Pages

Sunday, April 3, 2011

Moland House Colonial Tea


On Sunday, March 20th Drexelbrook Catering was honored to be part of The Colonial Tea at Bucks counties newest venue, The Moland House. Drexelbrook Catering is proud to be the exclusive caterer at The Moland House. Complete with historical reenactors the afternoon tea was sold out at 45 guests.
Above (Martha Washington and Ona Judge Chat with Guests)



Drexelbrook Catering prepared a wonderful assortment of scones, muffins, breakfast breads, tea sandwiches, and desserts that were served along with selected teas.
 The Moland House is the perfect historic venue for intimate events of up to 50 or tented events up to 120. The historic venue is located along the banks of the Neshaminey Creek in historic Bucks County. For further information contact Gene Blum. A brief history of the house follows.

 " In the early evening of 10 August 1777, eleven thousand Continental and militia soldiers are marching up York Road towards the Cross Roads with Bristol Road [Hartsville, PA] on their way to Coryell’s Ferry [New Hope, PA] to camp four miles across the Delaware River.  General George Washington receives a dispatch from John Hancock, President of the Second Continental Congress, placing the 260-vessel British fleet, hauling 17,000 troops under General William Howe, fifty miles south of the Delaware Capes [May & Henelopen] on 7 August. Unsure and wary of Howe’s intentions, Washington immediately halts his force to encamp around the bridge over the Little Neshaminy Creek in WarwickTownship, BucksCounty.  Knowing the area and having ridden through only ten days earlier, he selects the substantial stone dwelling of Widow Moland as his Head Quarters on the farm north of the bridge.  
           An invasion force from Canada, led by British General Burgoyne, is advancing through central New York.  Howes’ large fleet was last reported heading eastward from the mouth of Delaware Bay.  What are his intentions?
           For eleven sweltering summer days, Washington frets as no further intelligence arrives about the fleet.  A Council of War on 21 August in the Moland House concludes Howe is heading south to attack Charleston, SC.  The encamped army is ordered to return through New Jersey to assist the Northern Army against Burgoyne’s invading forces or attack New York City.  But two dispatches arrive within the next few hours which place Howes’ fleet sailing up Chesapeake Bay
            On 23 August 1777, camp breaks at 4 a.m.  The Patriot troops march back down York Road towards Philadelphia in a dash to the Chesapeake.  A skirmish at Cooch’s Bridge below Newark, DE; battles at Brandywine, Germantown, Paoli, the struggle for the forts along the Delaware River, a stand-off at Whitemarsh, and retiring into winter quarters at Valley Forge soon follow.  During the winter, Pennsylvania militia will range through this area striving to impose a land blockade on trade with the British in Philadelphia.  The Continental Army will return to Bucks County in June 1778 on their way to confront Royal forces at Monmouth Courthouse, NJ.
            During this encampment at the Moland House, nineteen year-old Marquis de Lafayette arrives to present his papers to General Washington.  A life-long friendship has begun.  On 21 August, Casimir Pulaski appears at Head Quarters with his credentials.  Later during the winter, Pulaski will work to forge the Continental cavalry.  “Light Horse Harry” Lee is acquitted at a court-martial held in the nearby Neshaminy-Warwick Presbyterian Church [since rebuilt].  The thirteen-starred “Betsy Ross” flag was first unfurled at the “Cross Roads near Neshamini Bridge”.*  This is the legacy of the Moland House. "
As stated by Dr. B. F. Fackenthal, Jr., then President of the Bucks County Historical Society, in a speech given at the Thompson-Neeley House and published later in 1932.

1 comment: