CHAPTER III
The Two
Battles of Trenton
BY FREDERICK L. FERRIS
I. The
First Battle
“NOWHERE in the annals of
warfare,” says General William S. Stryker, “can be
found a counterpart of the winter campaign of Washington and his
army in 1776-77 -that army which left the vicinity of New York
a ragged, starved, defeated, demoralized band, which passed through
the Jerseys and over the river, then dashed upon the Hessian advance,
punished the flank of the British line, doubled on its own bloody
tracks through the village of Princeton, and at last marched into
quarters an army of victors.” 1
1 The Battles of Trenton
and Princeton (Houghton, Mifflin and Company, 1898), p. 1.
This is the definitive work dealing with Revolutionary events in
Trenton and vicinity. General Stryker was a painstaking and scholarly
author who devoted his spare time for twenty-seven years to preparation
for his great task and rewrote his manuscript five times. Professor
William Starr Myers, of Princeton University, editing the same
author’s posthumous work, The Battle of Monmouth,
has borne testimony that he found Stryker as an historian “accurate,
sound, judicial and scholarly.” Sir George Otto Trevelyan,
Baronet, in his authoritative work, The American Revolution,
says of Stryker’s commentary on Trenton and Princeton: “A
better book on the subject could not be compiled.” Living
on the scene of the memorable engagements here, General Stryker
from childhood was steeped in local Revolutionary lore. He gathered
much of his knowledge almost first-hand from the families of survivors.
Quite inevitably, therefore, the author of the present chapter
has found it necessary and desirable to lean heavily upon Stryker’s
immortal account of the Battles of Trenton as both a factual and
an interpretative guide.
DARK DAYS FOR THE PATRIOTS
This is a simple statement of fact. Disaster after
disaster had come to the Americans during the summer of 1776. The
defeat on Long Island was followed by the indecisive engagements
at Harlem Heights and White Plains; and then ensued the collapse
of Fort Washington and Fort Lee. Having lost 329 officers and 4,430
men in his unsuccessful attempt to defend the lower Hudson, Washington
found himself in command of a force of not more than 4,000 poorly
equipped, discouraged troops, facing a situation which demanded quick
action but offered the smallest promise of success.
It would have been absurd further
to resist the British. It would have meant annihilation to linger
near New York. Washington, accordingly, ordered a retreat through
the Jerseys, not knowing whether he would be forced to continue
on to Virginia or even beyond the Alleghany Mountains themselves.
Appealing to Governor William Livingston, of New Jersey, for reinforcements,
he wrote: “The critical situation of our affairs and the
movements of the enemy make some further and immediate exertions
absolutely necessary.”
Anxious to avoid being caught between
the Hackensack and Passaic Rivers, Washington started the march
southward on November 21, posting his force at Newark within the
next two days. Five days later this position was abandoned, and
the Continentals resumed falling back before the pressure of the
British host. That the pressure was being persistently applied
is indicated by the fact that the enemy advance-guard entered Newark
even while the American rear-guard withdrew.
Upon reaching Brunswick on November
29, the patriot army was joined by a small force under Brigadier
General Lord Stirling, but the recruits for which Washington kept
hopefully looking failed to materialize until the army reached
Trenton, and at the latter point it was only a small detachment
of New Jersey militia which “volunteered to assist the forlorn
cause.” 2
2 Stryker, p. 18. This detachment
included men from the Hunterdon and Middlesex brigades, under command
of Colonel Isaac Smith and Colonel John Neilson, respectively.
After doing considerable damage
to the bridge over the Raritan River, the Americans proceeded to
Princeton, arriving on the morning of December 2 and pushing on
almost immediately to Trenton where the army was posted the same
day.
Cornwallis, reaching Brunswick, sought General
Howe’s permission to press on and attack Washington before
the Delaware could be crossed. But Howe delayed, and the British
thus lost what was for them a rare opportunity to end the war at
a stroke. Washington, indeed, attributed the success of the retreat
to “nothing but the infatuation of the enemy.”
Meanwhile the shores of the Delaware
were being combed for boats. They were obtained in sufficient number,
and on December 7 and 8 plied from one side of the river to the
other, transporting the Continentals, gun and baggage, to the Pennsylvania
shore.
Nor was the movement premature,
for Cornwallis was already on his way to Trenton, being able, on
December 9, to attempt a crossing, and meeting with failure only
because the Americans by this time had obtained all the available
boats and placed them, under a strong guard, on the opposite side
of the stream.
THE RIVER CHECKS THE BRITISH
It was the river, in other words,
which checked the British pursuit. Inertia and delay quite literally
had permitted the patriots to escape from the clutches of General
Howe. For the enemy, there remained nothing to do but wait until
the Delaware should freeze sufficiently to permit a crossing. Joseph
Galloway, a Tory, later stated that there was ample material in
Trenton for the building of rafts, pontoons or boats, and that,
just as Howe’s men had failed to bring with them a single
boat from the Raritan, so now there was no effort made to construct
suitable craft. 3
3 Stryker, p. 37. See also
Trevelyan, The American Revolution (Longmans, Green and Co.,
1903), pp. 21-2. “How provoking it is,” remarked an experienced
British officer, “that our army, when it entered the Jerseys,
was not provided with a single pontoon! Unless the object was Philadelphia,
entering the Jerseys was absurd to the last degree. If we had six
flat-bottomed boats, we could cross the Delaware.” Galloway’s
statement was made before the British House of Commons, June 18,
1779.
The British General, moreover, was quite content
to halt operations for the winter. With this idea in mind, he ordered
the formation of several cantonments, which Cornwallis proceeded
to establish at Elizabeth-Town, Brunswick, Princeton, Trenton and
Bordentown. Hessian troops were assigned to the latter points. And
so, in addition to having a series of outposts sadly lacking in coordination,
the British had foreign mercenaries unfamiliar with the very language
of the patriots stationed at the towns closest to the place where
Washington and his army were quartered.
Three regiments of Hessian Infantry,
a detachment of Artillery, fifty Hessian yagers and twenty light
dragoons were stationed in Trenton under command of Colonel Johann
Gottlieb Rall. The infantry regiments were headed, respectively,
by Rall, Von Knyphausen and Von Lossberg. The entire force numbered
about 1,400 men.
Howe’s plan called for the
placing of 1,500 men at Bordentown, and, on December 11, Colonel
Von Donop left Trenton with the advance detachment, progress being
somewhat impeded, however, by operations of the militia in Burlington
County.
No one knew better than did Washington
that the American predicament called for action. Congress was depressed.
So were the people. On December 18, the commander-in-chief wrote
to his brother: “If every nerve is not strained to recruit
the new army with all possible expedition, I think the game is
pretty nearly up . . . . You can form no idea of the perplexity
of my situation. No man, I believe, ever had a greater choice of
difficulties, and less means to extricate himself from them.” 4
4 Ford’s Writings
of George Washington, Vol. V, p. 109. “The trials of
Washington,” observes the historian Bancroft, “are
the dark, solemn ground on which the beautiful work of the country’s
salvation was embroidered.”
But Washington, in whom the country
had the utmost confidence in spite of current pessimism, did not
for a moment weaken in his high resolve.
Throughout the week before Christmas
there was much discussion of a proposed movement on the Hessian
outposts at Trenton and Bordentown. Colonel Joseph Reed, adjutant
general of the Continental army, was one of the first to urge a
crossing of the Delaware, and soon there was general agreement
that some such stroke was precisely the thing to bolster up American
hopes.
