A Rainy Day at The College of New Jersey

By Bill Hawkins

Following Washington’s crossing of the Delaware and the Battle of Trenton, Washington marched the Continental Army into New Jersey as they followed the British Army looking for an opportunity to help the American cause.  That opportunity presented itself by accident at Princeton, and so off to Princeton I went.

AaronBurrYoungMy first stop was to see Nassau Hall on the campus of Princeton University.  I wanted to see the building where Aaron Burr attended college to get a first hand view.  Here are some things I learned, or had forgotten I had learned about Nassau Hall.

During the revolution the University was called The College of New Jersey, and not Princeton College.

The building was the largest in the entire 13 colonies.  Of course, I visited when it was surrounded with scaffolding as they did restoration work.  Therefore, I couldn’t find where the cannonball had hit the building as the American tried to drive the British from the building.

The stone steps in the building have worn down after two and half centuries of foot traffic pounding up and down the half spiral staircases on each end of the three story building.  I thought the wear was significant as I climbed up the stairs and could feel the uneven surface beneath the soles of my feet.

NassauHall

Here are a few things I didn’t learn.  I was curious to know what the building originally looked like before restorations and additions from over a hundred years ago.  I couldn’t find out, because to my surprise, there wasn’t a pamphlet available with that kind of information.

In what room was the portrait of King George hanging when a cannonball took off his head after the American’s fired upon the building to drive out the British?

What did the surroundings of the college look like before and during the revolution?  Were there other building around Nassau Hall that made up part of the college?  Where did the students lodge?  Were they all housed in Nassau Hall?

NassauHallEarly

These are some of the questions I hoped to find when I visited the building, but there was no guide, or even printed guide.  I’m sure the information must be available somewhere, so if you’re visiting the place, you may want to find your answers before you go.

After my self-guided tour of Nassau Hall at the College of New Jersey, I ventured a few miles to the site of the Battle of Princeton. Look for my next post as I describe that little adventure.

Crossing the Delaware

Looking into New Jersey from the Pennsylvania shore where the American Army crossed the Delaware on Christmas night in 1776.

What goes through an author’s mind when he visits a site that could be a possible setting in a future novel?  I can’t attest to what goes through other novelist’s minds, but I can tell you what went through mine.  I attempted, through my imagination, to envision being there when the event took place.

I had such an opportunity on August 26th, 2018, when I visited the spot where Washington crossed the Delaware River with his troops on Christmas night.  As I drove through New Jersey’s rolling hills toward the Delaware, I was using my trusty Google Maps to deliver me to the right place.  Therefore, after backtracking from the first false entrance it sent me to, I finally arrived at the state park that has been preserved to honor the occasion.

Looking back toward the Pennsylvania shore from Jersey

After paying my out-of-state entrance fee of $7, I drove to the visitor center and enjoyed a short film of the event for an additional dollar.  I never know where I’m going to learn a little detail I wasn’t familiar with, so I try not to assume I already know everything about something.  From the movie I learned that Washington had a young Lieutenant by the name of James Monroe stand by the road after leaving New York to count the troops.  Washington’s army had gone from over 30,000 troops in New York to only around 3,000 that marched across New Jersey in flight from the pursuing British.

The Ferry House view the soldiers would have had walking up the road after landing in New Jersey. The road went just to the right of the house.

After touring the little museum, I exited the building with a park map, oriented myself, and found the trail that led to the river.  To my great pleasure the trail was the very same road the Continental Army used to march up from the river on their way toward Trenton.  Which brings me to one of my main fascinations from history, and that’s walking in the footsteps of those that made history.

I wanted it to see what it was like to march into New Jersey from the perspective of the soldiers, so I walked directly down to the river and chronicled my jaunt on the way back with photos and by taking voice notes on my phone.  I noted that I had expected the Delaware to be broader and I wasn’t expecting an island just above the crossing point.

The fireplace in the Ferry House that Washington would have stood in front of to get warm.

While looking across the river I tried to imagine the weather much different than the balmy August day I was experiencing,  Bitter cold winds with ice and snow pelting faces with stinging jabs.  The numbness of standing without the ability to feel your feet, which seem frozen like blocks of ice that have been tied to the end of your legs to weigh you down.  The misery of standing and waiting without the benefit of a fire to keep you from literally freezing, which did happen to two of the soldiers.  Meaning it was a real danger they faced.

I tried to drown out the sounds of people hiking and biking, and of cars from the highway I had crossed using a foot bridge built for pedestrians over that highway.

View of the original road the American soldier’s marched over on their way to victory at Trenton.

I walked up the hill and took these photos as I walked in the footsteps of the Continental Army.  By reading signs I discovered more I did not know.  For example, the island that I hadn’t known about was key to the crossing, because it was behind that island that Washington hid all the boats that had been collected from up and down the river so the British couldn’t follow.

