Preparations Colonel
Lewis Nicola held Fort Mifflin with a party of Pennsylvania militia, mostly men untrained for field service. Among the approximately 60 militiamen present for duty, not a single one knew how to operate the cannons. On September 23, with Philadelphia about to be captured, Washington sent Lieutenant Colonel
Samuel Smith of the
4th Maryland Regiment with a detachment of
Continentals into the fort on Mud Island. Smith's force numbered 200 soldiers plus Major Robert Ballard of Virginia, Major
Simeon Thayer of Rhode Island, and Captain Samuel Treat of the Continental Artillery. With the British army closing in on Philadelphia, the small force had to reach Fort Mifflin by a circuitous route. On the last leg of their journey, reinforcements for Mud Island had to be ferried across the Delaware from
Red Bank, New Jersey under the protection of the
Pennsylvania Navy river flotilla commanded by
John Hazelwood. To further complicate matters, Lieutenant Colonel John Green of the
7th Virginia Regiment, who outranked Smith, arrived with reinforcements on October 18. Smith developed an uneasy relationship with Hazelwood and their differences soon became obvious. On October 4, Washington marched against Howe's army at the
Battle of Germantown but was defeated. On the 11th, Hazelwood and Smith launched a joint attack by row galleys on the working parties. After losing one man killed and one wounded, a total of two officers and 56 enlisted men from the 1st Grenadier Battalion waved the white flag. The prisoners were quickly herded into the Americans' boats before engineer Captain James Moncrieffe could arrive with a rescue party of Hessians. The British
court martialed two officers for this setback. On October 14, French engineer Major
François-Louis Teissèdre de Fleury came to the fort and proved a great help to Smith.
Thomas Paine visited the fort on the 15th and observed that 30 enemy shells fell into the fort that day. On October 20, a British red-hot shot set off a minor explosion in the northwest blockhouse. Baron d'Arendt finally came to assume command on the 21st. While taking the Prussian on a tour of the fort, Smith and Fleury watched with shock and contempt as the terrified man ran away from the damaged blockhouse. D'Arendt announced that the fort was indefensible and left Mud Island for good on October 27, pleading "illness".
October 22–23 A Hessian force under Colonel
Carl von Donop attacked Fort Mercer on October 22 in the
Battle of Red Bank. The
1st Rhode Island Regiment under Colonel
Christopher Greene had arrived at the fort only on October 11 after leaving
Peekskill, New York on September 29. This was the first black unit in the Continental Army. Colonel
Israel Angell's
2nd Rhode Island Regiment reached Red Bank a week later and Major Thayer was sent with 150 soldiers to help garrison Fort Mifflin. When it became clear that the fort was about to be attacked, Thayer and his men recrossed the river to help in Fort Mercer's defense. The following day saw another stunning disaster for the British. In support of the assault on Fort Mercer, a
squadron from Admiral Howe's fleet moved upriver under the command of Captain Francis Reynolds in the
ship of the line (64). Accompanying
Augusta was the
sloop HMS
Merlin (18) under Commander Samuel Reeve and the
frigates HMS
Roebuck (44), Captain Andrew Snape Hamond, HMS
Pearl (32), Captain Wilkinson, and (28), Captain Henry Bellew. A force of 200 British Grenadiers waited to make an amphibious assault on Mud Island when the fort's artillery fire was suppressed. While bombarding Fort Mifflin,
Augusta and
Merlin went
aground. High tide came that evening, but contrary winds prevented sufficient depth for the ships to be freed. On October 23, the American forts concentrated their fire on the two stricken ships. (50) worked its way alongside the stranded
Augusta in a rescue attempt. British accounts claimed that American gunnery did only slight damage but that flaming wads from the ships' guns caused
Augusta to catch fire. The loud explosion was heard nearly away in
Trappe, Pennsylvania. After the destruction of
Augusta the crew of
Merlin set their ship on fire and abandoned ship. At length
Merlin blew up in a less spectacular explosion.