“If you ever expect to establish
the independence of these States,” said Colonel John Stark
at one of the staff meetings on this weighty matter, “you
must teach them to place dependence upon their firearms and courage.” 5
5 Stryker, p. 85. An interesting
popular account of the formulation of plans for the surprise attack
on the Hessian outpost at Trenton is contained in Rupert Hughes’ George
Washington, 1762-1777, pp. 575-8.
Washington, always quick to sense
strategic wisdom, did not hesitate to gamble with fate.
“VICTORY OR DEATH!”
On Christmas Eve, detailed plans
for the crossing of the Delaware and the attack on Trenton were
formulated. The final council of war was held at the headquarters
of Major General Greene. In addition to Greene and Washington,
there were present Generals Sullivan, Mercer, Lord Stirling, Colonel
Knox and other officers.
It was decided to make an ambitious
three-fold offensive Christmas night. Washington was to cross at
McKonkey’s Ferry, some nine miles north of Trenton, and march
down upon the Hessians with his force of approximately 2,400 men.
General Ewing’s division was to negotiate the stream at Trenton
Ferry, directly opposite the village, with a view of cutting off
Rall’s retreat and preventing Von Donop from sending up reinforcements
from his station at Bordentown. Ewing commanded a force of 92 officers
and about 1,000 men. Cadwalader, with 1,800 men, was to cross somewhat
further to the south and proceed directly against Von Donop. With
Rall and Von Donop defeated and the Continentals in control of
Trenton as well as the enemy cantonments in the vicinity of Bordentown,
it was planned that the entire army should advance on the British
strongholds at Princeton and Brunswick.
Christmas night was chosen for the
attack by reason of the Hessians’ well-known leaning toward
unrestrained Yuletide celebrations. Hearty drinking and a momentary
lapse of discipline were counted on, and not in vain, as the natural
consequences of the Teutonic seasonal observance.
Marching orders for the descent
on Trenton from McKonkey’s Ferry were issued by Washington
on Christmas morning. An express rider was dispatched to bring
Dr. Shippen and surgical assistance, though subsequent events were
to prove how little this medical aid was needed.
Early in the afternoon of Christmas
day, the first regiment began to move, and within an hour all parts
of the northern expedition were on their way to the Delaware. Unity
of action had been facilitated by Washington’s order that
all officers should set their watches by his.
Each man had three days’ rations
and forty rounds of ammunition. In these respects, there was adequacy.
As for clothing and footwear, shivering infantrymen and a bloody
trail in the snow told a different story. “Sunshine patriots” could
not have faced this ordeal.
“What a time to hand me letters!” exclaimed
Washington, when, as he himself was about to swing into his saddle
for the ride to the ferry, a note was given him with the information
that General Gates had reported sick. To the commander-in-chief,
it seemed that, at the zero hour of national destiny, the pen was
scarcely mightier than the sword.
Rugged, horny-handed seafarers from
Marblehead, Mass., had charge of the boats. They rendered yeoman
service. With jagged cakes of ice floating swiftly along the Delaware
channel, theirs was a difficult task. A severe snow and hail storm,
accompanied by a biting wind, added to the arduous job of transporting
the chilled but determined army to the Jersey shore. 6
6 “Had not Colonel John
Glover’s splendid regiment of seafaring men from Marblehead,
Mass., lent a willing and skilful hand, as he had promised they would;” says
Stryker, pp. 133-4, “the expedition would no doubt have failed.”
Washington had anticipated getting
the force across before midnight, so that the attack on the drowsy
Hessians could be made prior to the break of day. But on this dark,
stormy night facility of movement was out of the question. It was
four o’clock on the morning of December 26, 1776, before
the Continentals were ready to start on their march along the Jersey
shore toward Trenton. The last man had reached the eastern bank
at three. During the latter part of the crossing venture, Washington,
awaiting transport of his horse, had sat on a box once used as
a beehive. What a background for high resolve and earnest meditation
- blinding snow, piercing wind, the grunts of artillerymen with
their cumbersome burdens, the stentorian shouts of Colonel Knox.
“Victory or Death!” had
been given out as the password; the necessity for absolute silence,
obedience and order had been impressed on the men. At length, four
hours behind schedule, came the command, “Shoulder your firelocks
!” The weary tramp along slippery roads began.
Neither the delay nor the weather
could weaken Washington’s grim purpose. Existing conditions,
he later wrote, “made me despair of surprising the town,
as I well knew we could not reach it before the day was fairly
broke. But as I was certain there was no making a retreat without
being discovered and harassed on repassing the river, I determined
to press on at all events.” 7
7 Ford’s Writings
of George Washington, Vol. V, p. 132.
Meanwhile, General Ewing had found it impossible
to get a boat launched at Trenton Ferry, and Colonel Cadwalader, after
landing some 600 men on the Jersey side at Dunk’s Ferry, a few
miles below Bristol, was confronted by an icy barrier which made further
progress impossible. He therefore recalled those already across and
bowed before the elements.
CONFIDENT
REVELRY
If there was chill misery at McKonkey’s
Ferry, there was warm cheer in Trenton. The Hessians who were not
required to remain on picket duty gathered around their fires, drinking
and singing. Colonel Rall was no man to stand aside and watch others
celebrate. He, too, was out to make a night of it.
Rall was full of confidence, despite
the fact that a Continental advance on the Jersey shore of the
Delaware was considered likely by his superior officers. On December
24, General Grant dispatched a letter to Von Donop at Bordentown,
advising that he be upon his guard “against an unexpected
attack at Trenton.” And General Leslie, on the same day,
sent a patrol to Trenton with word that an attack on either Trenton
or Princeton was imminent.
“As the American officers
had anticipated,” says Stryker, “the Hessian troops
at Trenton, carelessly confident in their own military strength,
entered eagerly into the Christmas revelry as they did at home,
and all day and far into the night they continued their merrymaking,
with some feasting and much drinking with the people of the town.” 8
8 The Battles of Trenton
and Princeton, p. 117.
As late as Christmas morning, Colonel Rall received
word from General Grant that a detachment under General Lord Stirling
might be expected to attack the village sometime during the day.
The advice was without foundation, but it should have sufficed to
keep Rall alert. Instead, the confident Hessian, working on the theory
that “these country clowns can’t whip us,” made
a cursory inspection of some of the guards on the outskirts of town
and then returned, late in the afternoon, to the house of Stacy Potts,
on King Street, where he maintained headquarters.
Scarcely had the Hessian commander joined his
genial host in a game of checkers when firing was heard. The village
was immediately thrown into a state of alarm. The troops fell in.
Rall marched his regiment to the junction of Pennington and Maidenhead
Roads, but he soon received news from Captain Von Altenbockum that
the Americans, who had attacked a picket on the Pennington Road,
had been driven off and, after careful search, could not be found.
Rall was inclined to brush the incident
aside as wholly trivial. Not so Major Von Dechow, who was impressed
by the latent possibilities and urged upon Rall the desirability
of sending out patrols to all the ferries and along all the roads.
Certainly a more vigilant commanding officer than Rall would have
done something besides permit officers and men to return to their
drunken revels. 9
9 Colonel Rall is seriously
censured for negligence in the finding of the Hessian Court Martial,
recorded by Stryker, pp. 411-19. Lack of prudence, underestimation
of the fighting capacity of the Continentals and failure to designate
alarm places are especially emphasized, but the conclusion is somewhat
softened by the following remark: “Colonel Rall having been
mortally wounded and died of the wounds received at the attack on
Trenton he cannot be held to answer these charges, and a decision
cannot be justly rendered against him.” For almost six months,
the Hessian court was in session intermittently at Philadelphia and
New York, the final report being sent to the Prince of Hesse, September
23, 1778.
