1758–1818
1
recorded events
Connected towns:
West Point, NYBiography
John Paulding was born in 1758 in Westchester County, New York, in the region that became one of the most bitterly contested borderlands of the Revolutionary War. Westchester lay between British-held New York City and American-held territory to the north, and its population was divided between loyalists and patriots in roughly equal measure, making it a zone of constant skirmishing, raiding, and irregular warfare throughout the conflict. Men like Paulding served as volunteer militia, operating without the regular pay or formal organization of the Continental Army, and his service in this environment meant exposure to the particular violence and moral ambiguity of a civil war fought among neighbors. He had been captured by the British at some point before September 1780 and had escaped wearing a Hessian coat, a detail that would prove significant in what followed.
On the morning of September 23, 1780, Paulding was with two fellow militiamen — Isaac Van Wart and David Williams — near Tarrytown when they stopped a traveler moving south toward New York. The man presented himself as a British officer, apparently relying on Paulding's captured Hessian coat to suggest the group was loyalist. When the travelers' demeanor raised suspicion, a search revealed papers hidden in his stockings — detailed plans of West Point's fortifications and other military information in what was clearly a British officer's handwriting. The traveler was John Andre. The three men brought him to the nearest American post rather than accepting the substantial bribe Andre offered for his release, and the papers were forwarded up the chain of command, triggering the discovery of Arnold's treason.
Congress rewarded Paulding, Van Wart, and Williams with gold medals, annual pensions, and considerable public celebration — they were the heroes of the hour in a moment when the army desperately needed heroes. Paulding received his pension and settled in Westchester, where he lived until 1818. His later years brought some controversy, as detractors suggested that the three captors had initially taken Andre for a loyalist and that the interception had been more accidental than heroic; Paulding consistently defended his conduct. Whatever the precise motivations of the moment, the consequence of the capture was unambiguously significant — it exposed the most dangerous act of treason the Continental cause had faced and preserved West Point at a moment when its loss might have been catastrophic. Paulding's grave in Cortlandt, New York, is marked with a monument acknowledging the importance of a few minutes' decision on an ordinary road in a forgotten county.
Events
Sep
1780
# The Capture of Major John André and the Unmasking of Benedict Arnold's Treason In the autumn of 1780, the American Revolution hung in a precarious balance. The war had dragged on for five years, and the Continental Army was beset by chronic shortages of supplies, plummeting morale, and a growing sense of exhaustion among both soldiers and civilians. It was against this backdrop of vulnerability that one of the most dramatic episodes of the entire conflict unfolded — a story of betrayal, espionage, and a stroke of extraordinary fortune that may well have saved the American cause from catastrophe. Benedict Arnold was, by 1780, one of the most celebrated generals in the Continental Army. His courage at the Battle of Saratoga in 1777 had been instrumental in securing a pivotal American victory, one that helped convince France to enter the war as an ally. Yet Arnold was also a deeply embittered man. He felt that the Continental Congress had repeatedly passed him over for promotions he deserved, and he nursed grievances over perceived slights and financial difficulties. His marriage to Peggy Shippen Arnold, a young Philadelphia socialite with close ties to British officers who had occupied the city, further drew him into a world sympathetic to the Crown. By 1779, Arnold had begun secretly corresponding with British intelligence, offering to betray the American cause in exchange for money and a commission in the British Army. His contact on the British side was Major John André, a charming and capable young officer who served as chief intelligence officer to British General Sir Henry Clinton. Arnold maneuvered to obtain command of West Point, the strategically vital fortress on the Hudson River in New York. West Point controlled the Hudson, and its loss would have effectively severed New England from the rest of the colonies, potentially crippling the American war effort. Arnold's plan was to weaken the fort's defenses and then deliver it to the British. To finalize the arrangement, André traveled upriver aboard the British warship HMS Vulture to meet Arnold in secret on the night of September 21, 1780. During their clandestine meeting, Arnold handed André detailed plans of West Point's fortifications, troop dispositions, and defensive weaknesses. André's return journey, however, did not go as planned. The Vulture came under fire from American positions along the river and was forced to withdraw before André could reboard. Left with no choice, André disguised himself in civilian clothes, adopted the alias John Anderson, and attempted to make his way back to British lines overland. On September 23, 1780, near Tarrytown, New York, three local militiamen — John Paulding, Isaac Van Wart, and David Williams — stopped the suspicious traveler. When they searched him, they discovered papers concealed inside his stockings containing the detailed plans of West Point. André attempted to bribe the men, but they refused and turned him over to American military authorities. The capture of André sent shockwaves through both armies. When word reached Benedict Arnold that his conspirator had been seized, he fled immediately, escaping down the Hudson River to the Vulture and eventually reaching British lines. His wife, Peggy Shippen Arnold, put on a dramatic display of distress that initially convinced even George Washington of her innocence, though historians have since established that she was deeply involved in the conspiracy from the beginning. Major John André, meanwhile, was tried by a military tribunal, found guilty of espionage, and hanged on October 2, 1780. Even his American captors acknowledged his dignity and courage in facing death, and he was widely mourned — even by those who condemned his mission. The exposure of Arnold's treason proved to be a turning point of a different kind in the Revolution. While it shocked Americans to learn that one of their greatest generals had betrayed them, it also galvanized patriotic resolve and heightened vigilance against further conspiracies. West Point, the fortress Arnold had tried to surrender, remained firmly in American hands and continued to serve as a critical stronghold for the duration of the war. The three militiamen who stopped André were celebrated as heroes and awarded specially struck Congressional medals, among the first such honors bestowed by the young nation. Their vigilance on that September morning stands as a reminder of how the actions of ordinary individuals can alter the course of history, and how close the American experiment came to unraveling through a single act of treachery.