Continental Army Victorious at Princeton

After achieving a great victory at the Battle of Trenton, General George Washington recrossed the Delaware River hoping for a second miracle. In response, Lord Charles Cornwallis and 6,000 Redcoats marched towards Trenton and struck back at the bold Americans, leaving a battalion at Princeton, twelve miles north. On the night of January 2, 1777, Washington, unnoticed by British sentries, moved his men around the British flank towards Princeton and attacked at dawn.

Tom Hand, creator and publisher of Americana Corner, discusses how George Washington’s perseverance and daring generalship during the ten crucial days from Trenton to Princeton saved the American cause, and why it still matters today.

Images courtesy of Yale University Art Gallery, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, The New York Public Library, National Portrait Gallery – Smithsonian Institution, Princeton University Art Museum, Library of Congress, Mount Vernon, Wikipedia. 


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The British Capture Philadelphia

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George Washington and the Crossing of the Delaware