The party which attacked the Pennington
picket was a small detachment from Stephen’s brigade which
had been engaged, without Washington’s knowledge or permission,
in scouting through Hunterdon County. General Stephen, according
to the commonly accepted version, was subsequently censured by
Washington for allowing the rovers to operate in a way which came
so close to warning the enemy against the imminence of a major
attack. As a matter of fact, however, the episode was fortunate
for the Continentals, by reason of Rall’s inference that
this was the movement which had been predicted by General Grant.
Thus, far from being forewarned, the Hessians were lulled into
a sense of security which proved to be their undoing.
After this flurry, Colonel Rall,
instead of resuming his checker game with Potts, went to the home
of Abraham Hunt, at the corner of King and Second Streets. Hunt
was the rich merchant of the town and was always ready to welcome
guests with bounteous good cheer. Whether, as some patriots then
suspected, he had leanings in the direction of Toryism, Hunt certainly
aided the Continental cause on Christmas night, 1776, for the merriment
which he provided with open-handed generosity continued until early
morning and served to get Rall so drenched with intoxicating beverages
that he was in the poorest of conditions when Washington and his
determined band finally stormed the town.
|
|
Even while the Hessian commander
was making the most of his fool’s paradise, another warning
arrived - and it, too, was spurned. A Pennsylvania Tory came to
Hunt’s door to tell Rall of the movements of the American
army. Refused admittance by a negro servant who was loath to interrupt
the evening’s jollification, the informant wrote a note which
was duly delivered to the roistering Hessian leader. Without so
much as reading the missive, Rall tucked it into his vest pocket.
Later, dying of wounds, Rall said
of the note, “If I had read that at Mr. Hunt’s, I’d
not be here.”
And so, drinking and card-playing
continued to occupy the attention of the Hessian leader at the
very moment when Washington’s loyal army of cold and bleeding
patriots was being organized for a stroke that was to mark the
turning-point of the Revolution. 10
10 A graphic picture of the
contrasting situations of the patriot and Hessian forces is contained
in excerpts from the diary of an officer on Washington’s staff,
set forth by Stryker, pp. 361-2.
PLAN AND
CONDUCT OF THE BATTLE
Washington’s carefully laid plans called
for a separation of the Continentals into two divisions for the march
toward Trenton. Upon being organized in column formation, the army
proceeded as a unit to Bear Tavern, about a mile f rom the river,
and thence to Birmingham. 11 At this point, now known as Trenton Junction, “General
Washington stopped for a moment, and partook of the hospitality of
Benjamin Moore, while the column was halted, and the men made a hasty
meal.”12
11 The route of the Continentals
from Bear Tavern has been subject to controversy. Dr. Carlos E. Godfrey
has adduced considerable evidence tending to show that the army divided
at Bear Tavern, Greene’s division crossing from this point
to the Scotch Road. There are those, on the other hand, who hesitate
to brush aside too readily the theory which has given little Birmingham
its fame. How explain away, they ask, the account of the march given
by General James Wilkinson, who participated therein, and the version
adopted by General Stryker, who was familiar with Washington’s
marching orders, and the Forrest diary which support the presumption
in favor of Bear Tavern? Stryker prints these documents in an appendix
to his history, yet he clearly states that the Continentals divided
at Birmingham. Why? We can only surmise. One supposition is that,
after crossing the Delaware, Washington learned of the short route
that connected Birmingham with the Scotch Road, well-posted local
guides giving him the information, and gladly took advantage of the
opportunity to keep both divisions together, and thus avoid a surprise
attack upon either between Bear Tavern and the village. The entry
in Forrest’s diary, argues the same side, may easily have been
a slip of the pen, written with the original marching orders in mind.
It is significant that General Stryker did not think it necessary
even to explain away the documents and maps now advanced to establish
a different theory. Again, if the so-called Pennington Road route
had been followed, it would have carried Generals Washington and
Greene with one division past the Ewing Presbyterian Church. Yet
the church annals contain no reference to what would surely have
been a choice bit of parish history, nor did the members of the congregation
pass on to their descendants so striking and revered a legend. On
the contrary, the Rev. Eli F. Cooley, whose pastorate began in 1823
and who spent many years in historical and genealogical research
among the families of his charge, wrote a series of sketches upon
Revolutionary incidents for the State Gazette in 1842-43,
in which he deliberately described the division of the army at Birmingham.
Persons interested in this issue will find Dr. Godfrey's argument
thoroughly developed in a paper read before the Trenton Historical
Society, March 20, 1924.
12 Stryker, p. 141.
Before reaching Birmingham, where the column was
scheduled to divide, Captain John Mott informed Major General Sullivan
that the storm was causing the priming powder to become damp.
“Well, boys,” shouted
the determined Sullivan, “we must fight them with the bayonet.”
Washington, also informed of the
condition, sent his aide-de-camp to “tell the General to
use the bayonet and penetrate into the town; for the town must
be taken and I am resolved to take it.” 13
13 Stryker, p. 140. It is urged
by those who believe the army marched as a unit until reaching Birmingham
that this verbal exchange would scarcely have been feasible if the
division of forces had taken place at Bear Tavern.
The column left Birmingham in two divisions, the
first under Major General Sullivan along the River Road and the second
under Major General Greene along the Scotch Road. General Washington
accompanied Greene’s division.
Sullivan was supported by the brigades
of Brigadier General St. Clair, Colonel Glover and Colonel Sargent
and the batteries of Captains Neil, Hugg, Moulder and Sargent;
Greene, by the brigades of Brigadier Generals Stephen, Mercer,
Lord Stirling and de Fermoy, Captain Morris’ Philadelphia
troop of light horse and the batteries of Captains Forrest, Bauman
and Hamilton.
Birmingham is little more than four
miles from Trenton, the distance by the River Road being somewhat
less than that by the route of Greene’s division.
Daylight appeared before the tattered
Continentals, many of them without shoes, had covered half the
distance from Birmingham. But their courage was kept at high pitch
by Washington’s reiterated, “Press on, press on, boys!”
Colonel Rall, about this moment,
left the convivial scene at Abraham Hunt’s, plodded to his
headquarters, flung his clothes aside - the telltale note still
tucked away in his vest pocket - and confusedly lunged into bed
to dream of even better Yuletide celebrations in far-away Hesse.
A Hessian patrol ventured forth
about five o’clock as far as Captain John Mott’s house,
on the present site of the New Jersey State Hospital, only to return
with the report that the enemy was nowhere in sight. “An
hour later and a march a mile farther,” says Stryker, “would
probably have changed the condition of affairs in Trenton at eight
o’clock, and Washington would have found a foe ready to receive
him.” 14
14 The Battles of Trenton and
Princeton, p. 146.
Shortly before eight o’clock, the advance
party of Greene’s division came upon the Hessian picket post
on the Pennington Road. Lieutenant Wiederhold’s sentinels challenged
the Americans, and when it was evident that the approaching force
consisted of Continentals, the guards ran from the house, shouting, “The
enemy! The enemy! Turn out! Turn out!”
Three volleys were fired by the
Americans. Wiederhold was forced to retreat, and, though soon joined
by Captain Von Altenbockum’s company, came so close to being
surrounded and cut down that a hurried withdrawal was necessary.
When a young Hessian officer fell,
mortally wounded, during the retreat down the Pennington Road,
Captain Samuel Morris, of the Philadelphia light horse, showed
a desire to stop and aid his dying foe. A sharp order from General
Greene checked the display of sympathy. This was no time for anything
but a vigorous advance.
Shortly after Greene’s division
routed the upper picket, General Sullivan reached the Hessian outpost
at the Hermitage, residence of General Philemon Dickinson, on the
River Road at the outskirts of Trenton. Captain John Flahaven’s
detachment caused the Hessians stationed there to retreat, a movement
in which they were forced on by Colonel Glover’s brigade.
