George Washington and the Crossing of the Delaware

In late December 1776, after four months of hard-fighting, the 16,000-man Continental Army had dwindled to a force of 3,000 soldiers encamped in Pennsylvania on the west side of the Delaware River. General George Washington chose this desperate moment to strike a surprise blow at the Redcoats. He would cross the river Christmas night and attack the 1,500-man Hessian garrison in Trenton, knowing that the Hessians would be recovering from a day of Christmas reverie.

Tom Hand, creator and publisher of Americana Corner, discusses the Continental Army’s perilous journey across the Delaware River and the Battle of Trenton, and why it still matters today.

Images courtesy of Library of Congress, Yale University Art Gallery, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston Brown University Library, Metropolitan Museum of Art, Mount Vernon, The New York Public Library, National Archives, U.S. Army Center of Military History, Wikipedia. 


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Continental Army Victorious at Princeton

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Continental Army Faces Rocky Start