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      <p align="center"><b><font face="Times New Roman">Sunrise at Trenton: 
      Nurturing the Revolutionary Spirit of 1776</font></p>
      <p align="center"></b><font face="Arial" size="2">Nicholas E. Hollis<br>
      (All Rights Reserved)</font></p>
      <p><font face="Arial" size="2">In late 1776, General George Washington�s 
      decision to cross the Delaware River and launch a surprise attack on 
      Trenton set the stage for one of the most inspiring and pivotal moments in 
      our Nation�s history. After suffering defeats while trying to hold New 
      York against a numerically superior, better equipped and more mobile 
      British Army under Lord Howe backed by the British Navy, Washington had 
      been forced into retreat across New Jersey. With morale plummeting and 
      enlistment papers nearly expired for many of his troops, Washington seemed 
      on the brink of defeat. The Redcoats (and their Hessian mercenaries) 
      assumed the Continental Army was in winter quarters and incapable of 
      mounting any type of concentrated action.<sup><a href="#1" style="text-decoration: none">1</a></sup></font></p>
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            <p align="right" style="margin-bottom: 0"><font size="1">(Photo 
            Courtesy of Washington Crossing Foundation)</font></p>
            <p style="margin-top: 0; margin-bottom: 0"><font size="2">DECISIVE 
            WARRIOR--General Washington chose a narrow point in the Delaware 
            River for his crossing and surprise attack on December 26, 1776 at 
            Trenton. The gamble proved a turning point in America's fight for 
            independence (painting by Emanual Leutze completed in 1851. )<br>
            </font><font face="Times New Roman" size="2">
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      <p><font face="Arial" size="2">The daring, early morning counterattack on 
      December 26 caught the Hessian pickets off guard. Advancing in two columns 
      along the Bear Tavern (River) and the Pennington Roads, Washington�s army 
      swept in with a howling snow storm at their backs, surrounded the town and 
      positioned artillery at the head of the main streets. When the alarmed 
      Hessians poured out of their barracks, their attempts to organize in 
      formation met Colonial cannon fire and infantry with fixed bayonets on the 
      side streets.</font></p>
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            <td width="100%"><font size="2">ALARM BELL--Hessian mercenaries 
            under the command of Col. Johann Rall were barracked here and at 
            other points around Trenton--and awoke to muster calls as the 
            Continental Army attacked.<br>
            </font><font face="Times New Roman" size="2">
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      <p><font face="Arial" size="2">Hessian commander Colonel Johann Gottlieb 
      Rall, who had performed brilliantly in capturing Fort Washington and Fort 
      Lee, was slow that morning in recognizing (and responding to) the growing 
      ferocity of the Continental attack (see Map 2). He ordered his artillery 
      up, but the well-situated Colonials got the best of the ensuing duel and, 
      with horses down, the Hessians were forced to abandon their cannon. Rall 
      then commanded his troops to reform outside town in an orchard for a 
      counterattack. But his orders to link up with other regiments (Col. Von 
      Lossberg and troops detached from General von Knyphausen) were confused, 
      and the attack floundered under pressure from American artillery barrages 
      on its flank. Colonel Rall was mortally wounded, and the disorganized 
      Hessians retreated to the orchard (Map 3). A few minutes later nearly a 
      thousand mercenaries surrendered. A large percentage of von Knyphausen�s 
      men escaped through Assunpink Creek and fled towards Princeton, but 
      Washington�s victory was stunning and soon electrified the country -- 
      giving new spirit to the American cause for independence.<sup><a href="#2/">2</a></sup>
      </font></p>
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            <td width="100%"><font size="2">ATTACK AT DAWN--Featuring key road 
            junctions north of Trenton in 1776. (1) Washington's plans fall 
            behind schedule in the growing storm, but 2,400 troops and artillery 
            make it over the swollen Delaware River by 3 a.m. (McConkey's Ferry) 
            under the able direction of Henry Knox. (2) Marching silently, the 
            attacking Continentals divide forces with General Sullivan taking 
            the River Road and Generals Washington and Nathaniel Greene taking 
            Pennington Road. (3) Artillery positioned at the head of High and 
            Bridge Streets open fire just after 8 a.m., while troops under Maj. 