Meantime, the firing had proved to be an effective
alarm for the force in town. The retreating pickets were being driven “pell-mell” into
Trenton, and, as the Americans swept on, it became evident to the
Hessian officers that there was no time for delay. All would be lost
if defensive organization were not effected speedily.
Lieutenant Jacob Piel, attached
to the Von Lossberg regiment, was quick to act when the firing
was heard. He dispatched a detail to ascertain the cause of the
disturbance, and then went directly to Colonel Rall’s house.
Awakened by the knocking at his door, Rall shouted from an upper
window, “What's the matter?” Piel mentioned the firing. “I’ll
be out in a minute,” said Rall. He had been on the street
but a second or two when the American guns began to sweep the streets
of the town.
Sullivan had reached Trenton ahead
of Greene and Washington, and the commander-in-chief of the Continentals
was greatly relieved thereby, as is shown in the following account
by a member of his staff: 15
15 Stryker, p. 363.
General Washington’s face lighted up instantly, for he knew
that it [the boom of a cannon] was one of Sullivan’s guns.
We could see a great commotion down toward the meeting-house, men
running here and there, officers swinging their swords, artillerymen
harnessing their horses. Captain Forrest unlimbered his guns.
Washington gave the order to advance, and we rushed on to the junction
of King and Queen Streets. Forrest wheeled six of his cannon into
position to sweep both streets. The riflemen under Colonel Hand and
Scott’s and Lawson’s battalions went upon the run through
the fields on the left to gain possession of the Princeton road .
. . .
It was on the spot where the Trenton Battle Monument
now stands that Captain Forrest’s six-gun battery and the second
company of the Pennsylvania artillery unit began combing Queen Street,
while the New York artillerymen, commanded by young Alexander Hamilton,
sent volley after volley down King Street.
General Washington took up a position
on the high ground at what is now Princeton Avenue. This point
gave him an excellent opportunity to watch developments and to
direct the course of the engagement. Tradition has it that his
chestnut sorrel horse was severely wounded and that another animal
had to be procured. 16
16 Stryker, p. 160.
The various units of the Hessian
forces were formed, meanwhile, more or less successfully, but the
attack of the Americans had been so much in the nature, of a surprise,
and Colonel Rall was in so befuddled a condition, that it was quite
impossible to secure coordination in the defending ranks.
Poor Rall was unable even to give
intelligent replies to subordinate officers coming to him for instructions. “Forward!
Forward!” he exclaimed repeatedly without himself having
a very clear idea as to where or for what purpose.
“These are the times that
try men's souls,” the onrushing Americans are said to have
shouted, taking a certain ironical delight in thus adapting to
military purposes the clarion call coined by Thomas Paine.
THE ENEMY LOSE CONFIDENCE
Rall’s men lost confidence
in their leader. They lost confidence in themselves. They began
falling back in confusion, unable to stand against the deadly shots
of the Americans who had wisely found vantage places in houses
and cellars where their powder could be kept dry and their firing
directed with uncanny accuracy.
With General Sullivan’s division
rapidly taking possession of the southern part of the town, the
regiments of Rall and Von Lossberg withdrew to the low ground known
as “The Swamp,” between what are now Stockton and Montgomery
Streets, north of Perry.
“Forward march!” cried
the confused Rall. “Attack them with the bayonet!”
The Hessians momentarily responded, but soon they
were in disorderly retreat. Despite the fact that their colors had
been displayed, their ranks re-formed, the band forced to play and
order brought, for the moment, out of chaos, the Teutonic mercenaries
could not face the withering fire of the American rifles.
It was under such discouraging conditions
that Colonel Rall fell, frightfully wounded by two Continental
shots. Leaderless, his troops virtually abandoned the fray and
retreated to the apple orchard at the eastern edge of the village. 17
17 See Trevelyan’s The
American Revolution, pp. 108-9, for a stirring description
of the brilliant futility displayed by Rall’s brigade during
this final attempt at recovery.
In the southern part of town, the
Von Knyphausen regiment was making a futile attempt to escape by
way of the bridge over the Assunpink Creek which already had proved
to be a safe avenue of retreat for some of the Hessians. But General
Sullivan, anticipating such a move, had blocked the way with well-placed
infantry and cannon, so that the Hessians, hemmed in on all sides,
finally engaged in a parley with their aggressive antagonists and
surrendered.
Rall had been shot from his horse
on Queen Street in front of the house of Isaac Yard. After reclining
on the ground momentarily and suffering much pain, he was assisted
by two soldiers into the Methodist Church, at Queen and Fourth
Streets.
In the meantime, the Rall and Von
Lossberg regiments could see from their position in the orchard
that they were virtually surrounded by the excited and determined
Americans. Lieutenant Colonel Scheffer and Major Von Hanstein received
one of Washington’s aides-de-camp, probably Lieutenant Colonel
Baylor, and at last decided to recognize the inevitable and lay
down their arms. Standards were lowered, guns grounded, and officers’ hats
placed on the points of swords as an indication of surrender.
“The patriot troops,” according
to Stryker, “tossed their hats in the air, and a great shout
resounded through the village, as the surrender was made, and the
battle of Trenton closed.” 18
18 Stryker, p. 185.
As defeat came swiftly to his soldiers, so death
came with anything but laggard steps to Colonel Rall. The proud Hessian
commander lay in the Methodist Church until after the surrender.
Then he was placed on a bench and carried to headquarters on King
Street, the house of Stacy Potts. Here, while being disrobed, Rall
saw the note which he had tucked away and which brought forth his
well-known remark of regret.
Generals Washington and Greene called
on the mortally wounded Rall, conversed briefly with him and took
his parole of honor. In response to a request from Rall, Washington
assured him that the prisoners would receive kind treatment. Rall
died the following evening, December 27, 1776. German records tell
of his burial in the Presbyterian churchyard, East State Street,
but the exact location of his grave is unknown. 19
19 Colonel Rall was born in
1725. He served with distinction in the .Seven Years’ War and
performed creditably in some of the earlier engagements of the Revolutionary
War, including the Battle of Long Island and the capture of Fort
Washington. He was a lover of colorful military display, but was,
nevertheless, a man of marked personal bravery. “His memory
has been cursed by German and English soldiers, many of whom were
not fit to carry his sword,” said Captain Johann Ewald, the
one Hessian writer who fails to hold poor Rall up as an object of
censure.
FRUITS OF VICTORY
“This is a glorious day for
our country, Major Wilkinson,” General Washington remarked
to this gallant young officer when informed of the Hessian surrender.
And indeed it was a glorious day. What had been a well-nigh hopeless
cause was transformed by a remarkably executed stroke into one
which commanded confidence.
As modern battles go, the losses
on neither side were great. The Americans went virtually unscathed,
two officers and two privates wounded being the official report
of Washington. Reports of the Hessian casualties vary slightly.
In the New Jersey Archives, 20 the number of men and officers killed is given as
35; wounded, 60; captured, 948. Washington placed the total number
killed, wounded and captured at 918, but his return was made out
the day after the battle and hence could scarcely have been as
accurate as later compilations.
20 Second series, Vol. IV,
p. 450.
However, it was not in point of enemy troops put
out of action that the first Battle of Trenton contributed so markedly
to the American cause. Serving as a patriotic tonic, it did much
to revive the hopes of the army and to give Congress and the people
generally a revitalized vision of better days to come. At a single
stroke, a poorly clad, ill-fed mob of discouraged campaigners had
been changed into a confident band which justified the spreading
confidence that the cause of national independence was far from a
state of collapse. The battle proved, moreover, that the highly touted
German mercenaries were by no means invincible, and that Continental
tradesmen and merchants who could shoot were infinitely more effective
in battle than gaudily uniformed professionals who could drill. In
addition, the justifiable feeling spread that George Washington was
an able strategist and that in point of leadership the American Army
need not bow its head before any foreign band. 21
21 cf. Trevelyan, pp. 119-20.
