<h2><SPAN href="#Contents">CHAPTER IV</SPAN></h2>
<h3>The Loss of New York</h3>
<p><span class="smcap">Washington's</span> success at Boston had one good
effect. It destroyed Tory influence in that Puritan stronghold. New
England was henceforth of a temper wholly revolutionary; and New England
tradition holds that what its people think today other Americans think
tomorrow. But, in the summer of this year 1776, though no serious foe was
visible at any point in the revolted colonies, a menace haunted every one
of them. The British had gone away by sea; by sea they would return. On
land armies move slowly and visibly; but on the sea a great force may pass
out of sight and then suddenly reappear at an unexpected point. This is
the haunting terror of sea power. Already the British had destroyed
Falmouth, now Portland, Maine, and Norfolk, the principal town in
Virginia. Washington had no illusions of security. He was anxious above
all for the safety of New
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_82" id="Page_82">82</SPAN></span>
York, commanding the vital artery of the Hudson, which must at all costs
be defended. Accordingly, in April, he took his army to New York and
established there his own headquarters.</p>
<p>Even before Washington moved to New York, three great British expeditions
were nearing America. One of these we have already seen at Quebec. Another
was bound for Charleston, to land there an army and to make the place a
rallying center for the numerous but harassed Loyalists of the South. The
third and largest of these expeditions was to strike at New York and, by a
show of strength, bring the colonists to reason and reconciliation. If
mildness failed the British intended to capture New York, sail up the
Hudson and cut off New England from the other colonies.</p>
<p>The squadron destined for Charleston carried an army in command of a fine
soldier, Lord Cornwallis, destined later to be the defeated leader in the
last dramatic scene of the war. In May this fleet reached Wilmington,
North Carolina, and took on board two thousand men under General Sir Henry
Clinton, who had been sent by Howe from Boston in vain to win the
Carolinas and who now assumed military command of the combined forces.
Admiral Sir Peter Parker commanded the fleet, and
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_83" id="Page_83">83</SPAN></span>
on the 4th of June he
was off Charleston Harbor. Parker found that in order to cross the bar he
would have to lighten his larger ships. This was done by the laborious
process of removing the guns, which, of course, he had to replace when the
bar was crossed. On the 28th of June, Parker drew up his ships before Fort
Moultrie in the harbor. He had expected simultaneous aid by land from
three thousand soldiers put ashore from the fleet on a sandbar, but these
troops could give him no help against the fort from which they were cut
off by a channel of deep water. A battle soon proved the British ships
unable to withstand the American fire from Fort Moultrie. Late in the
evening Parker drew off, with two hundred and twenty-five casualties
against an American loss of thirty-seven. The check was greater than that
of Bunker Hill, for there the British took the ground which they attacked.
The British sailors bore witness to the gallantry of the defense: <q>We
never had such a drubbing in our lives,</q> one of them testified. Only one
of Parker's ten ships was seaworthy after the fight. It took him three
weeks to refit, and not until the 4th of August did his defeated ships
reach New York.</p>
<p>A mighty armada of seven hundred ships had
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_84" id="Page_84">84</SPAN></span>
meanwhile sailed into the Bay
of New York. This fleet was commanded by Admiral Lord Howe and it carried
an army of thirty thousand men led by his younger brother, Sir William
Howe, who had commanded at Bunker Hill. The General was an able and
well-informed soldier. He had a brilliant record of service in the Seven
Years' War, with Wolfe in Canada, then in France itself, and in the West
Indies. In appearance he was tall, dark, and coarse. His face showed him
to be a free user of wine. This may explain some of his faults as a
general. He trusted too much to subordinates; he was leisurely and rather
indolent, yet capable of brilliant and rapid action. In America his heart
was never in his task. He was member of Parliament for Nottingham and had
publicly condemned the quarrel with America and told his electors that in
it he would take no command. He had not kept his word, but his convictions
remained. It would be to accuse Howe of treason to say that he did not do
his best in America. Lack of conviction, however, affects action. Howe had
no belief that his country was in the right in the war and this
handicapped him as against the passionate conviction of Washington that