Climax Beginning on October 26 a
nor'easter struck the area and the storm lasted for three days, bringing with it high winds and torrential rain. With two feet of water over most of Mud Island and similar conditions on Province and Carpenter's Islands, the mutual cannon fire stopped as both sides tried to find a dry place. By November 1, the Americans had the British army in Philadelphia effectively under blockade. Howe's troops were short of food, rum, clothing, and money. Montresor complained that he lacked adequate artillery and ammunition. The British were compelled to send supplies into Philadelphia via convoys of flatboats. To avoid being sunk by the guns of Fort Mifflin and the Pennsylvania Navy, the boats had to make the attempt in the night and maintain total silence. Hessian Captain
Johann von Ewald noted that in order to hold the sailors to their dangerous work, they were made completely drunk. After a
council of war on October 29, Washington ordered
Brigadier General James Mitchell Varnum to assume responsibility for the defense of the Delaware. Soon the last two units of his brigade were committed to the battle. On November 3, Varnum sent the
4th and
8th Connecticut Regiments to garrison Fort Mifflin. On November 10, Montresor was finally prepared to batter down the fort. By that date he had ready for action two 32-pounder, six 24-pounder, and one 18-pounder cannon plus two 8-inch howitzers, two 8-inch mortars, and one 13-inch mortar. On the 10th, the two sides blazed away at each other at a range of . No casualties were suffered by the Americans but large parts of the palisades on the western side of the island were wrecked. On the 11th, Captain Treat was killed by the concussion of a near miss as he talked with Smith. Later that day as Smith was in the barracks, a cannonball smashed through the chimney and struck him in the left hip. Though covered in bricks from the collapsed chimney and suffering from a dislocated wrist, Smith survived because the round was spent. The wounded Smith was ferried across to Red Bank, leaving the garrison leaderless. Varnum reported that the troops would welcome a British infantry assault, but that the constant barrage was taking its toll on the men. Fleury wrote to Washington that all the guns were dismounted except two but that the soldiers of the garrison were able to repair the damage to the palisades every night. The only safe place in the fort was a ditch on the east side and Fleury would go there to round up men for work details, lashing out at the laggards with his cane. The next in command after Smith was Lieutenant Colonel Giles Russell of Connecticut, but he declined and asked to be recalled. On November 12 Major Thayer accepted command of the fort. Sir William Howe began assembling a detachment of light infantry and Foot Guards on November 9, placing them under the command of Lieutenant Colonel
Sir George Osborn, 4th Baronet. These troops were ready by the 13th and were to be supported by the
27th Foot and
29th Foot. By November 14, the British had planted two additional batteries containing four 32-pounder guns and six 24-pounder guns, which added to the furious daily bombardment. That night Fort Mifflin fired on a supply convoy but missed. The British brought (20) upriver to attack the fort.
Vigilant was originally the naval transport
Empress of Russia. She had been converted in June 1777 into a vessel designed for shore bombardment. For this purpose, the ship carried 14 24-pounder cannon, two 9-pounders, and four 6-pounders. Before the attack, the British strengthened the vessel's sides, added 24 sharpshooters and 50 gunners to the crew, and transferred two extra guns to her starboard side. To maintain the ship's stability, water casks were positioned on the port side. Lieutenant John Henry was the commanding officer. Favored by a high tide,
Vigilant worked its way into the shallow channel between Mud Island and the north bank at 8:00 AM on November 15. Accompanied by the sloop
Fury with three 18-pounder guns, the converted transport hurled a barrage at Fort Mifflin from a distance of . Out in the main channel, (70),
Isis,
Roebuck, and
Pearl added the weight of their broadsides from a greater distance. Thayer ordered his 32-pounder cannon to be moved to the place of danger. Before
Vigilant reached her station, the gun crew claimed to have fired 14 shots into her. After the floating battery came to anchor, the fort was subjected to a terrific point blank fire. A single shot killed five American gunners at one cannon. A defender wrote that men were, "split like fish to be broiled". Thayer ordered a distress signal to be hoisted requesting help from Hazelwood, but to do so the fort's flag had to be lowered first. When the British gunners ceased fire and began to cheer in anticipation of victory, Thayer's officers demanded that the flag be immediately raised again. The bombardment resumed and the artillery sergeant detailed to haul the flag was the next casualty, cut in half by a cannonball. That afternoon, a chunk of wood from the smashed barracks struck down artillery Captain James Lee and knocked Fleury unconscious. When Hazelwood's ships tried to attack
Vigilant and
Fury, fire from the British naval squadron drove them back. By this time the interior of the fort was furrowed with the tracks of cannonballs and the barracks and blockhouses were wrecked. Osborn planned to send eight flatboats each with 35 soldiers in the first wave of his assault. Howe declined to give the order for the 400-man storming party to attack, waiting for a high tide and hoping that the garrison would evacuate the fort. That evening at around 11:30 PM, Thayer gave the order to abandon Fort Mifflin. The 300 survivors and what equipment could be salvaged were rowed across to Red Bank. Thayer held back a detail of 40 men. These troops burned down the barracks at midnight and soon joined the others in New Jersey. Thayer was the last one to leave. ==Aftermath==