If the Hessians had earned their evil reputation for brutality, they
were sufficiently mild and docile in captivity to win the hearts
of their conquerors. “They had been poor soldiers at Trenton,” is
the dry comment of Trevelyan, “but they made most excellent
prisoners.”
The rebirth of patriotic ardor inevitably
had an effect upon enlistments, sorely needed by Washington in
view of the fact that the army had just about reached the point
of dissolution through expiration of terms. Word winged its way
throughout the Colonies that a glorious victory had been won in
Trenton. And, as in the case of Connecticut, men began flocking
to the colors by the hundreds, anxious to participate in this revived
burst of national zeal.
Truly it was a turning-point in
the fight for freedom. Coming when and as it did, there is no doubt
whatsoever that the first Battle of Trenton opened the way to ultimate
victory.
INTERLUDE
“In justice to the officers
and men,” said General Washington, in his report to the Continental
Congress, “I must add that their behavior upon this occasion
reflects the highest honor upon them.”
It was no exaggeration. And, not
only did the Continentals behave well in battle but they behaved
well in victory. The Hessians in New Jersey had won for themselves
a reputation for barbaric conduct. 22 They had seized personal property
and were accused on all hands of conduct unseemly if not actually
criminal. It would have been natural for a conquering American
army to bear down upon them without mercy. Instead, the Hessians
were treated with every consideration, both by the military and
civil conquerors into whose hands they had fallen through that “unfortunate
affair” on the eastern shore of the Delaware.
22 Stryker, p. 222.
The battle over, Washington without undue delay
ordered the prizes collected, the troops lined up and the march back
to the ferry begun, soon after the middle of day. In contrast with
the grim body that had tramped the nine miles some six hours earlier,
it was indeed a joyous host.
At McKonkey’s Ferry, the prisoners
of war were sent across first. Nor was the crossing much easier
than it had been the night before. One boatload of German officers
came near being lost and it was only after a hard battle with the
icy current that the Pennsylvania shore was reached.
After the whole detachment had returned
to their former camps and barracks, headquarters for the army were
established near Newtown, to which point the enlisted men of the
Hessian army were marched at once. On December 28 the American
officers entertained the Hessian commanders at dinner, and pleasantries
were exchanged with good feeling predominant on both sides. 23
23 Stryker, pp. 208-9.
The Hessian prisoners at Newtown
signed a parole of honor, and Washington more than made good his
promise to Rall by allowing them to keep their personal baggage
without examination.
Soon after giving their parole,
the Hessian officers were sent to Philadelphia, the enlisted men
following afoot on December 30. They were all treated hospitably,
as was the case, also, after they were scattered throughout the
western counties of Pennsylvania and parts of Virginia. Many of
them preferred to remain in America when the war was over, settling
in the German communities of the Keystone State.
Receiving word from Adjutant General Joseph Reed
to the effect that Trenton was deserted, Washington resolved to recross
the Delaware and reestablish himself in New Jersey. General Greene,
with 300 men, took the town, and Washington himself followed on December
30 in advance of the main body.
Upon reaching Trenton, Washington
established headquarters at the home of Major John Barnes, a loyalist,
on Queen Street near the Assunpink Creek bridge, where he remained
until January 2. He then moved to Jonathan Richmond’s tavern
to the south of the bridge.
During these days, while Trenton
was again the scene of intensive military activity, General Cornwallis
was in New York busily planning a return trip to England for the
purpose, in part at least, of informing the King of the great success
being attained by the British army in New Jersey. But he was to
receive a rude awakening.
General Howe, informed of the “unhappy
affair” at Trenton, quickly ordered the prospective voyager
to resume command of his forces. Cornwallis promptly cancelled
his arrangements and, on January 1, joined General Grant at Princeton,
the latter already having moved with his force from Brunswick,
leaving about 600 men to guard the supplies. 24
24 Stryker, p. 247.
Washington, meanwhile, had received
extraordinary powers from the hands of Congress, in session on
December 27 at Baltimore. His position now was not only that of
commander-in-chief of the Continental army but also that of virtual
dictator. “Happy it is for this country,” read the
letter informing Washington of the Congressional resolution, “that
the General of their forces can safely be entrusted with the most
unlimited power, and neither personal security, liberty nor property
be in the least degree endangered thereby.”
“Instead of thinking myself
freed from all civil obligations, by this mark of confidence,” Washington
wrote to the Congressional notification committee, penning his
letter from the Richmond Inn, Trenton, January 1, “I shall
constantly bear in mind, that as the sword was the last resort
for the preservation of our liberties, so it ought to be the first
thing laid aside, when those liberties are firmly established.” |
II. The Second Battle
IT WAS a motley army which made
ready, on the high ground at the south side of Assunpink Creek,
to meet the anticipated advance of the British. Experienced soldiers
who had become accustomed to the smell of powder were not only
diminished in number but quite exhausted as a result of the rigors
of recent campaigning. The green troops, recruited in the flush
of victory over the Hessians, were lacking in discipline though
determined in spirit and ready to render the fullest measure of
service to the American cause. 25
25 “His army,” says
Trevelyan of Washington’s force at the second Battle of Trenton, “was
a medley of unequally sized and very dissimilar fragments, of which
the best were the smallest.” The American Revolution,
p. 129.
THE BRITISH
FORCES MARCH FROM PRINCETON
The British forces, divided into
three columns, started the march from Princeton before daybreak
on January 2. General Cornwallis was in command. General Leslie’s
brigade was ordered to remain at Maidenhead, and Grant’s
brigade, under command of Lieutenant Colonel Mawhood, was left
in Princeton as a rear-guard, with the understanding that it was
to proceed to Trenton on January 3. After making these precautionary
arrangements, Cornwallis had about 5,500 men for the expected engagement
with Continental troops in Trenton.
On the first day of the new year,
Washington’s forces had been augmented, as a result of orders
from headquarters, by the divisions of General Cadwalader and General
Mifflin. The two bodies had joined at White Horse Tavern and advanced
as a unit to Trenton.
Washington had sent scouting parties to obtain
the position and, if possible, the intentions of the enemy. With
the desired information at hand, he ordered out a detachment under
Brigadier General de Fermoy for the purpose of taking a position
somewhat to the south of Maidenhead and offering at least temporary
resistance to the British advance.
Before the detachment came in contact
with the redcoats, General de Fermoy himself returned to Trenton,
but Colonel Edward Hand, assuming command, decided to fall back
on the town as slowly as practicable and endeavor to impede the
British in every possible way. In this, he achieved marked success
with his able regiment of Pennsylvania riflemen. So persistently
did the Americans dispute the territory at one point that the enemy
battalions of Von Linsingen and Block were drawn up in order of
battle, fully convinced that the major engagement which they had
anticipated was about to begin.
The condition of the roads was another
factor which contributed to a fulfilment of Washington’s
plan that the British be delayed all day. Mild weather had caused
the ground to thaw, and the heavy mud was an obstacle of serious
proportions for Cornwallis and his heavily equipped army.
Finally falling back upon the town
in their battling retreat, the Americans offered another bit of
stiff resistance at the ravine which led down to Assunpink Creek.
Here earthworks and a number of guns enabled the Virginia troops,
commanded by Captain William Hull and reinforced by General Greene,
to hold out against the British until about five o’clock
in the afternoon.
