In Irving's story,
Peter Stuyvesant, having learned of an
English expedition on its way to seize the colony, ordered Van Corlaer to rouse the villages along the
Hudson River with a trumpet call to war. "
It was a dark and stormy night" when Van Corlaer arrived at the upper end of the island, and as no ferryman was available Van Corlaer vowed to swim across the
Harlem River "in spite of the devil", but drowned in the attempt. Before at last going under, he blows a
last heroic blast like the chivalric Orlando. Some sources state that
Spuyten Duyvil, an inlet between
Manhattan and
the Bronx, is named after this incident. Van Corlaer was famous for his enormous, shiny red nose. One story tells of a
sturgeon killed by a ray of sunlight reflected off its surface.
Anthony's Nose Mountain along the Hudson is said by Irving to be named for this event. Van Corlaer's prior endeavors on behalf of Stuyvesant are mentioned several times in
Washington Irving's book
A History of New York. Irving also wrote the most popular account of the trumpeter's last deed, including the witness statement (which he claims to disbelieve) of Van Corlaer being seized by "the duyvel, in the shape of a huge
mossbonker". This has led some modern readers, unaware that Irving's work was a parody of history, to suggest that Van Corlaer was killed by a
bull shark. == In popular culture ==