all was at stake which made life worth living.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_85" id="Page_85">85</SPAN></span>
The General's elder brother, Lord Howe, was another Whig who had no belief
that the war was just. He sat in the House of Lords while his brother sat
in the House of Commons. We rather wonder that the King should have been
content to leave in Whig hands his fortunes in America both by land and
sea. At any rate, here were the Howes more eager to make peace than to
make war and commanded to offer terms of reconciliation. Lord Howe had an
unpleasant face, so dark that he was called <q>Black Dick</q>; he was a silent,
awkward man, shy and harsh in manner. In reality, however, he was kind,
liberal in opinion, sober, and beloved by those who knew him best. His
pacific temper towards America was not due to a dislike of war. He was a
fighting sailor. Nearly twenty years later, on June 1, 1794, when he was
in command of a fleet in touch with the French enemy, the sailors watched
him to find any indication that the expected action would take place. Then
the word went round: <q>We shall have the fight today; Black Dick has been
smiling.</q> They had it, and Howe won a victory which makes his name famous
in the annals of the sea.</p>
<p>By the middle of July the two brothers were at New York. The soldier,
having waited at Halifax
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_86" id="Page_86">86</SPAN></span>
since the evacuation of Boston, had arrived, and
landed his army on Staten Island, on the day before Congress made the
Declaration of Independence, which, as now we can see, ended finally any
chance of reconciliation. The sailor arrived nine days later. Lord Howe
was wont to regret that he had not arrived a little earlier, since the
concessions which he had to offer might have averted the Declaration of
Independence. In truth, however, he had little to offer. Humor and
imagination are useful gifts in carrying on human affairs, but George III
had neither. He saw no lack of humor in now once more offering full and
free pardon to a repentant Washington and his comrades, though John Adams
was excepted by name¹; in repudiating the right to exist of the
Congress at Philadelphia, and in refusing to recognize the military rank
of the rebel general whom it had named: he was to be addressed in civilian
style as <q>George Washington Esq.</q> The King and his ministers had no
imagination to call up the picture of high-hearted men fighting for
rights which they held dear.</p>
<div class="footer">
<SPAN name="footer_86-1" name="footer_86-1"></SPAN>
¹Trevelyan, <i>American Revolution</i>, Part II, vol. I (New
Ed., vol. II), 261.</div>
<p>Lord Howe went so far as to address a letter to <q>George Washington Esq.
&c. &c.,</q> and Washington agreed to an interview with the officer
who
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_87" id="Page_87">87</SPAN></span>
bore it. In imposing uniform and with the stateliest manner,
Washington, who had an instinct for effect, received the envoy. The awed
messenger explained that the symbols <q>&c. &c.</q> meant everything,
including, of course, military titles; but Washington only said smilingly
that they might mean anything, including, of course, an insult, and
refused to take the letter. He referred to Congress, a body which Howe
could not recognize, the grave question of the address on an envelope and
Congress agreed that the recognition of his rank was necessary. There was
nothing to do but to go on with the fight.</p>
<p>Washington's army held the city of New York, at the southerly point of
Manhattan Island. The Hudson River, separating the island from the
mainland of New Jersey on the west, is at its mouth two miles wide. The
northern and eastern sides of the island are washed by the Harlem River,
flowing out of the Hudson about a dozen miles north of the city, and
broadening into the East River, about a mile wide where it separates New
York from Brooklyn Heights, on Long Island. Encamped on Staten Island, on
the south, General Howe could, with the aid of the fleet, land at any of
half a dozen vulnerable points. Howe had the further
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_88" id="Page_88">88</SPAN></span>
advantage of a much
larger force. Washington had in all some twenty thousand men, numbers of
them serving for short terms and therefore for the most part badly
drilled. Howe had twenty-five thousand well-trained soldiers, and he
could, in addition, draw men from the fleet, which would give him in all
double the force of Washington.</p>
<p>In such a situation even the best skill of Washington was likely only to
qualify defeat. He was advised to destroy New York and retire to positions
more tenable. But even if he had so desired, Congress, his master, would
not permit him to burn the city, and he had to make plans to defend it.