Washington was well pleased with
the hindrance and delay which had been forced on the approaching
enemy, and when Cornwallis’s main column began marching down
Queen Street, the American commander was prepared to meet the onslaught
from the strategic position in which the main Continental army
was posted to the south of the Assunpink. 26
26 Warren Street at the time
did not extend below Front Street. The Assunpink was bridged only
at King (Broad) Street, and this single-arched crossing was “scarce
sixteen feet wide,” so that not without difficulty were the
American skirmishers, who had helped all day to check the enemy’s
progress, able at the last moment to crowd through the passage, their
retreat being protected under cover of friendly fire from the south
bank of the creek. See also Stryker, p. 261.
It was well after five o’clock, and growing
darker moment by moment, when the British line reached the bridge
and made its first futile effort to storm the span and gain the other
side.
Continental batteries, under Captains
Moulder, Forrest and Read, together with infantry fire from the
American positions to the east and west of the bridge, proved sufficient
to stave off three British advances. In the dusk, accurate firing
was extremely difficult, but the Continentals had a great defensive
advantage in being able to concentrate on the bridge and keep up
withering volleys, throwing out a screen of shot and shell which
the redcoats were quite unable to penetrate.
General Washington, meanwhile, is
said to have remained on horseback at the American end of the bridge,
ignoring personal exposure, as he also did later at Princeton,
in order to encourage his men. 27
27 Stryker, p. 264. This fact
in itself indicates the importance which Washington attached to holding
the bridge against the British and thus staving off a fight to the
finish with Cornwallis’ formidable force.
Hessian troops made a vigorous attempt
to cross the stream at a point somewhat to the west of the bridge,
but Colonel Hitchcock’s brigade, which had thrown up temporary
breastworks on the Bloomsbury farm, checked the movement abruptly
by means of a well-directed curtain of lead.
Commenting on the failure of the
British to make other similar efforts, Stryker says: 28
It will always appear singular that the invaders
did not attempt to cross the creek at some of the many fording-places
on the east of the town, such as Henry’s Mill or Phillips Ford,
the one a mile, the other two miles, above the mill-dam at the bridge.
It was impossible for General Washington to protect the whole stream,
and had the British forced the American right and driven them toward
Trenton Ferry and the river, nothing could have saved the entire
army. A determined advance along the line and a half hour’s
fight would have decided the battle. The American army would have
been well-nigh annihilated, and with it the fate of America and the
hopes of freemen.
28 The Battles of Trenton
and Princeton, p. 268.
The rapid approach of darkness and Cornwallis’ conviction
that the American forces were bottled up in such a way as to prevent
escape may have been responsible for this singular tactical omission,
as well as for the British General’s neglect, later that night,
to send out patrols and scouting parties and to establish picket-lines
on the Continentals’ exposed flank.
That he would “bag the old
fox” in the morning was the confident forecast of Cornwallis.
“If Washington is the General
I take him to be, his army will not be found there in the morning,”was
the cautious rejoinder of Sir William Erskine, Baronet, Colonel
and aide-de-camp to the King. 29
29 Stryker, p. 268.
HEAVY BRITISH LOSSES
It is hard definitely to estimate
the British losses at the bridge over the Assunpink. The official
reports make no mention of them, though authentic statements by
a number of eye-witnesses picture them as being very heavy. The
American losses are known to have been slight.
General Washington’s official
report contains the following description of the engagement:
After some skirmishing the head of their column
reached Trenton about four o’clock, whilst their rear was as
far back as Maidenhead. They attempted to pass Sampink Creek, which
runs through Trenton, at different places, but, finding the fords
guarded, they halted and kindled their fires. We were drawn up on
the other side of the creek. In this situation we remained till dark,
cannonading the enemy, and receiving the fire of their fieldpieces,
which did us little damage.
“We kept possession of the
bridge,” said Captain Thomas Rodney of Delaware, “although
the enemy attempted several times to carry it but were repulsed
each time with great slaughter.” 30
30 ibid., p. 266, note.
As to the importance of the second
Battle of Trenton in relation to the patriot cause, it is unquestionably
true that this later engagement, sometimes known as the “Battle
of the Assunpink,” was of even greater moment than the surprise
attack on the Hessians the week before. Had the forces of Lord
Cornwallis been successful in their attempts to storm the bridge,
Washington might have found his army split asunder and the struggle
for national independence brought to a sudden, unfavorable end.
Most historians of the Revolutionary period have slighted the event, 31 despite the fact that there is an abundance
of available evidence which tends to elevate the second Battle of
Trenton to a plane of major significance.
31 This is doubtless due, in
large part, to the dearth of official records as to killed and wounded.
It should be remembered, however, that the battle took place toward
dusk, that Washington and his army left for Princeton during the
night and that Cornwallis hurriedly withdrew early the next morning
to pursue the Continentals. Under these circumstances, detailed casualty
lists are scarcely to be expected. What probably happened is that
the British dead were left where they fell, the exigencies of the
moment preventing either identification or enumeration.
In the Connecticut Journal of
January 22, 1777 - published less than three weeks after the engagement
- appears the following graphic description:
Immediately after the taking of the Hessians at Trenton, on the
26th ult., our army retreated over the Delaware, and remained there
for several days, and then returned and took possession of Trenton,
where they remained quiet until Thursday, the 2nd inst., at which
time, the enemy having collected a large force at Princeton, marched
down in a body of 4,000 or 5,000, to attack our people at Trenton.
Through Trenton there runs a small river, over which there is a small
bridge. Gen. Washington, aware of the enemy’s approach, drew
his army (about equal to the enemy) over that bridge, in order to
have the advantage of the said river, and of the higher ground on
the farther side. Not long before sunset, the enemy marched into
Trenton; and after reconnoitering our situation, drew up in solid
column in order to force the aforesaid bridge, which they attempted
to do with great vigor at three several times, and were as
often broken by our artillery and obliged to retreat and give over
the attempt, after suffering great loss, supposed at least one
hundred and fifty killed. 32
32 Quoted in the Historical
Collections of the State of New Jersey, Barber and Howe, pp.
299-300.
This, it will be noted, indicates
that the number of British killed was nearly five times as great
as the casualty list for the first Battle of Trenton.
AN EYE-WITNESS
ACCOUNT
Another account which lends emphasis
to the memorable fight at the Assunpink bridge was written by an
eye-witness and printed in the Princeton Whig of November
4, 1842:
When the army under Washington, in the year ‘76,
retreated over the Delaware, I was with them. At that time there
remained in Jersey only a small company of riflemen, hiding themselves
between New Brunswick and Princeton. Doubtless, when Washington reached
the Pennsylvania side of the river, he expected to be so reinforced
as to enable him effectually to prevent the British from reaching
Philadelphia. But in this he was disappointed. Finding that he must
achieve victory with what men he had, and so restore confidence to
his countrymen, it was then that the daring plan was laid to recross
the river, break the enemy’s line of communication, threaten
their depot at New Brunswick, and thus prevent their advancing to
Philadelphia; which was only delayed until the river should be bridged
by the ice. But Washington anticipated them. I was not with the troops
who crossed to the capture of the Hessians. It was in the midst of
a December storm, that I helped to reestablish the troops and prisoners
on the Pennsylvania shore. The weather cleared cold, and in a few
days we crossed on the ice to Trenton. Shortly afterward a thaw commenced
which rendered the river impassable, and consequently the situation
of the army extremely critical.
