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Battle of the Assunpink Creek

 
Wikipedia: Battle of the Assunpink Creek
Battle of the Assunpink Creek
Part of the American Revolutionary War
Delaware river chart 1655.jpeg
1655 Delware river chart - 'Asin Pink' is marked on far right
Date January 2, 1777
Location Trenton, New Jersey
Result American Victory[1]
Belligerents
 United States United Kingdom Great Britain
Commanders
United States George Washington United Kingdom Charles Cornwallis
Strength
6,000
40 guns[2]
8,000
28 guns[2]
Casualties and losses
100 killed or wounded[3] 365 killed, wounded or captured[3]

The Battle of the Assunpink Creek[4] also known as The Second Battle of Trenton was an American victory that took place on January 2, 1777, during the American Revolutionary War.

Lieutenant General Charles Cornwallis had left 1,400 British troops under the command of Lieutenant Colonel Charles Mawhood in Princeton, New Jersey. Following a surprise victory at the Battle of Trenton early in the morning of December 26, 1776, General George Washington of the Continental Army and his council of war expected a strong British counter-attack. Washington and his council decided to meet this attack in Trenton.

Washington established a defensive position south of the Assunpink Creek, just south of Trenton. Cornwallis moved from Princeton to Trenton on January 2, but his army was delayed by riflemen under the command of Edward Hand, and the advanced guard did not even reach Trenton until twilight. After assaulting the American positions three times, and being repulsed each time, Cornwallis decided to wait and finish the battle the next day. Washington moved his army and attacked Mawhood at Princeton the next day, forcing the British to evacuate New Jersey.

Contents

Background

On December 25, 1776, George Washington, Commander-in-Chief of the Continental Army crossed the Delaware River with his army, and attacked the Hessian Garrison at Trenton.[5] The Hessian garrison was surrounded and quickly defeated. Washington crossed the river again and went back to his camp in Pennsylvania.[6] On December 30, Washington moved his army to Trenton and stationed his men on the south side of the Assunpink Creek.[7]

Prelude

Washington's Appeal

At Trenton Washington faced a dilemma. All but a handful of his men's enlistments would be up on December 31, and he knew that the army would collapse unless he convinced them to stay.[8] So, on the 30th, Washington appealed to his men to stay one month longer for a bounty of ten dollars.[9] He asked any men who wanted to volunteer to poise their firelocks, but not a man turned out.[10] Washington then wheeled his horse around and rode in front of the troops, saying "My brave fellows, you have done all I asked you to do, and more than could be reasonably expected; but your country is at stake, your wives, your houses and all that you hold dear. You have worn yourselves out with fatigues and hardships, but we know not how to spare you. If you will consent to stay only one month longer, you will render that service to the cause of liberty and to your country which you probably never can do under any other circumstances."[10] At first, still, no one stepped forward, but then one soldier stepped forward, and he was followed by most of the others, leaving only a few in the original line.[11]

Preparations

On January 1, money from Congress arrived in Trenton and the men were paid.[12] Washington also received a series of resolves from Congress including one that gave Washington the power of a Military Dictator. Washington decided that he would stand and fight at Trenton, and ordered General John Cadwalader, who was at Crosswicks with 1,800 Militia, to join him in Trenton.[13] On January 31, Washington learned that an army of 8,000 men under the command of General Lord Cornwallis was going to attack him at Trenton.[14]

Washington ordered his men to build earthworks that were parallel to the south bank of the Assunpink Creek.[14] The lines extended about three miles down the south end of the stream. However, one of Washington's aides, Joseph Reed, pointed out that there were fords up stream that the British could cross, and then they would be in position to drive in Washington's right flank.[14] Washington could not escape across the Delaware because all of his boats were a few miles up stream. Washington told his officers than he planned to move the army and that their current position was only temporary.[14]

British Movement

Cornwallis, who had been planning to return to Britain, had his leave canceled.[15] He rode to Princeton to catch up with General James Grant, who had moved with 1,000 troops to reinforce Princeton. Cornwallis arrived, and was convinced by Grant and Carl von Donop to attack Trenton with their combined forces.[15]

By January 1, 1777, Cornwallis and his army had reached Princeton.[16] On January 2, Cornwallis left part of his force there, and with 5,500 men, set off down the road to Trenton, 11 miles away. Cornwallis's army had 28 cannon and marched in three columns.[16] When Cornwallis reached Maidenhead, he detached Colonel Alexander Leslie with 1,500 men and ordered them to remain there until the following morning.[16]

The Battle

Delaying Actions

Out in front of his army, Cornwallis placed a skirmish line of Hessian Jaegers and British light infantry.[17] Two days before, Washington had placed an outer defensive line halfway between Trenton, in order to delay the British advance with troops under the command of Matthias Alexis de Roche Fermoy.[18] As the British approached, Fermoy returned to Trenton, drunk.[17] Colonel Edward Hand took his place.[17]

