day is tomorrow, not today.

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