In the morning of the day on which the battle of the Assunpink was
fought, I, with several others, was detached under the command of
Captain Longstreet, with orders to collect as many men as we could
in the country between Princeton, Cranbury, and Rhode Hall, and then
unite ourselves with the company of riflemen who had remained in
that neighborhood. We left Trenton by the nearest road to Princeton,
and advanced nearly to the Shabbaconk (a small brook near Trenton),
when we were met by a little negro on horseback, galloping down the
hill, who called to us that the British army was before us. One of
our party ran a little way up the hill, and jumped upon the fence,
from whence he beheld the British army, within less than half a mile
of us. And now commenced a race for Trenton. We fortunately escaped
capture; yet the enemy were so near, that before we crossed the bridge
over the Assunpink, some of our troops on the Trenton side of the
creek, with a field-piece, motioned to us to get out of the street
while they fired at the British at the upper end of it. Not being
on duty, we had nothing to do but choose our position and view the
battle.
Washington’s army was drawn up on the east side of the Assunpink,
with its left on the Delaware River, and its right extending a considerable
way up the mill-pond, along the face of the hill where the factories
now stand. The troops were placed one above the other, so that they
appeared to cover the whole slope from bottom to top, which brought
a great many muskets within shot of the bridge. Within 70 or 80 yards
of the bridge, and directly in front of, and in the road, as many
pieces of artillery as could be managed were stationed. We took our
station on the high ground behind the right, where we had a fair
view of our line, as far as the curve of the hill would permit, the
bridge and street beyond being in full view. The British did not
delay the attack. They were formed in two columns, the one marching
down Green‑street to carry the .bridge, and the other down
Main-street to ford the creek, near where the lower bridge now stands.
From the nature of the ground, and being on the left, this attack
(simultaneous with the one on the bridge) I was not able to see.
It was repelled; and eye-witnesses say that the creek was nearly
filled with their dead. The other column moved slowly down the street,
with their choicest troops in front. When within about 60 yards of
the bridge they raised a shout, and rushed to the charge. It was
then that our men poured upon them from musketry and artillery a
shower of bullets, under which however they continued to advance,
though their speed was diminished; and as the column reached the
bridge, it moved slower and slower until the head of it was gradually
pressed nearly over, when our fire became so destructive that they
broke their ranks and fled. It was then that our army raised a shout,
and such a shout I have never since heard; by what signal or word
of command, I know not. The line was more than a mile in length,
and from the nature of the ground the extremes were not in sight
of each other, yet they shouted as one man. The British column halted
instantly; the officers restored the ranks, and again they rushed
to the bridge; and again was the shower of bullets poured upon them
with redoubled fury. This time the column broke before it reached
the center of the bridge, and their retreat was again followed by
the same hearty shout from our line. They returned the third time
to the charge, but it was in vain. We shouted after them again, but
they had enough of it. It is strange that no account of the loss
of the English was ever published; but from what I saw, it must have
been great. 33
33 Barber and Howe, pp. 300-1.
In addition to these weighty bits
of evidence, C. C. Haven, Trenton historian who was a faithful
and earnest student of local Revolutionary lore, quotes General
Wilkinson, John Howland, Major General Greene and one A. Cuthbert,
son of a Revolutionary officer, all of whom lay stress on the magnitude
of the military action at Assunpink bridge. 34
34 Haven, Thirty Days in
New Jersey Ninety Years Ago, pp. 35-47. For additional comment
on Mr. Haven, see Chap. XV, below. An interesting article on this
man who contributed so much to a more complete understanding of
the second Battle of Trenton was written by John J. Cleary and
published in the Trenton Sunday Times-Advertiser of November
11, 1923. In the article appear several verses of a poem, probably
written by Edward S. Ellis, once superintendent of the Trenton
public schools, which show the esteem in which Mr. Haven was held.
Three of the verses follow:
Now tier on tier our patriots ranged themselves
upon the ridge,
And now again the redcoats charged upon Assunpink
bridge;
Three times Cornwallis’ hosts, with ringing
shout and shell,
Came rushing down upon us like the very hosts
of hell!
But artillery and musketry we poured in deadly rain,
And often as they yelled and charged, we beat them back again,
Until the victory was ours! All hail our Washington !
Assunpink’s battle has been fought, Assunpink’s battle
won!
And honor the historian whose patriotic pen
Has told these deeds with vivid power, unto his countrymen;
Whose four-score winters with their frosts have only fanned the
flame,
And with our Country’s good and true we proudly link his name.
Howland, who participated in the
battle and who subsequently became president of the Historical
Society of Rhode Island, made the following observation:
Night closed upon us, and the weather, which
had been mild and pleasant through the day, became intensely cold.
On one hour - yes, on forty minutes, commencing at the moment when
the British troops first saw the bridge and creek before them - depended
the all-important, the all-absorbing question, whether we should
be Independent States or conquered rebels ! Had the army of Cornwallis,
within that space have crossed the bridge or forded the creek, unless
a miracle intervened, there would have been an end of the American
army. 35
35 Haven, Thirty Days in
New Jersey Ninety Years Ago, p. 39.
When these descriptive and interpretative statements
are considered in the aggregate, it becomes plain that the second
Battle of Trenton was, for the Continental army, a defensive operation
of vast import. Whereas in the surprise of the Hessians Washington
was the aggressor engaged in attacking what was at best a mere outpost,
in the clash at the Assunpink he was defending against a formidable
British army under the most competent leadership. That he was able
to emerge victorious may be said, without any exaggeration, to have
been a saving factor for the patriot cause.
WASHINGTON’S POSITION STILL PRECARIOUS
But in spite of the success of the
moment, Washington’s position was decidedly precarious. To
face the foe on the morrow would be almost suicidal. To retreat
toward Bordentown would assure ultimate defeat. Here was a situation
to test the capacity of a commander and to call forth all the shrewdness
which some of the British leaders were by this time attributing
to the Continental chief.
The shrewdness asserted itself.
Washington called a council of war at the house of Alexander Douglass,
headquarters of Brigadier General St. Clair, the General’s
own quarters at the Richmond tavern having been abandoned because
of the proximity of the enemy. Before this gathering of Continental
leaders, Washington outlined his plan of strategy. 36
36 An illuminating account
of this and attendant events was given by Counsellor William J. Backes
before the Caliphs on December 28, 1915, and was reported in the Trenton
Sunday Times-Advertiser of January 2, 1916. The Douglass House
stood on the site of the present German Lutheran Church, South Broad
Street. It has since been sold and removed to Mahlon Stacy Park.
Dr. Carlos E. Godfrey delivered an accurate and informative address
on the second Battle of Trenton before the Caliphs on January 2,
1919. It was at this meeting that steps were taken to form the Trenton
Historical Society. An account of the proceedings, together with
Dr. Godfrey’s address, was published in the State Gazette of
January 3, 1919.
This plan, one of the boldest strokes in military
history, called for a decamping movement, a forced march that night
through the woods around Trenton and a surprise attack on Princeton,
from which point, as already noted, most of the British forces had
been withdrawn for the purpose of moving on Trenton. The virtue of
the scheme lay not only in the possibility it offered for avoiding
a finish fight with the splendidly equipped army of Cornwallis but
also in its appearance as an offensive drive rather than as a hopeless
retreat. Washington well knew that his inexperienced troops needed
encouragement and a taste of victory if they were to maintain their
spirits. The proposed attack on Princeton was exactly the right medium.
Orders to this effect, therefore,
were given, though men and subordinate officers below the rank
of Brigadier General were not informed as to the end in view, the
element of secrecy being so effectively obtained that some of the
Continental officers who had gone to the rear for much needed rest
were left behind and forced to find their commands as best they
could the following day. 37
37 Trevelyan, p. 133. Referring
to Chapter XV of General Stryker’s classic work, Trevelyan
says: “The account there given of Washington’s flank-march
is illustrated by the local knowledge of a neighbor, and the oral
traditions accessible to the member of an old Revolutionary family.”
