Elsie's Vacation and After Events by Martha Finley
page 91 of 257 (35%)
page 91 of 257 (35%)
![]() | ![]() |
|
altogether probable that if Morgan could have fallen, with his fresh
troops, upon the weary ones of Sir Henry Clinton, toward the close of the day, the result might have been such a surrender as Burgoyne was forced to make at Saratoga. "But as it was, while Washington and his weary troops slept that night, the general looking forward to certain victory in the morning, when he could again attack his country's foes with his own troops strengthened and refreshed by sleep, Sir Henry and his army stole silently away and hurried toward Sandy Hook." "Did Washington chase him?" asked Walter. "No," said the captain; "when he considered the start the British had, the weariness of his own troops, the excessive heat of the weather, and the deep sandy country, with but little water to be had, he thought it wiser not to make the attempt." "Papa, was it near here that the British shot Mrs. Caldwell?" asked Lulu. "No; that occurred in a place called Connecticut Farms, about four miles northwest of Elizabethtown, to which they--the Caldwells--had removed for greater safety. "It was in June, 1780. The British under Clinton and Knyphausen crossed over to Elizabethtown and moved on toward Springfield. The Americans, under General Greene, were posted upon the Short Hills, a series of high ridges near Springfield, and came down to the plain to oppose the invasion of the British. I will not go into the details of the battle, |
|