            Gen. Sullivan and Brig. Gen. St. Clair take position along side 
            streets near old barracks. Troops movements are concealed in the 
            snow, which is at the backs of the attackers.<br>
            </font><font face="Times New Roman" size="2">
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      <p><font face="Arial" size="2">At this miraculous juncture, Washington�s 
      army suffered only light casualties � with four wounded. The Revolutionary 
      War would drag on another five years to other theaters leading to 
      Cornwallis� surrender at Yorktown in 1781, but Trenton was the turning 
      point. The significance of Washington�s dawn attack was summed up in 
      London by Lord George Germain, Colonial Secretary of State to King George 
      III in a speech before the House of Commons on May 3, 1779 when he said, 
      &quot;All our hopes were blasted by that unhappy affair at Trenton.&quot;</font></p>
      <i><b>
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            <font size="2">FIXED BAYONETS IN THE SNOW STORM (Map 2)</font><p>
            <font size="2">With Continental artillery canister clearing the 
            streets (1-3), Hessians are routed on the side streets by a fixed 
            bayonet charge under Sullivan/St. Clair (7). Amid growing confusion, 
            Col. Rall (A) retreats to orchard with (B) voss Lossberg regiments. 
            Flying snow is in their faces as Hessians organize for a 
            counterattack (C) Von Knyphausen's regiment moves to join Rall.</font></td>
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            <td width="100%" colspan="2"><font size="1">(Diagrams/maps 
            constructed courtesy of Thomas Gordon, 1828, Map of Mercer County, 
            New Jersey and Samuel Stelle Smith, <i>The Battle of Trenton</i>, 
            1965.)</font></td>
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      <p>&nbsp;</p>
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            <td width="100%" align="left" valign="top"><font size="2">SURRENDER 
            IN THE ORCHARD- (Map 3)</font><p><font size="2">Col. Rall's 
            counterattack (A/B) is shattered by enfilading artillery and musket 
            fire (1) directed by Brg. Gen. Stephen while Brig. Gen. Mercer's 
            troops (2) and Brig. Gen. Stirling's men (3) drive into the 
            Hessians, who retreat as Rall is hit twice and falls from his horse, 
            mortally wounded. Meanwhile, troops from von Knyphausen unit (C) 
            have moved south after misunderstanding orders. Many of these troops 
            eventually escape via the Assunpink Creek.&nbsp; (</font><font size="1">Diagrams/maps 
            constructed courtesy of Thomas Gordon, 1828 Map of Mercer County, 
            New Jersey and Samuel Stelle Smith, The Battle of Trenton, 1965)</font></td>
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      <p><font size="2" face="Arial">Dr.</font></b></i><font face="Arial" size="2">
      </font><i><b><font size="2" face="Arial">Jacob Jennings of New Jersey<br>
      </font></b></i><font face="Arial" size="2">Marching with Washington on 
      that blustery morning long ago was Dr. Jacob Jennings (1744-1813), a 
      surgeon and officer from Hunterdon County under Col. Mark Thompson and 
      Abraham Bennett. Hailing from a long family line which traced back to Long 
      Island more than a century earlier, Jennings had been a community leader 
      and a delegate in the provincial Congress of New Jersey in August 1775. 
