Riverfront Bonfires To Commemorate Essex Revolution Battle
ESSEX Shortly after sundown Tuesday, the sound of drums will be heard along the lower Connecticut River as bonfires will be lit to commemorate a nighttime raid by the British 200 years ago that destroyed the town's privateering fleet.
On April 8, 1814, 136 British Royal Marines rowed up the river to Essex, then a center of shipbuilding and trade called Potopaug, and set fire to 27 ships, most in the harbor but a few in shipyards still on the stocks.
No one was killed, but the loss to American shipping, estimated at $100,000 at the time, was the largest before Pearl Harbor.
Essex is marking the bicentennial of the infamous British Raid of 1814, with a monthlong series of events, including Tuesday's "Light up the Night" commemoration, which aims to rekindle those feelings of fear and anger two centuries ago.
http://www.courant.com/news/connecticut/hc-essex-raid-0407-20140403,0,5172628.story
I might go to a few of these events. I've watched the reenactment of the Battle of Groton Heights (Fort Griswold) for several years in Groton.