Trenton Battle Monument

Trenton Battle Monument

The Trenton Battle Monument, located at [http://maps.google.com/maps?hl=en&q=348+South+Warren+Street,+Trenton,+New+Jersey&um=1&ie=UTF-8&sa=X&oi=geocode_result&resnum=1&ct=title 348 South Warren Street, Trenton, New Jersey] , is a column-type monument commemorating the Battle of Trenton, one of the most famous insurgencies in American history, and the pivotal victory for the Continental forces, before their march on Princeton, during the American Revolutionary War.

The monument

The hollow Roman-Doric fluted column of the memorial is of granite construction, as is the pedestal which supports it; although, slightly darker stone was used to give more apparent solidity to the base. The column is capped by a small, round pavilion, forming an observatory; accessible by means of an electric elevator, it has provided thousands of tourists an excellent view of Trenton, and the surrounding battle scene, over the years. Encircling the column, just above the cap, thirteen electric lights, symbolic of the original Thirteen Colonies, shed their radiance at night.

The pavilion is surmounted by an acanthus leaf pedestal where, atop the entire structure, a bronze statue of General George Washington, as he appeared at the opening of the engagement, crowns the impressive monument; with his extended right hand, Washington directs the fire of the Continental artillery down King (now Warren) Street. The figure is thirteen feet high while the monument, including the statue, is one hundred and fifty feet above street level.

On the east, west and south sides of the base of the pedestal are three bronze reliefs depicting "The Surrender of the Hessians," "The Continental Army Crossing the Delaware River" and "The Opening of the Battle," respectively; the latter shows the battery of Alexander Hamilton about to fire down King Street. On the north side of the pedestal is a bronze tablet presented by the Society of the Cincinnati of New Jersey.

Guarding the entrance to the monument stand two bronze figures of Continental soldiers. One is the statue of Private John Russell, a member of Colonel John Glover's splendid regiment of seafaring men from Marblehead, Massachusetts, who gained fame by transporting Washington’s army across the ice-choked Delaware, Christmas night, 1776. The other figure is modeled after a likeness of Private Blair McClenachan, of the Philadelphia Light Horse Troop, which also took part in the Battle of Trenton.

History

The monument is located in an area of the city known as “Five Points.” It was here, at the intersection of Warren (King) Street, North Broad (Queen) Street, Brunswick, Pennington and Princeton Avenues, that the American artillery was placed. From this vantage point, they dominated the streets of Trenton, preventing the Hessian troops from organizing an effective counter attack.

A movement to erect a monument commemorating the success at Trenton began in 1843. About forty years later in 1886, the property for the monument was acquired by the Trenton Monument Association. To build the monument, the New Jersey legislature appropriated $15,000, Congress $30,000, and citizens contributed $15,000. Monument Park at the "Five Points" was acquired under the provisions of an ordinance passed June 28, 1893, to afford a setting for the Battle Monument.

The cornerstone was laid Saturday, December 26, 1891, on the 115th anniversary of the Battle of Trenton. The base and pedestal were erected in the spring of 1892, the capstone raised into position on Saturday, August 31, 1893, and the statue of General Washington finally placed atop the shaft September 5th of the same year. The completed memorial was dedicated with elaborate ceremonies on October 19, 1893, the 112th anniversary of the surrender of General Lord Cornwallis at the Siege of Yorktown in Virginia; in attendance were eight governors of the original thirteen states.

Designed by John H. Duncan, the architect of Grant's Tomb, the memorial is an early example of the Beaux Arts style in America.

Although various changes have taken place in the immediate vicinity of the monument since its dedication, the commanding figure of Washington still looks down upon the once great industrial city and capital of the State, which has developed from the small village made famous by his signal victory at Trenton, December 26, 1776. Its design is based on "The Monument", a 1671 structure built to the memory of the Great Fire of London, on the London street where the 1666 fire started. Intentionally the height of this erection is the same, as the distance from the address where the fire started to the pillar's base.

References

*Trentoniana Collection, Trenton Free Public Library, Trenton, NJ
*'Some Early Trenton Washington Celebrations.' Trenton Historical Society, 1933.
* [http://query.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=9A03E6DD173EEF33A25756C1A9669D94629ED7CF "Battle Monument Unveiling; Preparations Nearly Completed for the Ceremony."] — The New York Times, 1893.
*Trenton Historical Society, 'A History of Trenton,' 1679-1929: Two Hundred and Fifty Years of a Notable Town with Links in Four Centuries. Princeton University Press, 1929.
*Trenton Newspapers, 1778-1932. Trenton, "Trenton Times", 1932; Bound volumes on file in the New Jersey State Library and the Trenton Free Public Library.
* New Jersey Division of Parks and Forestry (NJDEP)

ee also

*Battle of Trenton
*Battle of the Assunpink Creek (Second Battle of Trenton)
*Battle of Princeton
*Princeton Battlefield
*List of Registered Historic Places in Mercer County, New Jersey
*List of monuments in the United States
*List of monuments dedicated to George Washington


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