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<h2> THE BATTLE OF TRENTON </h2>
<p>And such they are—and such they will be found:<br/>
Not so Leonidas and Washington,<br/>
Their every battle-field is holy ground<br/>
Which breathes of nations saved, not worlds undone.<br/>
How sweetly on the ear such echoes sound!<br/>
While the mere victor's may appal or stun<br/>
The servile and the vain, such names will be<br/>
A watchword till the future shall be free.<br/>
—Byron.<br/></p>
<p>In December, 1776, the American Revolution was at its lowest ebb. The
first burst of enthusiasm, which drove the British back from Concord and
met them hand to hand at Bunker Hill, which forced them to abandon Boston
and repulsed their attack at Charleston, had spent its force. The
undisciplined American forces called suddenly from the workshop and the
farm had given way, under the strain of a prolonged contest, and had been
greatly scattered, many of the soldiers returning to their homes. The
power of England, on the other hand, with her disciplined army and
abundant resources, had begun to tell. Washington, fighting stubbornly,
had been driven during the summer and autumn from Long Island up the
Hudson, and New York had passed into the hands of the British. Then Forts
Lee and Washington had been lost, and finally the Continental army had
retreated to New Jersey. On the second of December Washington was at
Princeton with some three thousand ragged soldiers, and had escaped
destruction only by the rapidity of his movements. By the middle of the
month General Howe felt that the American army, unable as he believed
either to fight or to withstand the winter, must soon dissolve, and,
posting strong detachments at various points, he took up his winter
quarters in New York. The British general had under his command in his
various divisions twenty-five thousand well-disciplined soldiers, and the
conclusion he had reached was not an unreasonable one; everything, in
fact, seemed to confirm his opinion. Thousands of the colonists were
coming in and accepting his amnesty. The American militia had left the
field, and no more would turn out, despite Washington's earnest appeals.
All that remained of the American Revolution was the little Continental
army and the man who led it.</p>
<p>Yet even in this dark hour Washington did not despair. He sent in every
direction for troops. Nothing was forgotten. Nothing that he could do was
left undone. Unceasingly he urged action upon Congress, and at the same
time with indomitable fighting spirit he planned to attack the British. It
was a desperate undertaking in the face of such heavy odds, for in all his
divisions he had only some six thousand men, and even these were
scattered. The single hope was that by his own skill and courage he could
snatch victory from a situation where victory seemed impossible. With the
instinct of a great commander he saw that his only chance was to fight the
British detachments suddenly, unexpectedly, and separately, and to do this
not only required secrecy and perfect judgment, but also the cool,
unwavering courage of which, under such circumstances, very few men have
proved themselves capable. As Christmas approached his plans were ready.
He determined to fall upon the British detachment of Hessians, under
Colonel Rahl, at Trenton, and there strike his first blow. To each
division of his little army a part in the attack was assigned with careful
forethought. Nothing was overlooked and nothing omitted, and then, for
some reason good or bad, every one of the division commanders failed to do
his part. As the general plan was arranged, Gates was to march from
Bristol with two thousand men; Ewing was to cross at Trenton; Putnam was
to come up from Philadelphia; and Griffin was to make a diversion against
Donop. When the moment came, Gates, who disapproved the plan, was on his
way to Congress; Griffin abandoned New Jersey and fled before Donop;
Putnam did not attempt to leave Philadelphia; and Ewing made no effort to
cross at Trenton. Cadwalader came down from Bristol, looked at the river
and the floating ice, and then gave it up as desperate. Nothing remained
except Washington himself with the main army, but he neither gave up, nor
hesitated, nor stopped on account of the ice, or the river, or the perils
which lay beyond. On Christmas Eve, when all the Christian world was
feasting and rejoicing, and while the British were enjoying themselves in
their comfortable quarters, Washington set out. With twenty-four hundred
men he crossed the Delaware through the floating ice, his boats managed
and rowed by the sturdy fishermen of Marblehead from Glover's regiment.
The crossing was successful, and he landed about nine miles from Trenton.