      Afterwards, he served in the Committee of Correspondence, a local 
      coordinating/networking function for early patriots to report/build on 
      opposition to British rule.<sup><a href="#3">3</a></sup> His father, also 
      named Jacob, had been a pastor near Scotch Plains, New Jersey.</font></p>
      <p><font face="Arial" size="2">According to Jennings lore, Dr. Jacob was 
      one of those wounded at Trenton, but he recovered and later became a 
      pastor himself at the North Branch Reformed Church in Readington, New 
      Jersey. He and his wife, Mary (Kennedy) Jennings had six sons and two 
      daughters between 1770-1787. But in 1791 Mary died prematurely (at age 
      42), and Jacob moved his family to New Salem, Pennsylvania (near 
      Uniontown). He continued practicing medicine, remarried and was soon 
      ordained as pastor at the Dunlop�s Creek Presbyterian Church (1792). Jacob 
      continued in the pulpit until his death in 1813. </font></p>
      <p><font face="Arial" size="2">In choosing his southwestern Pennsylvania 
      home, Jacob probably followed David (1742-1824) and Benjamin Jennings, who 
      had moved from New Jersey more than twenty years earlier in the late 
      1760s. The road west had been marched and hacked out of the wilderness by 
      young George Washington with British General Braddock, who met defeat (and 
      death) in 1755 at the beginning of the French and Indian Wars. A century 
      later this path had become the &quot;National Road.&quot; Today, not far from the 
      old National Road (U.S. Route 40) in a small cemetery, the gravestone of 
      Dr. Jacob Jennings is inscribed with these words:</font></p>
      <p align="center"><font size="2" face="Arial">&quot;</font><i><font size="2" face="Arial">And 
      I heard a voice from heaven saying unto me, <br>
      Write, blessed are the dead Who die in the Lord.<br>
      Yea, saith the Spirit that they may rest from their<br>
      Labors and their works do follow them&quot; <sup><a href="#5">5</a></sup></font></p>
      <b>
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            <img border="0" src="church.jpg" width="386" height="234"><br>
            <font size="1">(Photo courtesy of Jennings Heritage Project)</font></td>
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            <td width="100%"><font size="1">DUNLAP'S CREEK PRESBYTERIAN 
            CHURCH--near New Salem, PA became the pulpit for
            <a name="Dr. Jacob Jennings">Dr. Jacob Jennings</a> 
            in&nbsp; 1792. Church services continue to the present day.</font><font size="2"><br>
            </font><font face="Times New Roman" size="2">
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      <p><font face="Arial" size="2">A Peregrinating Family<br>
      </font></b></i><font face="Arial" size="2">The Jennings migratory 
      tradition forged another westward surge a generation later. Armed with 
      strong educations and discipline, the sons of Jacob Jennings entered Ohio 
      and Indiana, sparking illustrious public service careers. David 
      (1787-1834) served as Belmont county (Ohio) prosecuting attorney, and 
      later became a State Senator and a member of the U.S. House of 
      Representatives. Of his brothers, Obadiah (1778-1832) was a renowned 
      lawyer in Steubenville, Ohio and later became Andrew Jackson's minister in 
      Nashville, TN; Jonathan (1784-1834) studied law and 
      became the first governor of Indiana (1816) later serving several terms in 
      the U.S. House of Representatives; and Ebenezer, the youngest, who moved to 
      Washington, PA became a Pennsylvania State Senator. The oldest brother, Samuel Kennedy 
      Jennings (1771-1854) followed his father�s medical lead, becoming a surgeon 
      and one of the founders of the Washington Medical College of Baltimore. One of 
      Jennings� daughters mothered the famous Henry Alexander Wise (1806-1876) 
      who became Governor of Virginia (1856-1860), opposed secession and served 
      as a Brigadier-General in the Confederate Army with distinction at the 
      Battle of Petersburg, and later urged surrender at Appomattox.</font></p>
      <i><b>
      <p><font face="Arial" size="2">A Revolutionary Spirit<br>
      </font></b></i><font face="Arial" size="2">At the outbreak of the 
      Revolutionary War, no less than nine family heads of households (Jennings) 
      lived at Southampton, Long Island � descendants of John Jennings 
      (1617-1686). Formed in the early 1640s as the first English settlement in 
      New York, rivaling New Amsterdam (Dutch), Southampton had become an 
      important port and trading center. The British wanted to utilize 
      Southampton as a staging area for the invasion of New York. There were 
      many Tories (i.e. Loyalists) among the population, but the Jennings 
      maintained an &quot;Independent tilt.&quot; When the British ordered Israel Jennings 
      (1745-1830), one of the more prominent family heads to either swear 
      allegiance to the Crown or give up his home, he elected to relinquish his 
      property and later migrated to Kentucky, finally settling in Brown County, 
      Ohio (near Cincinnati) in 1803. Israel Jennings was the maternal 
      great-grandfather of <a href="../bryan.htm">William Jennings Bryan</a> - The Great Commoner 
      (1860-1925). <sup><a href="#8">8</a></sup>Israel's son (also Israel 
      Jenning) migrated to Salem, Illinois.</font></p>
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            <font face="Arial" size="1">GRANT BOYHOOD HOME - This property, just 
            off Georgetown, Ohio's main square and less than a mile from the 
            Jennings farm, was once owned by Jesse Root Grant. His eldest son, 
            Ulysses S. Grant, learned to ride and work horses in this area. 
