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Home Virginia Northumberland County British Attacks at Kinsale and Mundy Point

British Attacks at Kinsale and Mundy Point

Hampton Hall Rd, VA , USA

Latitude & Longitude: 37° 59' 49.7544", -76° 35' 12.8472"
  Virginia VA State Historical Marker
Virginia State
Historical Marker

 
(Obverse:) Two miles east on 3 Aug. 1814, 500 British marines and seamen under Adm. Sir George Cockburn landed at Mundy's Point and Kinsale. Opposing the enemy at the Point were Capt. William Henderson and thirty Northumberland county militiamen. Henderson's company was forced to retreat to the county courthouse. Later that day, British forces took Kinsale, burned the town, and seized tobacco. Three days later, they began raids along the Coan River. Among the British troops were about fifty formerly enslaved African Americans, who were among the thousands who gained freedom by fighting or working for the British.
(Reverse:) Impressment of Americans into British service and the violation of American ships were among the causes of America's War of 1812 with the British, which lasted until 1815. Beginning in 1813, Virginians suffered from a British naval blockade of the Chesapeake Bay and from British troops' plundering the countryside by the Bay and along the James, Rappahannock, and Potomac rivers. The Virginia militia deflected a British attempt to take Norfolk in 1813, and engaged British forces throughout the war. By the end of the war, more than 2000 enslaved African Americans in Virginia had gained their freedom aboard British ships.

Last updated: 2/14/2015 15:17:00
 
   
 
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British Attacks at Kinsale and Mundy Point Virginia Map