Brooklyn Heights so commanded New York that enemy cannon planted there
would make the city untenable. Accordingly Washington placed half his
force on Long Island to defend Brooklyn Heights and in doing so made the
fundamental error of cutting his army in two and dividing it by an arm of
the sea in presence of overwhelming hostile naval power.</p>
<p>On the 22d of August Howe ferried fifteen thousand men across the Narrows
to Long Island, in order to attack the position on Brooklyn Heights from
the rear. Before him lay wooded hills across which led three roads
converging at Brooklyn
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_89" id="Page_89">89</SPAN></span>
Heights beyond the hills. On the east a fourth road
led round the hills. In the dark of the night of the 26th of August Howe
set his army in motion on all these roads, in order by daybreak to come to
close quarters with the Americans and drive them back to the Heights. The
movement succeeded perfectly. The British made terrible use of the
bayonet. By the evening of the twenty-seventh the Americans, who fought
well against overwhelming odds, had lost nearly two thousand men in
casualties and prisoners, six field pieces, and twenty-six heavy guns. The
two chief commanders, Sullivan and Stirling, were among the prisoners, and
what was left of the army had been driven back to Brooklyn Heights. Howe's
critics said that had he pressed the attack further he could have made
certain the capture of the whole American force on Long Island.</p>
<p>Criticism of what might have been is easy and usually futile. It might be
said of Washington, too, that he should not have kept an army so far in
front of his lines behind Brooklyn Heights facing a superior enemy, and
with, for a part of it, retreat possible only by a single causeway across
a marsh three miles long. When he realized, on the 28th of August, what
Howe had achieved, he increased the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_90" id="Page_90">90</SPAN></span>
defenders of Brooklyn Heights to ten
thousand men, more than half his army. This was another cardinal error.
British ships were near and but for unfavorable winds might have sailed up
to Brooklyn. Washington hoped and prayed that Howe would try to carry
Brooklyn Heights by assault. Then there would have been at least slaughter
on the scale of Bunker Hill. But Howe had learned caution. He made no
reckless attack, and soon Washington found that he must move away or face
the danger of losing every man on Long Island.</p>
<p>On the night of the 29th of August there was clear moonlight, with fog
towards daybreak. A British army of twenty-five thousand men was only some
six hundred yards from the American lines. A few miles from the shore lay
at anchor a great British fleet with, it is to be presumed, its patrols on
the alert. Yet, during that night, ten thousand American troops were
marched down to boats on the strand at Brooklyn and, with all their
stores, were carried across a mile of water to New York. There must have
been the splash of oars and the grating of keels, orders given in tones
above a whisper, the complex sounds of moving bodies of men. It was all
done under the eye of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_91" id="Page_91">91</SPAN></span>
Washington. We can picture that tall figure moving
about on the strand at Brooklyn, which he was the last to leave. Not a
sound disturbed the slumbers of the British. An army in retreat does not
easily defend itself. Boats from the British fleet might have brought
panic to the Americans in the darkness and the British army should at
least have known that they were gone. By seven in the morning the ten
thousand American soldiers were for the time safe in New York, and we may
suppose that the two Howes were asking eager questions and wondering how
it had all happened.</p>
<p>Washington had shown that he knew when and how to retire. Long Island was
his first battle and he had lost. Now retreat was his first great tactical
achievement. He could not stay in New York and so sent at once the chief
part of the army, withdrawn from Brooklyn, to the line of the Harlem River
at the north end of the island. He realized that his shore batteries could
not keep the British fleet from sailing up both the East and the Hudson
Rivers and from landing a force on Manhattan Island almost where it liked.
