For decades New Yorkers celebrated Evacuation Day every November 25, a holiday marking the 1783 departure of British forces from the city they had occupied for several years during the Revolutionary War.
The events of that departure -- that evacuation -- inspired annual celebrations of patriotism, unity, and a bit of rowdiness. Evacuation Day was honored well until the late 19th century. But then, gradually, the party sort of petered out.....
Of course, Americans may know late November for another historically themed holiday – Thanksgiving, a New England-oriented celebration that eventually took the place of Evacuation Day on the American calendar. But we are here to tell you listener – you should celebrate both!
Greg and Tom tell the story of the British's final years in their former colonies, now in victory known as the United States, and their final moments within New York City, their last remaining haven. The city was in shambles and the gradual handover was truly messy.
And then, on November 25, 1783, George Washington rode into town, basically traveling from tavern to tavern on his way down to the newly freed city. The Bowery Boys chart his course (down the Bowery of course) and make note of a few unusual events -- wild parties, angry women with brooms, and one very lucky tailor.
PLUS: Where and how you can celebrate Evacuation Day today.
Other Bowery Boys episodes to check out when you're done with this one:
-- New York City During the Revolutionary War
-- The Revolutionary Tavern of Samuel Fraunces
-- The Great Fire of 1776
-- The Brooklyn Navy Yard and Vinegar Hill
The Bowery Boys Present: The First Broadway Musical
#231 The Stonewall Riots Revisited
#230 Before Harlem: New York's Forgotten Black Communities
#229 Live in Brooklyn! The Bowery Boys: Ten Years of Podcasting
#228 The Pirate of Pearl Street: The New York Adventures of Captain Kidd
#227 The Hindenburg Over New York
#226 The Beauty Bosses of Fifth Avenue
#225 P. T. Barnum and the Greatest Show on Earth
#224 The Arrival of the Irish: An Immigrant Story
The Algonquin Round Table
#222 Who Killed Helen Jewett? A Mystery By Gaslight
#221 New York: Capital City of the United States
#220 George Washington's New York Inauguration
#219 Newsies on Strike!
#218 Lincoln Center and West Side Story
#217: Truman Capote's Black And White Ball
#216: Edwin Booth and the Players Club
01 The Wheel: Ferris' Big Idea ('The First' Podcast Special Preview)
#215 Ghosts of the Gilded Age
#214 Bronx Trilogy (Part Three) The Bronx Was Burning
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