🚨 More Americans Died on One British Prison Ship Than in Every Battle of the Revolution Combined. The Empire Called It “Policy.” ☠️
They don’t teach this.
11,500+ American prisoners died on British prison ships during the Revolutionary War.
6,800 died in combat.
Let that math settle in.
The HMS Jersey — nicknamed “Hell” — held 1,000+ men in a space built for 400. Hatches battened down at night. No air. No latrines. Men died in their sleep and lay among the living for days. Dysentery. Typhus. Smallpox.
Rations: worm-infested meat. Moldy bread. Water so foul men drank their own urine.
The British Commissary embezzled the food meant for prisoners. Guards pocketed the difference. Every morning the cry went up: “Rebels, bring out your dead.” Bodies stripped naked, dumped in shallow sandbar graves. For decades after the war, bones washed up on Brooklyn’s shore.
And the choice they offered?
Switch sides. Enlist for the Crown. Get fed. Get freed.
Thousands chose starvation and death instead.
The British refused to classify Americans as POWs — because that would mean recognizing America as a nation. So they called them “rebels in arms.” Criminals.
No protections. No exchanges. Washington begged for prisoner swaps. The British said no. Because starving prisoners was strategic.
This wasn’t collateral damage. This wasn’t the fog of war. This was policy.
The Prison Ship Martyrs’ Monument in Brooklyn holds the bones of ~11,500 of these men. It’s one of the tallest Doric columns on earth. More American dead than Gettysburg, sitting in a crypt in Fort Greene Park.
Nobody visits it. Nobody teaches it.
Because the story of men rotting in floating dungeons, eating their shoes, refusing to betray their country — that’s harder to package than Bunker Hill.
But it’s the truer story.
Remember the ships. Remember what empire actually looks like.
Want video links? Search “HMS Jersey prison ship” or “Prison Ship Martyrs Monument” on X and YouTube — several excellent documentaries and historical breakdowns are available. The History Guy and American Battlefield Trust both have solid pieces on it.