Then the city of New York would be surrounded by a hostile fleet and a
hostile army. The Howes could have performed
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_92" id="Page_92">92</SPAN></span>
this maneuver as soon as they
had a favorable wind. There was, we know, great confusion in New York, and
Washington tells us how his heart was torn by the distress of the
inhabitants. The British gave him plenty of time to make plans, and for a
reason. We have seen that Lord Howe was not only an admiral to make war
but also an envoy to make peace. The British victory on Long Island might,
he thought, make Congress more willing to negotiate. So now he sent to
Philadelphia the captured American General Sullivan, with the request that
some members of Congress might confer privately on the prospects for
peace.</p>
<p>Howe probably did not realize that the Americans had the British quality
of becoming more resolute by temporary reverses. By this time, too,
suspicion of every movement on the part of Great Britain had become a
mania. Every one in Congress seems to have thought that Howe was planning
treachery. John Adams, excepted by name from British offers of pardon,
called Sullivan a <q>decoy duck</q> and, as he confessed, laughed, scolded, and
grieved at any negotiation. The wish to talk privately with members of
Congress was called an insulting way of avoiding recognition of that body.
In spite of this, even the stalwart
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_93" id="Page_93">93</SPAN></span>
Adams and the suave Franklin were
willing to be members of a committee which went to meet Lord Howe. With
great sorrow Howe now realized that he had no power to grant what Congress
insisted upon, the recognition of independence, as a preliminary to
negotiation. There was nothing for it but war.</p>
<p>On the 15th of September the British struck the blow too long delayed had
war been their only interest. New York had to sit nearly helpless while
great men-of-war passed up both the Hudson and the East River with guns
sweeping the shores of Manhattan Island. At the same time General Howe
sent over in boats from Long Island to the landing at Kip's Bay, near the
line of the present Thirty-fourth Street, an army to cut off the city from
the northern part of the island. Washington marched in person with two New
England regiments to dispute the landing and give him time for evacuation.
To his rage panic seized his men and they turned and fled, leaving him
almost alone not a hundred yards from the enemy. A stray shot at that
moment might have influenced greatly modern history, for, as events were
soon to show, Washington was the mainstay of the American cause. He too
had to get away and Howe's force landed easily enough.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_94" id="Page_94">94</SPAN></span>
Meanwhile, on the
west shore of the island, there was an animated scene. The roads were
crowded with refugees fleeing northward from New York. These civilians
Howe had no reason to stop, but there marched, too, out of New York four
thousand men, under Israel Putnam, who got safely away northward. Only
leisurely did Howe extend his line across the island so as to cut off the
city. The story, not more trustworthy than many other legends of war, is
that Mrs. Murray, living in a country house near what now is Murray Hill,
invited the General to luncheon, and that to enjoy this pleasure he
ordered a halt for his whole force. Generals sometimes do foolish things
but it is not easy to call up a picture of Howe, in the midst of a busy
movement of troops, receiving the lady's invitation, accepting it, and
ordering the whole army to halt while he lingered over the luncheon table.
There is no doubt that his mind was still divided between making war and
making peace. Probably Putnam had already got away his men, and there was
no purpose in stopping the refugees in that flight from New York which so
aroused the pity of Washington. As it was Howe took sixty-seven guns. By
accident, or, it is said, by design of the Americans themselves, New York
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_95" id="Page_95">95</SPAN></span>
soon took fire and one-third of the little city was burned.</p>
<p>After the fall of New York there followed a complex campaign. The
resourceful Washington was now, during his first days of active warfare,
pitting himself against one of the most experienced of British generals.
Fleet and army were acting together. The aim of Howe was to get control of
the Hudson and to meet half way the advance from Canada by way of Lake
Champlain which Carleton was leading. On the 12th of October, when autumn
winds were already making the nights cold, Howe moved. He did not attack
Washington who lay in strength at the Harlem. That would have been to play
Washington's game. Instead he put the part of his army still on Long
Island in ships which then sailed through the dangerous currents of Hell
Gate and landed at Throg's Neck, a peninsula on the sound across from Long
Island. Washington parried this movement by so guarding the narrow neck of
the peninsula leading to the mainland that the cautious Howe shrank from a
frontal attack across a marsh. After a delay of six days, he again
embarked his army, landed a few miles above Throg's Neck in the hope of
cutting off Washington from retreat northward, only to find
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_96" id="Page_96">96</SPAN></span>
Washington
still north of him at White Plains. A sharp skirmish followed in which
Howe lost over two hundred men and Washington only one hundred and forty.