Camp fires were kept burning on
the high ground along which the Continentals were posted. Throughout
the night, these fires were visible from the British positions,
and the sound of earthworks being thrown up to the south of the
creek added to the realistic effect of the camouflage. At the bridge
and at various fording places, American guards paced to and fro.
If ever an army was completely fooled, it was this army of the
complacent Cornwallis.
ON TO PRINCETON
Under cover of darkness, the flank movement began.
The heavier guns and surplus supplies were sent out under General
Stephen, who, with a strong guard, was to take them to Burlington
by way of Bordentown. Not long after midnight, the main army began
to move, headed by an advance party under Major Isaac Sherman, of
Connecticut, and including the brigades of Brigadier General Mercer
and General St. Clair. Washington and his staff accompanied the latter
division.
The route lay along the Sand Town
Road, near what is now Hamilton Avenue. Much care was exercised
lest the enemy should hear the movement and become alarmed. The
wheels of the gun carriages were wrapped with pieces of cloth;
the need of absolute silence was impressed upon officers and men.
Before reaching Sand Town, a small group of houses at the present
location of Mercerville, the army veered to the north and crossed
Miry Run, a stream running in a westerly direction into Assunpink
Creek. From this point, the route was north by east across Quaker
Bridge and thence due north to Clarksville, across Stony Brook,
where three brigades under General Sullivan split from the main
army that they might enter Princeton from the east. 38
38 See map, Stryker, p. 279.
The Sons of the Revolution have marked this Trenton-Princeton route
with granite obelisks, out Hamilton Avenue, through Greenwood Cemetery
and via the Quaker Creek road.
A fortunate change in the weather
facilitated the movement. Whereas Cornwallis in his march on Trenton
had been impeded by the mud, Washington’s forces were benefited
by a drop in the temperature which froze the roads and made it
comparatively easy to transport even the artillery. But the wooded
sections through which the troops were forced to pass were something
of an obstacle, for the Continentals suffered “many a fall
and severe bruise,” according to John Howland, of Colonel
Lippitt’s Rhode Island regiment, in their encounter with
the trees. 39
39 Stryker, p. 276.
Lieutenant Colonel Mawhood, meanwhile,
started for Trenton with the 17th and 55th Infantry and fifty light
horse. Upon approaching Stony Brook, the British discovered the
advancing forces of Washington and immediately attacked a detachment
of several hundred men under General Hugh Mercer as the latter
was carrying out Washington’s orders to destroy the bridge
at Worth’s Mill in order to thwart the anticipated pursuit
by Cornwallis.
In this engagement, which took place in an orchard,
General Mercer received numerous wounds from British bayonets. 40 His men were momentarily demoralized, but
soon Washington and Greene came up with the main army, and, with
their commander-in-chief personally waving them on to victory, the
Americans made their superior numbers felt and forced the British
to retreat. As the redcoats fell back upon the town there was some
additional fighting, a final stand being made in Nassau Hall, where,
it is said, an American cannon-ball entered the building and crashed
through a portrait of George II. Before the structure itself was
badly damaged, the British showed a white flag at one of the windows
and the Battle of Princeton was brought to a close. 41
40 Suffering intensely, General
Mercer lived until Sunday, January 12. Death came in spite of the
efforts of an American surgeon, sent by special order of Washington
and allowed to pass through the British lines by Lord Cornwallis.
41 See “The Battle of
Princeton,” an address delivered by Professor Thomas J. Wertenbaker,
of Princeton University, at the annual meeting of the New Jersey
Historical Society at Newark, N.J., October 31, 1928. This admirable
address has been published in the Proceedings of the New Jersey
Historical Society, New Series, January 1929, Vol. XIV, No. 1.
Cornwallis awoke at Trenton only to discover that
the “old fox” had escaped. Not much time was lost sizing
up the situation, and early in the morning the British commander
had his men on the way back to Princeton, “running, puffing
and blowing, and swearing at being so outwitted.”
After getting control of the town,
Washington wisely decided to leave Princeton at once and to head
north toward the desirable position at Morristown. His men were
too tired, as a result of steady campaigning, to risk an attack
on the British base at Brunswick. 42 And to delay at Princeton would be to face the necessity
of meeting Cornwallis and the strong force at his disposal. Even
with quick action, however, Washington’s rear-guard was still
within sight of Princeton as the advance detachments of British
Infantry were approaching the southern entrance of the town. Nevertheless,
Washington was able to reach Somerset Court House unmolested and
to continue on to Morristown without another clash of arms.
42 “For two nights and a
day,” says Stryker, “they had had no sleep, and many of
them had carried their arms without intermission for nearly forty hours
on the march and in battle . . . . General Washington declared that
if he had had but 800 fresh troops, he could have made a forced march,
destroyed their stores and magazines, taken their money-chest, and possibly
have put an end to the war.” The Battles of Trenton and Princeton,
p. 300.
“THOSE
WONDERFUL DAYS”
To say that the Battles of Trenton,
culminating in the brilliant stroke at Princeton and the march
to Morristown, marked a turning of the tide of war in favor of
the Continental cause is to state what must be admitted by the
student of “those wonderful days in New Jersey.’ Never
was a military outlook more discouraging than that which Washington
faced toward the end of the year 1776. Never was a military recovery
more successful than that finally written into the record with
the dawn of the year 1777.
When Washington and his army retreated
from New York to their vantage point across the Delaware from Trenton,
the great city of Philadelphia was threatened with Hessian pillage
and destruction. When, a few weeks later, the patriots reached
Morristown, the Quaker City was safe.
When the British mercenaries were
strongly encamped in a line running from Amboy to Bordentown, New
Jersey at large was quite helplessly ensnared in the enemy mesh.
When the winter campaign of 1776-77 ended, the Colony, with the
exception of the British posts at Brunswick and Amboy, was free
from hostile control.
When the Continentals were fleeing
before the well-equipped host from Europe, the English cause gained
in vigor while that of the patriots inevitably suffered from the
blight of defensive discouragement. But with the close of the campaign,
these conditions were quite reversed, and the psychological advantage
lay with the Americans by virtue of “two lucky strokes.”
As for the effect of the campaign
upon the military prestige of George Washington, it was Lord Cornwallis
himself, who, after the capitulation at Yorktown, remarked: “When
the illustrious part that your Excellency has borne in this long
and arduous contest becomes matter of history, fame will gather
your brightest laurels rather from the banks of the Delaware than
from those of the Chesapeake.” 43
43 Trevelyan, p. 143. “At
that moment, and before that audience,” adds this British commentator, “Washington’s
generalship in the Chesapeake campaign must have represented an exceptionally
high standard of comparison.”
Henry Cabot Lodge in The Story of the Revolution, pp. 146-7,
library edition, 1919, Charles Scribner’s Sons, makes the following
significant comment: “With a beaten and defeated army operating
against overwhelming odds, he had inflicted upon the enemy two severe
defeats. No greater feat can be performed in war than this. That
which puts Hannibal at the head of all great commanders was the fact
that he won his astonishing victories under the same general conditions.
There was one great military genius in Europe when Washington was
fighting this short campaign in New Jersey - Frederick of Prussia.
Looking over the accounts of the Trenton and Princeton battles, he
is reported to have said that it was the greatest campaign of the
century. The small numbers engaged did not blind the victor of Rossbach
and Leuthen. He did not mean that the campaign was great from the
number of men involved or the territory conquered, but great in its
conception, and as an illustration of the highest skill in the art
of war under the most adverse conditions.” |