This Statement of the Affair at Egg Harbor
Historical Society contains 2 parts:
A critique of the recent Smithsonian Institution
documentary about the new Pulaski skeleton story and a
Summary description of Gen. Casimir Pulaski's
Defense of Little Egg Harbor (NJ) in the American Revolution
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When History becomes more about the Future
than the Past
A Statement on the Smithsonian documentary about Pulaski’s
skeleton as
Female or ‘Intersex’ (hermaphrodite)
April 16, 2019
Note: This statement contains 2 parts: A critique of the recent
Smithsonian Institution documentary about the new Pulaski skeleton
story, and a summary description of Gen. Casimir Pulaski's Defense
of Little Egg Harbor (NJ) in the American Revolution
What we know and why it matters
The AEHHS, a New Jersey historical society, assesses the recently
released documentary by the Smithsonian Institution as a work that
raises questions which it does not answer. While technically well
produced with a good eye for history, the 50-minute film (and
associated published material through Smithsonian Magazine) seem
very premature in terms of the state of research on the skeletal
remains of General Casimir Pulaski (our Polish Kazimierz Pulaski).
In short, their work introduces a novel question of ‘sex ambiguity’
about the historical personage without a full statement of evidence.
Those omissions create confusion.
Presented in this way, the Pulaski skeleton story churns a mystery.
A 'mystery' that, in fact, did not exist in the General's lifetime.
The new story also could create confusion. There may be a tendency
to go looking for evidence in Pulaski's life of any quality or
circumstance that would question his obvious gender, or a sign that
something was concealed. There is no such evidence in Pulaski’s
very exhaustively researched life story. The historical record is
unambiguous: Pulaski the general, and Pulaski the political leader,
was also Pulaski the man. That is not going to change. That cannot
change, because there is nothing in the historical record to replace
it with.
While the current surge in interest in Pulaski may be more
indicative of a search for a champion figure in history by a group
of good people who are biologically different, rather than a
breakthrough in science research (which it most certainly is not),
the fact is that Pulaski deserves recognition for other reasons.
His deeds and service in, and for two nations define his legacy.
The researchers acknowledge that scientific inquiry is in its
infancy into the affects of the Intersex condition on bone
structure. Those connections are the sole basis for the new Pulaski
skeleton story; in fact, positive identification of Pulaski's sex is
not claimed by the researchers. Absent identification of the actual
geno-type, the case of Pulaski's skeleton is generalized by the
researchers to conclude an Intersex finding. In other words, they
can't confirm by tests Pulaski's sex either way, but the bones could
fit an Intersex classification. Inductive reasoning, where the
premises provide some of the evidence for a conclusion, is useful
where the evidence is thin. This leaves the recent tests as only an
interesting personal story which had no historically recorded
evidence in his lifetime.
The Smithsonian documentary and the Questions that remain
The Smithsonian Institution, and the scientific research team
itself, are saying at least three things at the same time; however
none of it definitively addresses exactly, in terms of all possible
clinical criteria, why the Pulaski skeleton is not male. The team
states the skeleton has indicators of female physiology, while also
offering that 'we don’t know what intersex skeletons look like.” Nor
are there concrete parameters to the definition of 'Intersex',
according to the World Health Organization. That does not sound
like proof-positive that the skeleton is not that of a man-- indeed,
the magazine speaks of 'confusion' over Pulaski's remains.
Moreover, the billing headline of 'Woman or Intersex' plainly
indicates that the sex actually is not known through this work. The
advanced DNA technology cited by the study appears to have nothing
to do with the question of sex-identification, even though that
question is the core message of the finding, and, even though DNA is
vital in other respects. Finally, and crucially, there is no
positive (definitive) statement of geno-type/sequence (sex
chromosome-pair in the XX/XY system) of the skeleton. On what basis
then is the finding actually made that it is not male?
A minimum requirement on the part of the research team that it issue
a statement addressing that specific question, fully and completely
in science, is not an unreasonable expectation.
The Affair at Egg Harbor Historical Society/AEHHS is a N.J.
non-profit corporation. We maintain 2 sites directly associated
with the October 1778 Defense of Little Egg Harbor campaign, both of
which are found on the
National Register of Historic Places maintained
by the U.S. Department of the Interior – NPS: The Pulaski Monument
site on Radio Road, and the associated 'Headquarters' site ¾ mile
away on Hollybrook Drive, behind Ocean County-Atlantis golf course
(Little Egg Harbor Tnsp., N.J.).
