The Story of General Washington Crossing the Delaware
By Andrew Murphy, published Jan 10, 2008
Published Content: 303 Total Views: 88,706 Favorited By: 12 CPs
On Christmas Day, 1776, General Washington ordered his men to get as many boats as they could find and ready them for a crossing that night. Washington planned to cross nine miles north of Trenton, New Jersey which he planned to attack. The weather was bitterly cold and the river was swollen with ice, so the crossing was quite dangerous. Despite the danger, all of the 2,500 or so men who crossed the Delaware with Washington on that fateful march arrived at the other side uninjured.
The next morning, Washington marched his men south (many of them without shoes) and attacked the Hessian (German mercenaries) garrison at Trenton. The Hessians were caught completely by surprise and many of them were hung-over from their Christmas revelries the day before. The Hessians resisted, but surrendered after losing their commander. The Americans lost four men killed and eight wounded to the 900 Hessians killed, wounded, or captured, making the attack on Trenton one of the most successful operations of the American Revolution.
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