Washington, masterly in retreat, then withdrew still farther north among
hills difficult of attack.</p>
<p>Howe had a plan which made a direct attack on Washington unnecessary. He
turned southward and occupied the east shore of the Hudson River. On the
16th of November took place the worst disaster which had yet befallen
American arms. Fort Washington, lying just south of the Harlem, was the
only point still held on Manhattan Island by the Americans. In modern war
it has become clear that fortresses supposedly strong may be only traps
for their defenders. Fort Washington stood on the east bank of the Hudson
opposite Fort Lee, on the west bank. These forts could not fulfil the
purpose for which they were intended, of stopping British ships.
Washington saw that the two forts should be abandoned. But the civilians
in Congress, who, it must be remembered, named the generals and had final
authority in directing the war, were reluctant to accept the loss involved
in abandoning the forts and gave orders that every effort should be made
to hold them. Greene, on
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_97" id="Page_97">97</SPAN></span>
the whole Washington's best general, was in
command of the two positions and was left to use his own judgment. On the
15th of November, by a sudden and rapid march across the island, Howe
appeared before Fort Washington and summoned it to surrender on pain of
the rigors of war, which meant putting the garrison to the sword should he
have to take the place by storm. The answer was a defiance; and on the
next day Howe attacked in overwhelming force. There was severe fighting.
The casualties of the British were nearly five hundred, but they took the
huge fort with its three thousand defenders and a great quantity of
munitions of war. Howe's threat was not carried out. There was no
massacre.</p>
<p>Across the river at Fort Lee the helpless Washington watched this great
disaster. He had need still to look out, for Fort Lee was itself doomed.
On the nineteenth Lord Cornwallis with five thousand men crossed the river
five miles above Fort Lee. General Greene barely escaped with the two
thousand men in the fort, leaving behind one hundred and forty cannon,
stores, tools, and even the men's blankets. On the twentieth the British
flag was floating over Fort Lee and Washington's whole force was in rapid
flight across New Jersey, hardly
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_98" id="Page_98">98</SPAN></span>
pausing until it had been ferried over
the Delaware River into Pennsylvania.</p>
<p>Treachery, now linked to military disaster, made Washington's position
terrible. Charles Lee, Horatio Gates, and Richard Montgomery were three
important officers of the regular British army who fought on the American
side. Montgomery had been killed at Quebec; the defects of Gates were not
yet conspicuous; and Lee was next to Washington the most trusted American
general. The names Washington and Lee of the twin forts on opposite sides
of the Hudson show how the two generals stood in the public mind. While
disaster was overtaking Washington, Lee had seven thousand men at North
Castle on the east bank of the Hudson, a few miles above Fort Washington,
blocking Howe's advance farther up the river. On the day after the fall of
Fort Washington, Lee received positive orders to cross the Hudson at once.
Three days later Fort Lee fell, and Washington repeated the order. Lee did
not budge. He was safe where he was and could cross the river and get away
into New Jersey when he liked. He seems deliberately to have left
Washington to face complete disaster and thus prove his incompetence;
then, as the undefeated general, he could take the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_99" id="Page_99">99</SPAN></span>
chief command. There is
no evidence that he had intrigued with Howe, but he thought that he could
be the peacemaker between Great Britain and America, with untold
possibilities of ambition in that rôle. He wrote of Washington at
this time, to his friend Gates, as weak and <q>most damnably deficient.</q>
Nemesis, however, overtook him. In the end he had to retreat across the
Hudson to northern New Jersey. Here many of the people were Tories. Lee
fell into a trap, was captured in bed at a tavern by a hard-riding party
of British cavalry, and carried off a prisoner, obliged to bestride a
horse in night gown and slippers. Not always does fate appear so just in
her strokes.</p>
<p>In December, though the position of Washington was very bad, all was not
lost. The chief aim of Howe was to secure the line of the Hudson and this
he had not achieved. At Stony Point, which lies up the Hudson about fifty
miles from New York, the river narrows and passes through what is almost a
mountain gorge, easily defended. Here Washington had erected
