History is for Everyone

CT, USA

New Haven

17 sources organized by credibility tier.

Tier 1 — Institutional and Academic (5)
  • Connecticut Council of Safety Minutes, 1779Connecticut State Archives

    Official records of the Connecticut Council of Safety documenting militia orders, requisitions, and official responses to the British landings in July 1779.

  • Connecticut's Revolutionary War Coastal Raids: A National Register ContextNational Park Service, National Register of Historic Places

    NPS multiple property documentation form covering the 1779 British raids on New Haven, Fairfield, and Norwalk. Provides historical context, significance criteria, and site-by-site analysis.

  • Governor Jonathan Trumbull to General Washington, July 6, 1779Connecticut State Library, Jonathan Trumbull Papers

    Official gubernatorial account of the British raid on New Haven and neighboring towns. Trumbull details the scale of destruction and the colonial militia response in real time.

  • Literary Diary of Ezra Stiles, Volume II (1776-1781)Yale University Library, Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library

    Yale president Ezra Stiles recorded the July 1779 British raid on New Haven from direct observation. His diary entries on July 5-6 are among the most detailed eyewitness accounts of the attack.

  • Three Centuries of New Haven, 1638-1938Yale University Press (Rollin G. Osterweis)

    Standard scholarly history of New Haven with a dedicated chapter on the Revolution. Covers the July 5, 1779 raid, the militia defense under William Mansfield, and the partial burning of the town.

Tier 2 — Reputable Secondary (10)
Tier 3 — General Reference (2)
  • Battle of New Haven -- WikipediaWikimedia Foundation

    General encyclopedia entry on the July 1779 raid. Useful as a quick reference and for links to primary sources, but should be verified against Osterweis and Stiles for factual claims.

  • Visit New Haven: Revolutionary War Heritage SitesVisit New Haven (tourism bureau)

    Tourism information on Revolutionary War sites in New Haven, including the Green, Trinity Church (used as a stable by British troops), and the Pardee-Morris House.

For details on how we evaluate sources, see our Methodology.