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A History | Revolutionary War Battles | The Battle of Princeton - January 3, 1777
The Battle of Princeton - January 3, 1777
Gen. Howe responded to the fall of Trenton by sending 5,550 troops south from New York through Princeton toward
Trenton. Gen. Cornwalis' troops arrived in Trenton late on the afternoon of the 2nd of January. Cornwalis found
Gen. Washington's troops along the ridge of the Assunpink Creek, and decided
to wait until the next day to attack. Overnight, Washington moved his troops out of Trenton and into Princeton
to the north. There, his advance force met a British blocking force commanded by Lieutenant Colonel Charles Mawhood.
A desperate fight ensued in Princeton, in which the Americans almost lost. Washington's timely arrival on horseback,
however, served to rally the Americans, and the Colonial army defeated Mawhood's troops, forcing them to retreat to
Trenton. Both armies were spent, and Washington took his army into winter quarters in Morristown, while Cornwalis
withdrew to New Brunswick.
The American Revolution and Its Era: Maps and Charts of North America and the West Indies, 1750-1789
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