fortifications which made it at least difficult for a British force to
pass up the river. Moreover in the highlands of northern New Jersey, with
headquarters at Morristown, General Sullivan, recently exchanged, and
General Gates
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_100" id="Page_100">100</SPAN></span>
now had Lee's army and also the remnants of the force driven
from Canada. But in retreating across New Jersey Washington had been
forsaken by thousands of men, beguiled in part by the Tory population,
discouraged by defeat, and in many cases with the right to go home, since
their term of service had expired. All that remained of Washington's army
after the forces of Sullivan and Gates joined him across the Delaware in
Pennsylvania, was about four thousand men.</p>
<p>Howe was determined to have Philadelphia as well as New York and could
place some reliance on Tory help in Pennsylvania. He had pursued
Washington to the Delaware and would have pushed on across that river had
not his alert foe taken care that all the boats should be on the wrong
shore. As it was, Howe occupied the left bank of the Delaware with his
chief post at Trenton. If he made sure of New Jersey he could go on to
Philadelphia when the river was frozen over or indeed when he liked. Even
the Congress had fled to Baltimore. There were British successes in other
quarters. Early in December Lord Howe took the fleet to Newport. Soon he
controlled the whole of Rhode Island and checked the American privateers
who had made it their base. The brothers issued
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_101" id="Page_101">101</SPAN></span>
proclamations offering
protection to all who should within sixty days return to their British
allegiance and many people of high standing in New York and New Jersey
accepted the offer. Howe wrote home to England the glad news of victory.
Philadelphia would probably fall before spring and it looked as if the war
was really over.</p>
<p>In this darkest hour Washington struck a blow which changed the whole
situation. We associate with him the thought of calm deliberation. Now,
however, was he to show his strongest quality as a general to be audacity.
At the Battle of the Marne, in 1914, the French General Foch sent the
despatch: <q>My center is giving way; my right is retreating; the situation
is excellent: I am attacking.</q> Washington's position seemed as nearly
hopeless and he, too, had need of some striking action. A campaign marked
by his own blundering and by the treachery of a trusted general had ended
in seeming ruin. Pennsylvania at his back and New Jersey before him across
the Delaware were less than half loyal to the American cause and probably
willing to accept peace on almost any terms. Never was a general in a
position where greater risks must be taken for salvation. As Washington
pondered what was going on among the British
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_102" id="Page_102">102</SPAN></span>
across the Delaware, a bold
plan outlined itself in his mind. Howe, he knew, had gone to New York to
celebrate a triumphant Christmas. His absence from the front was certain
to involve slackness. It was Germans who held the line of the Delaware,
some thirteen hundred of them under Colonel Rahl at Trenton, two thousand
under Von Donop farther down the river at Bordentown; and with Germans
perhaps more than any other people Christmas is a season of elaborate
festivity. On this their first Christmas away from home many of the
Germans would be likely to be off their guard either through homesickness
or dissipation. They cared nothing for either side. There had been much
plundering in New Jersey and discipline was relaxed.</p>
<p>Howe had been guilty of the folly of making strong the posts farthest from
the enemy and weak those nearest to him. He had, indeed, ordered Rahl to
throw up redoubts for the defense of Trenton, but this, as Washington well
knew, had not been done for Rahl despised his enemy and spoke of the
American army as already lost. Washington's bold plan was to recross the
Delaware and attack Trenton. There were to be three crossings. One was to
be against Von Donop at Bordentown
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_103" id="Page_103">103</SPAN></span>
below Trenton, the second at Trenton
itself. These two attacks were designed to prevent aid to Trenton. The
third force with which Washington himself went was to cross the river some
nine miles above the town.</p>
<p>Christmas Day, 1776, was dismally cold. There was a driving storm of sleet
and the broad swollen stream of the Delaware, dotted with dark masses of
floating ice, offered a chill prospect. To take an army with its guns
across that threatening flood was indeed perilous. Gates and other
generals declared that the scheme was too difficult to be carried out.
