Riders from Peenpack reach the village of…
July 1779 CE
Riders from Peenpack reach the village of Goshen later in the day, telling of Brant's raid and the destruction of the town.
A militia forms immediately, under the reluctant command of Lieutenant Colonel Benjamin Tusten.
Tusten is strongly opposed to pursuing the raiders, as he knows the hastily assembled, ill-equipped, and inexperienced militia would be no match for the British and Iroquois soldiers, and he suggests waiting for reinforcements from the Continental Army.
The majority of the public and the militia, underestimating the fighting ability of the Iroquois, demand immediate retribution.
Tusten, outvoted, agrees to set out the following morning.
They meet up with elements of the Fourth Orange County Regiment ordered from Warwick by George Washington and led by Colonel John Hathorn, who assumes command and marches for the Delaware with a force of about one hundred and twenty minutemen.