The British fleet, waiting for favorable winds,…
March 1776 CE
During this time, American naval activities outside the harbor have successfully captured and diverted to ports under colonial control several British supply ships.
The wind had become favorable on March 15, but before they could leave, it turned against them.
The wind once again turns favorable on March 17.
The troops, who are authorized to burn the town if there are any disturbances while they were marching to their ships, begin to move out at 4:00 a.m.
By 9:00 a.m., all ships are underway for Nova Scotia.
The fleet departing from Boston includes one hundred and twenty ships, with more than eleven thousand people aboard.
Of these, nine thousand nine hundred and ninety-six are British troops, six hundred and sixty-seven are women, and fife hundred and fifty-three are children.
March 17th is today observed as the holiday Evacuation Day in Suffolk County, Massachusetts.