Only one of the three forces crossed the river. Washington, with iron
will, was not to be turned from his purpose. He had skilled boatmen from
New England. The crossing took no less than ten hours and a great part of
it was done in wintry darkness. When the army landed on the New Jersey
shore it had a march of nine miles in sleet and rain in order to reach
Trenton by daybreak. It is said that some of the men marched barefoot
leaving tracks of blood in the snow. The arms of some were lost and those
of others were wet and useless but Washington told them that they must
depend the more on the bayonet. He attacked Trenton in broad daylight.
There was a sharp fight.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_104" id="Page_104">104</SPAN></span>
Rahl, the commander, and some seventy men, were
killed and a thousand men surrendered.</p>
<p>Even now Washington's position was dangerous. Von Donop, with two thousand
men, lay only a few miles down the river. Had he marched at once on
Trenton, as he should have done, the worn out little force of Washington
might have met with disaster. What Von Donop did when the alarm reached
him was to retreat as fast as he could to Princeton, a dozen miles to the
rear towards New York, leaving behind his sick and all his heavy
equipment. Meanwhile Washington, knowing his danger, had turned back
across the Delaware with a prisoner for every two of his men. When,
however, he saw what Von Donop had done he returned on the twenty-ninth to
Trenton, sent out scouting parties, and roused the country so that in
every bit of forest along the road to Princeton there were men, dead
shots, to make difficult a British advance to retake Trenton.</p>
<p>The reverse had brought consternation at New York. Lord Cornwallis was
about to embark for England, the bearer of news of overwhelming victory.
Now, instead, he was sent to drive back Washington. It was no easy task
for Cornwallis to reach Trenton, for Washington's scouting
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_105" id="Page_105">105</SPAN></span>
parties and a
force of six hundred men under Greene were on the road to harass him. On
the evening of the 2d of January, however, he reoccupied Trenton. This
time Washington had not recrossed the Delaware but had retreated southward
and was now entrenched on the southern bank of the little river Assanpink,
which flows into the Delaware. Reinforcements were following Cornwallis.
That night he sharply cannonaded Washington's position and was as sharply
answered. He intended to attack in force in the morning. To the skill and
resource of Washington he paid the compliment of saying that at last he
had run down the <q>Old Fox.</q></p>
<p>Then followed a maneuver which, years after, Cornwallis, a generous foe,
told Washington was one of the most surprising and brilliant in the
history of war. There was another <q>old fox</q> in Europe, Frederick the
Great, of Prussia, who knew war if ever man knew it, and he, too, from
this movement ranked Washington among the great generals. The maneuver was
simple enough. Instead of taking the obvious course of again retreating
across the Delaware Washington decided to advance, to get in behind
Cornwallis, to try to cut his communications, to threaten the British base
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_106" id="Page_106">106</SPAN></span>
of supply and then, if a superior force came up, to retreat into the
highlands of New Jersey. There he could keep an unbroken line as far east
as the Hudson, menace the British in New Jersey, and probably force them
to withdraw to the safety of New York.</p>
<p>All through the night of January 2, 1777, Washington's camp fires burned
brightly and the British outposts could hear the sound of voices and of
the spade and pickaxe busy in throwing up entrenchments. The fires died
down towards morning and the British awoke to find the enemy camp
deserted. Washington had carried his whole army by a roundabout route to
the Princeton road and now stood between Cornwallis and his base. There
was some sharp fighting that day near Princeton. Washington had to defeat
and get past the reinforcements coming to Cornwallis. He reached Princeton
and then slipped away northward and made his headquarters at Morristown.
He had achieved his purpose. The British with Washington entrenched on
their flank were not safe in New Jersey. The only thing to do was to
withdraw to New York. By his brilliant advance Washington recovered the
whole of New Jersey with the exception of some minor positions near the
sea. He had
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_107" id="Page_107">107</SPAN></span>
changed the face of the war. In London there was momentary
rejoicing over Howe's recent victories, but it was soon followed by
distressing news of defeat. Through all the colonies ran inspiring
tidings. There had been doubts whether, after all, Washington was the
heaven-sent leader. Now both America and Europe learned to recognize his
skill. He had won a reputation, though not yet had he saved a cause.</p>
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<div class="chapterhead">
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