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Brigadier General Casimir Pulaski in History: The Defense of
Little Egg Harbor in the American Revolution
The war-fighting principles and techniques of General Pulaski,
envisioned by him as a game changer for the American Continental
Army, could have been just that. Indeed, had they been fully
embraced, nothing short of a conceptually new art of war would have
been introduced in North America. The idea of cavalry-attack
European-shock-action tactics in highly mobile formation warfare,
while common in East-Central Europe, was simply unknown in practice
in America and only vaguely understood even by the British. Pulaski
would lay a plan to transform American horse troopers into an
offensive force.
After his arrival in America, Pulaski was soon (in 9 months)
appointed by Washington to an independent command of his own
creation, the Pulaski Legion. The Legion's combined arms makeup,
including cavalry, infantry and artillery in a single formation, was
a radical idea. The Legion almost included a marine component, but
the Continental Congress drew the line on its exorbitant cost. But
the ‘legionary’ concept was one that would be consistently embraced
over time by the later United States Army, following the
revolution. The other truly innovative quality of the unit was its
mobility. Warfare at the time of the American Revolution was a
plodding exercise whereby infantry could consume as much as 3
days-time to move 25 miles; Pulaski knew a mobile force would cut
that by two-thirds with a rapid rate of march. By late Summer 1778
the Pulaski Legion was mobilized, and, in its first deployment would
be suddenly called into action by Congress in the emergency of
October 1778 (one that for a time threatened Philadelphia itself).
The engagement is known in history as
The Defense of Little Egg
Harbor.
The campaign would pit the Legion, at about 180 men, against a
British amphibious-borne landing force of three times that number
(complete with 20 long boats and 3 galleys, each with 18-pound
cannon), not counting the 12-vessel Royal Navy flotilla-complement.
The enemy landed unopposed at South Jersey's port of Little Egg
Harbor in the first week of October, commencing a destructive raid
and foraging operation on the Mullica River that leveled a
settlement and farms. Nearly just as suddenly as it began, the
attack was broken off with the entire force abruptly withdrawing
upon word of the approach of an as yet-unidentified American unit
—but one the British knew, from Tory intelligence, possessed both
horse and cannon. Critically, the British realized that reaching
their distant objective of a warehouse and ship fitting complex
(Batsto-at-The-Forks) might now be a ‘bridge too far.’ Batsto was
only 35 miles from Philadelphia.
Based on two independent accounts, Pulaski's rapid march from
Trenton to the Atlantic coast on October 6-7 was achieved in less
than 30 hours, or at a rate of march of some 22 miles a day. The
British were temporarily stunned. The two forces would not then
engage directly, but each gained enough knowledge of its respective
opponent to know this would be neither a short nor bloodless
affair.
The action resumed, in almost a repeated fashion, a week later when
the British landed a smaller 250-troop force (behind the protection
of an island and salt marsh) on the upper bank of the Mullica
River. A probing force managed to overrun an outpost on the upland,
while the Legion's main camp was tactically positioned to the rear,
so situated to block the enemy’s advance to a key road by either of
two routes. That complex defensive scheme nonetheless proved useful
even though the British clumsily attacked and butchered the outpost,
thus betraying their carefully-laid plan, 5 hours in execution, of a
secret advance. Pulaski's subsequent counter attack with his light
dragoons, some 60 horse and a swarm of infantry, caused a second
panicked withdrawal of British light infantry back to the island and
on to their ships.
Following the battle of October 15, 1778, the sizable expedition
finally gave up the effort to reach its 'Batsto' objective,
returning, after 3 weeks out of New York, to that harbor. The
collapse of the Little Egg Harbor expedition would shortly be a
topic of ridicule by Thomas Paine in his famed
American Crisis series.
The battle was also briefly recounted in the
Papers of the
Continental Congress.
Pulaski thus validated his concept of combined arms, mobile warfare
by leveraging a relatively small force to meet and defeat a superior
attacking force, even one with the advantage of descending at will
from the sea by virtue of the Royal Navy. The British had yet to
experience such an opponent-- but knew well enough to withdraw
because light infantry were no match for dragoons--something which
contributed to the Pulaski Legion's reputation as an elite formation
as recounted in the recent TV documentary. The British, for other
reasons, had already decided to strategically re-direct the war to
the Southern Colonies. The Defense of Little Egg Harbor proved to be
not only a capstone to the end of the King's Northern campaigns, but
also a precursor to the relief of American forces by Pulaski's
Legion at Charleston (South Carolina) the following year.
For more information about the history, physical sites and our
program in New Jersey, contact The Affair at Egg Harbor
Historical Society/AEHHS at: Pulaskimonumentlehnj@gmail.com.
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