The river wasn’t quite as broad as I had assumed it would be.  However, throw in cakes of ice and sixty foot boats going opposing directions, the struggle would have been magnified making the effort truly heroic.

The ferry house is still standing and open to tours.  It was thrilling to think I was standing in the same room as Washington and his staff as they most likely made the decision to attack Trenton despite the delays which would have them arriving in Trenton after dawn.

The ferry house was cool inside.  So much so that I assumed it was being air conditioned.  I learned that the “air conditioning” came from the fireplace.  It seems the fireplace stones were deep enough in the earth that it drew coolness upward which cooled the house.  I found that idea fascinating.  I suppose other people already knew that, and I should have known, but it was news to me.

As I continued walking up the road the soldiers had traversed, I imagined I was walking with them as a fellow soldier.  These men were the remaining 3,000 from the over 30,000 that had been in Washington’s army in New York.  These were the men who believed in the cause of liberty and persevered beyond the sunshine patriot and summer soldier.  These were the true heroes of the revolution.  The men who stayed and fought when the cause seemed lost and because they did the cause was given hope and ended in the victory which became the United States of America!

The thought gave me goosebumps.

A plaque honoring one of Washington’s spies.

 

Get Your Own Copy of Prickett’s Fort

My novel, Prickett’s Fort, is now available for sale through this website.  The books are in brand new condition.

The cost of the book through this website is only $15.95, and that includes free shipping.  Click on the shopping cart below and buy the book directly through PayPal.  Prickett’s Fort is currently selling on Amazon for $42.  If you have a Kindle you can download the book for only $5.

Prickett’s Fort Available on Kindle

Having recently decided to return to writing, I decided to mosey over to the bookshelf and dusted off my novel to see what I could do to reach more people.  Since publishing the first time, eBooks have taken on a life of their own.  Finally, here in 2018, my book is available for the first time on Kindle as of 5:30 am of July 25th.

If you’ve not read the book yet, or simply want to refresh your memory of it, follow this link which takes you directly to the Amazon page from where you may purchase the Kindle version for a mere $4.99 (US).  Yes, you heard right, folks!  Only $4.99!

Then again, who knows, by the time you read this I may be running a promotion and it may be even less, if not free!

So click on the link (or photo of the cover ’cause I’m clever like that) and run on over there and buy my book to help finance the sequel!  We’ll both be glad you did.

Sequel to “Prickett’s Fort” Coming Soon!

When I wrote Prickett’s Fort, I combined two true stories that occurred on the frontier a year apart.  One took place at Bedford, Pennsylvania where the family fought their way to the fort and includes the harrowing story of the wife being forced to repair the sled as her husband and young son keep the Indians from rushing the rest of the family.

The second true story took place at Prickett’s Fort near Fairmont, WV.  I combined the stories and set them at Prickett’s Fort at about the same time.  I took the liberty to change one bit of fact because I wanted to explore the topic to help me understand why families raised their children amid the danger of the frontier.

Thankfully, the book received good reviews, one of which I’ll excerpt here:

“Hawkins has done his historical homework with this title, and the result is historically sound and exciting. Prickett’s Fort is an excellent novel and in many ways reminds me of some of Zane Grey’s own pioneer tales. Hawkins’ characters come across like real people, not cardboard cut-outs or shallow creations without substance, and he has obviously placed a lot of emphasis on research to show what life was like in the late 18th century when this area was a wild frontier and mountain men fought native Americans in savage conflict.”

– Blair Bones

After the book was published I arranged some book signings and was fascinated by the feedback given to me by readers.  It seemed both men and women were emotionally caught up in the book.  What surprised me was I thought the emotion provoked would have been reversed, with the men more concerned with what the women were concerned about, and vice-versa.

Since the book was first published, the internet has drastically changed how writers are published.  I decided to make Prickett’s Fort available as an eBook.  The price is right and you can instantly read the book.  Order you own e-book and let me know what you think.  (Coming Soon)

One of the questions I got from nearly everyone who read Prickett’s Fort was, “Are you going to write a sequel?”  Well, I have good news; after more than a decade I’ve decided to do just that.  As a matter of a fact, as of this writing, I have four chapters completed!

Take a look at what Blair Bones had to say about a sequel with his initial review.

Prickett’s Fort is a great read and an instant classic in the genre of frontier fiction. Hawkins’ has wisely left room for a sequel, and readers may find themselves clamoring to know if Ethan really does make it to Kentucky after all. Amazingly, the book is Hawkins’ first novel, yet he writes with a seasoned maturity that is astounding.”

My plan is to post, in rough draft form, parts of chapters of the sequel and to engage readers who are also interested in frontier history.  If you would like to be updated with the progress of the sequel and have a chance to be part of the writing process, please subscribe to this page.

I’m looking forward to interacting with fans of the frontier.