Skirmish
at Kennett Meeting House
Original Oil-30"x48"
price upon request
12"x20"
Giclee on Canvas Ltd. Ed. (50), signed/numbered
$260
When riflemen under General
Morgan were dispatched to the Hudson River campaign,
General Washington formed a new light infantry
company of 800 men under the command of Brig.
General Maxwell.
On the morning of September 11, Maxwell sent
his men west on Nottingham Road (present day
Route 1) scouting to find the British. Leading
a company of men, Captain Porterfield preceded
the other detachments with orders to deliver
his fire as soon as met the enemy. The British
were at the same time heading east on the same
road. Their advance guard consisted of Ferguson's
Rifle Corps and the Queen's Rangers, who were
to encounter the Americans on their approach
to the Kennett Meeting House. Portefield and
his men waited to ambush the enemy and as Porterfield
shot and hit one of the Queens Rangers, the
Battle of Brandywine began.