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Welcome to Call to Decision
American Minute with Bill Federer
December 26
The first six months of the Revolution saw the Continental Army
chased out of New York, across New Jersey, and into Pennsylvania.
Ranks dwindled from 20,000 to 2,000 exhausted soldiers- most
leaving
at year's end when their six-month enlistment was up.
Expecting a British invasion, the Continental Congress fled
Philadelphia and sent the word:
"Until Congress shall otherwise order, General Washington
shall be
possessed of full power to order and direct all things."
In a military operation, with the password "Victory or
Death,"
Washington's troops crossed the ice-filled Delaware River at
midnight
Christmas Day.
Trudging in a blinding blizzard, with one soldier freezing to
death,
they attacked the feared Hessian troops at Trenton, New Jersey, on
daybreak DECEMBER 26, 1776, capturing nearly a thousand in just
over
an hour.
A few Americans were shot and wounded, including James Monroe, the
future 5th President.
Washington wrote August 20, 1778:
"The Hand of Providence has been so conspicuous in all
this-the
course of the war-that he must be worse than an infidel that lacks
faith, and more wicked that has not gratitude to acknowledge his
obligations; but it will be time enough for me to turn Preacher
when
my present appointment ceases."
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