
A Broom, a Cannon, and a Lot of Nerve: The Battle of Stonington (August 1814)
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In the summer of 1814, with Washington in ashes and the British tightening their grip on the American coast, a tiny Connecticut fishing village became the unlikely stage for one of the most audacious stands in U.S. history. When a Royal Navy squadron—led by a battle-hardened captain fresh from the burning of the White House—demanded Stonington’s surrender, the townspeople had one rusted cannon, a blacksmith’s stubbornness, and the unshakable defiance of a 73-year-old widow armed with a broom.
For three days, against impossible odds, Stonington fought back—rolling their lone gun between positions, recycling British cannonballs, and enduring a storm of rockets and broadsides. And at the center of it all stood "Aunt Nancy" Freeman, whose razor-sharp tongue proved more accurate than the Royal Navy’s gunners. By the time the smoke cleared, the British would limp away in humiliation, and a forgotten village would etch its name into legend.
This is the story of how a handful of farmers, fishermen, and a woman with a corn-bristle broom turned the tide of the War of 1812’s darkest hour—not with an army, but with sheer, unbreakable nerve.