Date and Time
Saturday Feb 17, 2024 Sunday Feb 18, 2024
Saturday, February 17
1:30pm: Reenactment
3:00pm: Lecture at the Ogdensburg History Museum
Sunday, February 18
1:30-2:30pm: Continued Battle of Ogdensburg Reenactment
Location
Fort de la Presentation
Van Rensselaer Point
22 Albany Avenue
Ogdensburg, NY
Fees/Admission
Free and open to the public
Website
Contact Information
Dallas Robinson: dr181353@yahoo.com
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Description
BATTLE OF OGDENSBURG REENACTMENTS
On February 17-18, 2024, the Fort de La Presentation Association will be hosting their annual Battle Reenactment of the 1813 Raid on Ogdensburg.
The Battle of Ogdensburg will be recreated on Saturday, February 17, with activities beginning with a wreath laying ceremony at 10:40 a.m. at the grave of Sheriff Joseph York at the Ogdensburg Cemetery. The first portion of the reenactment will begin at 1:30pm along Ford Street with coffee immediately to follow at the Ogdensburg History Museum, 206 Ford Street, at 3:00pm. There will be a lecture on medicine and surgical procedures of the period at the museum. All events are free to the public.
A continued Battle of Ogdensburg Reenactment will take place on Sunday, February 18th from 1:30pm-2:30pm, recreating the second half of the 1813 Raid on Ogdensburg at Fort de la Presentation (Van Rensselaer Point), 22 Albany Ave, Ogdensburg, NY.
ABOUT THE BATTLE
The original Battle of Ogdensburg occurred on February 22, 1813 and was a battle of the War of 1812. The British gained a victory over the Americans and captured the village of Ogdensburg, NY. Although small in scale, it removed the American threat to British supply lines for the remainder of the war.
ABOUT SHEIFF YORK
York was undersheriff for St. Lawrence County for three years and sheriff for another four. He also served as the county representative in the New York State Legislature for three years. York was born in 1781 at Claremont, NH and moved to Ogdensburg in 1805. During the War of 1812, on Feb. 22, 1813, the defensive forces for Ogdensburg, composed of U.S. Riflemen under Benjamin Forsyth, local militia, and volunteers from the town, readied for an oncoming British attack across the ice of the frozen St. Lawrence River with Sheriff York commanding an iron twelve-pounder cannon at the intersection of State and Ford Streets. The British forces attacked in two columns with one coming ashore near the unfinished earthen works known as Fort Oswegatchie and the other near the lighthouse to flank Fort Presentation. The two columns were comprised of 700 troops, 200 to the left column and 500 to the right. The right column made its way to Ford Street and proceeded west until it met fire from two artillery pieces, one commanded by Captain Kellogg, New York State Militia, and that under the command of Sheriff York. Both guns fired until Kellogg’s gun was disabled and his gunners left to join forces at the fort. But Sheriff York continued to operate his gun until his crew members were wounded. As the enemy approached, York continued to load. The enemy troops were about to charge York with their bayonets, when their commander halted the line and declared “there stands a man too brave to be killed” and York was taken prisoner. York was taken to Prescott. The town was taken, and Forsyth was forced to retreat.