
Everyone has heard of Paul Revere's ride through the night to alert a
sleeping countryside of the coming of the British troops. Less well known is
an equally heroic ride, undertaken in 1777 by a 16-year-old farm girl.
Sybil Ludington was the eldest of Col. Henry and Abigail
Ludington's 12 children. They lived in Fredericksburg, New York (now called
Ludingtonville), where her father, a veteran of the French and Indian war,
was a gristmill owner and commander of the area militia.
On the night of April 26, 1777, the Ludington family was
getting ready for bed when they were startled by ahard knock on the door. It
was a messenger from Danbury, Connecticut, who had come to request the aid
of the Fredericksburg militia. Two thousand British troops had attacked that
Connecticut town; the Continental Army's depot of munitions and food there
was destroyed and much of the town was left in flames.
Obviously, Colonel Ludington could not personally both
supervise the muster of his troops and ride to alert them. Sybil volunterred
to make the ride in his place.
Authorities vary on the length of her ride; some say it was
20, some say 40, miles. In any case, it was raining hard. But as Sybil urged
her bay horse, Star, onward, she could see the sky light up from the glow of
the flaming town. "The British are burning Danbury--muster at Ludington's,"
she shouted at the farmhouses of the millitiamen.
When, soaked from the rain and exhausted, she returned home,
most of the 400 soldiers were ready to march.
After the Battle of Ridgefield, as the resulting skirmish
was later known, Sybil was congratulated for her heroism by friends and
neighbors--and by Gen. George Washington.
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