As the British came within range, the American riflemen opened fire.[19] The American riflemen took cover in the woods, ravines and even in bends in the road, and each time the British would line up in a battle line, the riflemen would fall back and fire from cover. After Hand was forced to abandon the American position along Five Mile Run, he took up a new position, a heavily wooded area on the south bank of Shabbakonk Creek.[19] Hand deployed his men in the trees and they were so well protected from view that the British could not see them as they crossed the bridge over the stream, and the riflemen fired at them from point-blank range. The intense fire confused the British into thinking that the entire American army was up against them and they formed into battle lines, bringing up their cannon.[19] The British searched the woods for a half an hour looking for the Americans, but Hand had already withdrawn to a new position.[19]

By three in the afternoon, the British had reached a ravine known as Stockton Hollow, about a half a mile from Trenton where the Americans were forming another line of defense.[19] Washington wanted to hold the British off until nightfall, when darkness would prevent the British from attacking his defenses on the south side of Assunpink Creek. The British, with artillery in position, attacked Hand's new position, and he gave way, slowly falling back into Trenton.[19] Along the way, Hand had his troops fire from behind houses.[20] As Hand's troops came to the creek, the Hessians charged at them with bayonets fixed, causing chaos among the Americans. Washington, seeing the chaos, rode out through the crowd of men crossing the bridge, and shouted that Hand's rear guard pull back and regroup under the cover of the American artillery.[21]

British Assault

As the British prepared to attack the American defenses, cannon and musket fire was exchanged between the opposing sides.[20] The British moved across the bridge, advancing in solid columns, and the Americans all fired together. The British fell back, but only for a moment.[20] The British charged the bridge again, but the cannon fire drove them back. The British charged one final time, but the Americans fired with canister this time, and the British lines were raked with fire.[20] One soldier said, "[T]he bridge looked red as blood, with their killed and wounded and their red coats."[20]

American withdrawal

Cornwallis' Decision

When Cornwallis arrived in Trenton with the main army, he called a council of war as to whether or not he should continue to attack.[22] Cornwallis' quartermaster general, William Erskine, urged Cornwallis to strike right away and said, "If Washington is the General I take him to be, his army will not be found there in the morning."[22] But James Grant disagreed, and argued that there was no way for the Americans to retreat, and that the British troops were worn out and it would be better for them to attack in the morning when they were rested.[22] Cornwallis did not want to wait until morning, but he decided that it would be better than sending his troops out to attack in the dark. Cornwallis said, "We've got the old fox safe now. We'll go over and bag him in the morning." Cornwallis then moved his army, for the night, to a hill north of Trenton.[22]

Washington's Decision

During the night, the American artillery, under the command of Henry Knox, occasionally fired shells into Trenton to keep the British on edge.[22] As Cornwallis had, Washington also called for a council of war. Washington knew that there was a road that would lead to Princeton, and his council of war agreed to move to, and take Princeton.[23] By 2 am the army was on its way to Princeton. Washington left behind 500 men and two cannons to keep the fires burning and to make noise with picks and shovels to make the British think they were digging in.[23] By morning, these men too had evacuated, and when the British came to attack, all ,.of the American troops were gone.[24]

Aftermath

By morning, Washington had reached Princeton.[25] After a brief battle, the British were decisively defeated and most of the garrison under command of Mawhood captured. With their third defeat in ten days, Howe evacuated the army from New Jersey and pulled it into New York. Washington then moved his army to Morristown for winter quarters.[26]

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ Fischer p. 307
  2. ^ a b Fischer p.404
  3. ^ a b Fischer p.412
  4. ^ Frequently Asked Questions
  5. ^ McCullough p.277
  6. ^ McCullough p.284
  7. ^ Ketchum p.276
  8. ^ Ketchum p.277
  9. ^ McCullough p.285
  10. ^ a b Lengel p.196
  11. ^ Ketchum p.278
  12. ^ Ketchum p.280
  13. ^ Ketchum p.282
  14. ^ a b c d Ketchum p.284
  15. ^ a b Lengel p.199
  16. ^ a b c Ketchum p.286
  17. ^ a b c Ketchum p.288
  18. ^ Lengel p.200
  19. ^ a b c d e f Ketchum p.289
  20. ^ a b c d e Ketchum p.290
  21. ^ Lengel p.201
  22. ^ a b c d e Ketchum p.291
  23. ^ a b Ketchum p.294
  24. ^ Ketchum p.296
  25. ^ McCullough p.288
  26. ^ McCullough p.290

References


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