            These &quot;intersections&quot; were discovered during Jennings genealogical 
            research which linked Israel Jennings (1745-1830) to William 
            Jennings Bryan (1860-1925).</font></td>
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      <b>
      <p align="left"><font size="2" face="Arial">________________________________________________________________</font></p>
      <p><font face="Arial" size="2">Notes and Additional Reading:</font></p>
      </b>
      <p><font face="Arial" size="2"><font color="#0000FF"><sup><a name="1">1</a></sup>
      </font><u>The Battle of Trenton</u>, Samuel Stelle Smith, 1965, pp. 20-27.</font></p>
      <p><font face="Arial" size="2"><a name="2/"><sup><font color="#0000FF">2</font></sup></a>
      <u>1776,</u> David McCullough, Simon &amp; Schuster, 2005.</font></p>
      <p><font face="Arial" size="2"><sup><font color="#0000FF"><a name="3">3</a></font></sup>
      <u>History of Hunterdon and Somerset Counties of New Jersey</u>, James P. 
      Snell, 1881, p. 30, 218, 228.</font></p>
      <p><font face="Arial" size="2"><sup><font color="#0000FF"><a name="4">4</a></font></sup>
      <u>Early History of Southampton, Long Island, New York</u>, Georges Rogers 
      Howell, 1887, p. 330-331.</font></p>
      <p><font face="Arial" size="2"><sup><font color="#0000FF"><a name="5">5</a></font></sup>
      <u>History of Fayette County (PA),</u> Ed. Franklin Ellis, 1882, p. 623, 
      735.</font></p>
      <p><font face="Arial" size="2"><sup><font color="#0000FF"><a name="6">6</a></font></sup>
      <u>Centennial History of Belmont County, OH,</u> A.T. McKelvey, 1903, 
      p.642.</font></p>
      <p><font face="Arial" size="2"><sup><font color="#0000FF"><a name="7">7</a></font></sup>
      <u>History of Brown County</u> <u>(OH),</u> 1883, p. 379</font></p>
      <p><font face="Arial" size="2"><sup><font color="#0000FF"><a name="8">8</a></font></sup>
      <u>History of Marion County (IL),</u> Prof. J.H.G. Brinkerhoff, 1909, pp. 
      41, 46, 121.</font></p>
      <p>&nbsp;</td>
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    <font face="Arial" size="2"><b><i>Jennings Heritage Project<br>
        </i></b>P.O. Box 5565 - Washington DC 20016<br>
    Tel: (202) 296-4563<br>
        Email:&nbsp;<a href="mailto:[email protected]">[email protected]</a></font><p align="center">
    <a href="jennings_heritage_project.htm"><font size="2" face="Arial">Jennings
    Heritage Project</font> </a>
    <p align="center"><font size="2" face="Arial">
    <a href="JHP%20enrollment%20form.htm">Jennings
    Heritage Project Enrollment Form</a></font>
    <p align="center"><a href="../default.htm"><font size="2" face="Arial">Home</font></a><p align="center">
      <a href="nicholas-jennings.htm">Nicholas Jennings:&nbsp; In Search of 
      Justice</a><p>&nbsp;</td>
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