It was bitter cold, and the sleet and snow drove sharply in the faces of
the troops. Sullivan, marching by the river, sent word that the arms of
his soldiers were wet. "Tell your general," was Washington's reply to the
message, "to use the bayonet, for the town must be taken." When they
reached Trenton it was broad daylight. Washington, at the front and on the
right of the line, swept down the Pennington road, and, as he drove back
the Hessian pickets, he heard the shout of Sullivan's men as, with Stark
leading the van, they charged in from the river. A company of jaegers and
of light dragoons slipped away. There was some fighting in the streets,
but the attack was so strong and well calculated that resistance was
useless. Colonel Rahl, the British commander, aroused from his revels, was
killed as he rushed out to rally his men, and in a few moments all was
over. A thousand prisoners fell into Washington's hands, and this
important detachment of the enemy was cut off and destroyed.</p>
<p>The news of Trenton alarmed the British, and Lord Cornwallis with seven
thousand of the best troops started at once from New York in hot pursuit
of the American army. Washington, who had now rallied some five thousand
men, fell back, skirmishing heavily, behind the Assunpink, and when
Cornwallis reached the river he found the American army awaiting him on
the other side of the stream. Night was falling, and Cornwallis, feeling
sure of his prey, decided that he would not risk an assault until the next
morning. Many lessons had not yet taught him that it was a fatal business
to give even twelve hours to the great soldier opposed to him. During the
night Washington, leaving his fires burning and taking a roundabout road
which he had already reconnoitered, marched to Princeton. There he struck
another British detachment. A sharp fight ensued, the British division was
broken and defeated, losing some five hundred men, and Washington withdrew
after this second victory to the highlands of New Jersey to rest and
recruit.</p>
<p>Frederick the Great is reported to have said that this was the most
brilliant campaign of the century. With a force very much smaller than
that of the enemy, Washington had succeeded in striking the British at two
places with superior forces at each point of contact. At Trenton he had
the benefit of a surprise, but the second time he was between two hostile
armies. He was ready to fight Cornwallis when the latter reached the
Assunpink, trusting to the strength of his position to make up for his
inferiority of numbers. But when Cornwallis gave him the delay of a night,
Washington, seeing the advantage offered by his enemy's mistake, at once
changed his whole plan, and, turning in his tracks, fell upon the smaller
of the two forces opposed to him, wrecking and defeating it before the
outgeneraled Cornwallis could get up with the main army. Washington had
thus shown the highest form of military skill, for there is nothing that
requires so much judgment and knowledge, so much certainty of movement and
quick decision, as to meet a superior enemy at different points, force the
fighting, and at each point to outnumber and overwhelm him.</p>
<p>But the military part of this great campaign was not all. Many great
soldiers have not been statesmen, and have failed to realize the political
necessities of the situation. Washington presented the rare combination of
a great soldier and a great statesman as well. He aimed not only to win
battles, but by his operations in the field to influence the political
situation and affect public opinion. The American Revolution was going to
pieces. Unless some decisive victory could be won immediately, it would
have come to an end in the winter of 1776-77. This Washington knew, and it
was this which nerved his arm. The results justified his forethought. The
victories of Trenton and Princeton restored the failing spirits of the
people, and, what was hardly less important, produced a deep impression in
Europe in favor of the colonies. The country, which had lost heart, and
become supine and almost hostile, revived. The militia again took the
field. Outlying parties of the British were attacked and cut off, and
recruits once more began to come in to the Continental army. The
Revolution was saved. That the English colonies in North America would
have broken away from the mother country sooner or later cannot be
doubted, but that particular Revolution Of 1776 would have failed within a
year, had it not been for Washington. It is not, however, merely the fact
that he was a great soldier and statesman which we should remember. The
most memorable thing to us, and to all men, is the heroic spirit of the
man, which rose in those dreary December days to its greatest height,
under conditions so adverse that they had crushed the hope of every one
else. Let it be remembered, also, that it was not a spirit of desperation
or of ignorance, a reckless daring which did not count the cost. No one
knew better than Washington—no one, indeed, so well—the exact
state of affairs; for he, conspicuously among great men, always looked
facts fearlessly in the face, and never deceived himself. He was under no
illusions, and it was this high quality of mind as much as any other which
enabled him to win victories.</p>
<p>How he really felt we know from what he wrote to Congress on December 20,
when he said: "It may be thought that I am going a good deal out of the
line of my duty to adopt these measures or to advise thus freely. A
character to lose, an estate to forfeit, the inestimable blessing of
liberty at stake, and a life devoted, must be my excuse." These were the
thoughts in his mind when he was planning this masterly campaign. These
same thoughts, we may readily believe, were with him when his boat was
making its way through the ice of the Delaware on Christmas Eve. It was a
very solemn moment, and he was the only man in the darkness of that night
who fully understood what was at stake; but then, as always, he was calm
and serious, with a high courage which nothing could depress.</p>
<p>The familiar picture of a later day depicts Washington crossing the
Delaware at the head of his soldiers. He is standing up in the boat,
looking forward in the teeth of the storm. It matters little whether the
work of the painter is in exact accordance with the real scene or not. The
daring courage, the high resolve, the stern look forward and onward, which
the artist strove to show in the great leader, are all vitally true. For
we may be sure that the man who led that well-planned but desperate
assault, surrounded by darker conditions than the storms of nature which
gathered about his boat, and carrying with him the fortunes of his
country, was at that moment one of the most heroic figures in history.</p>
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