History & Culture · Hudson Valley
Yorktown Crosses the Croton at Pines Bridge
The Pines Bridge story gives Yorktown a Revolutionary-era crossing where local landscape and shared military memory meet.
Published June 23, 2026 · Last verified June 23, 2026
Yorktown’s Pines Bridge story is quiet but weighty. Town materials identify the site as the place where members of the Rhode Island Regiment defended the Pines Bridge crossing of the Croton River on May 14, 1781. African American and Native American soldiers fought there with Colonel Christopher Greene.
That gives Yorktown a Revolutionary-era memory rooted in a very specific landscape: a bridge, a river, and a defended approach. The story reminds you that local ground can hold national history, including the service of soldiers whose stories were often pushed to the edge.
The Croton River crossing makes the memory easier to place, and Yorktown gives people a clear way to begin learning it. The story has enough weight that it does not need to be made dramatic. A river, a bridge, and the people who defended that crossing are already enough.
It is a sober piece of town history, but it also gives Yorktown a strong landscape image. The water and crossing make the past feel close rather than abstract.
That is the strength of the Pines Bridge story: the place stays modest, while the memory reaches far beyond the riverbank.