The following is a list of buildings or locations that served as headquarters for General George Washington during the American Revolutionary War.
Background
editOn April 19, 1775, the militia of Massachusetts, later joined by the militias of other New England colonies, began a siege at Boston to prevent thousands of newly-arrived British troops from moving inland.
On June 14, 1775, meeting in Philadelphia, the Second Continental Congress created a Continental Army, to be formed out of the individual militias of the Thirteen Colonies. The next day, Congress created the position of Commander-in-Chief of the Continental Army, and unanimously elected Washington to that position. Congress formally presented him with his commission on June 19, and he departed Philadelphia, on June 23, headed for Cambridge, Massachusetts, where he arrived on July 2, and took command of the siege. It lasted until March 17, 1776, when the British withdrew by ship.
Washington's headquarters staff consisted of a military secretary, initially Colonel Joseph Reed, followed by four aides-de-camp, William Palfrey, Stephen Moylan, Richard Cary, and Robert Hanson Harrison. They managed Washington's correspondence, made copies of each day's general orders to be distributed to the commanding officer at each military post, and made copies of individual orders from the commander-in-chief.
Traveling with the headquarters staff and a troop of bodyguards, Washington tended to stay at military camps, taverns, houses belonging to Continental Army officers or sympathetic civilians, and vacant houses seized from Loyalists. Topography and geographical features were exploited to protect a headquarters—before and after the Battle of Germantown, Washington stayed at the Henry Keely House,[1] atop a plateau on the west side of the Perkiomen Creek, while the Continental Army camped on the east side of the creek at Pennypacker Mills; between Washington and the British Army.
Washington's correspondence and expense accounts are useful sources for determining his location on a specific date. For instance: an expense account entry that lists meals – but not "use of house" – likely indicates that Washington and his staff pitched their tents on the owner's property.
Headquarters
editName | Image | Location/GPS Coordinates | Dates | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Benjamin Wadsworth House[2] | Harvard Yard, 1341 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, Massachusetts 42°22′24″N 71°07′06″W / 42.373234°N 71.1182814°W |
July 2 to 15, 1775 | First of Washington's Headquarters. July 3 – Washington takes command of the Continental Army. | |
John Vassall House, also known as Longfellow House –Washington's Headquarters National Historic Site |
105 Brattle Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts 42°22′36″N 71°07′35″W / 42.376667°N 71.126389°W |
July 15, 1775 to April 4, 1776 | March 17 – Siege of Boston ends with the British evacuation of nearly 10,000 troops. | |
Samuel Dexter House | 699 High Street, Dedham, Massachusetts 42°15′01″N 71°10′41″W / 42.25015°N 71.17792°W |
April 4 to 5, 1776 | "Expenses paid ... Dexters – £9.18.7."[3] | |
Governor Stephen Hopkins House | 15 Hopkins Street, Providence, Rhode Island 41°49′18″N 71°24′12″W / 41.821667°N 71.403333°W |
April 5 to 7, 1776 | ||
April 7 to 8, 1776 | ||||
Leffingwell Inn Christopher Leffingwell, proprietor |
348 Washington Street, Norwich, Connecticut 41°32′32″N 72°05′17″W / 41.542222°N 72.088056°W |
April 8 to 9, 1776 | Jedidiah Huntington House | |
Nathaniel Shaw Mansion | 11 Blinman Street, New London, Connecticut 41°21′04″N 72°05′53″W / 41.351122°N 72.098098°W |
April 9 to 10, 1776 | ||
John McCurdy House | 2 McCurdy Road, Old Lyme, Connecticut 41°18′46″N 72°19′52″W / 41.3127°N 72.3311°W |
April 10 to 11, 1776 | ||
Sun Tavern Samuel Penfield, proprietor |
Town Hall Green, Fairfield, Connecticut 41°08′31″N 73°14′57″W / 41.141900°N 73.249244°W |
April 11 to 12, 1776 | "Expenses paid ... Penfield's at Fairfield – £2.0.9."[3] Destroyed by fire in 1779. Rebuilt on the same site. | |
Guion's Tavern | Boston Post Road, near East 233rd Street, Eastchester, Bronx, New York |
April 12 to 13, 1776 | "Expenses paid ... Guion's – £2.11.8."[3] Demolished in 1895. | |
William Smith House | Pearl Street, opposite Cedar Street, Manhattan, New York City, New York 40°42′23″N 74°00′26″W / 40.70636°N 74.00709°W |
April 13 to 17, 1776 | Demolished. | |
"Richmond Hill" (Abraham Mortier House) | Varick & Vandam Streets, Manhattan, New York City, New York 40°43′37″N 74°00′19″W / 40.726833°N 74.005278°W |
April 17 to May 21, 1776 | Demolished in 1849. | |
Tavern at New Ark | Newark, New Jersey | May 21 to 22, 1776 | "Tavern at New Ark 12 Dollrs"[4] | |
Hudibras Tavern Colonel Jacob Hyer, proprietor[5] |
SW corner of Nassau Street & Washington Road, Princeton, New Jersey 40°21′01″N 74°39′26″W / 40.350229°N 74.657199°W |
May 22 to 23, 1776 | Demolished. | |
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | May 23 to June 5, 1776 | |||
White Hall Tavern[6][7] Myndert Van Voorhees, proprietor |
Albany Street, east of Neilson Street, New Brunswick, New Jersey 40°29′50″N 74°26′28″W / 40.497286°N 74.441139°W |
June 5 to 6, 1776 | "Expenses paid ... Minne Voorhies. Brunswic – 16 Dollrs"[4] | |
Returns to "Richmond Hill" (Abraham Mortier House) | Varick & Vandam Streets, Manhattan, New York City, New York 40°43′37″N 74°00′19″W / 40.726833°N 74.005278°W |
June 6 to August 27, 1776 | Samuel Fraunces, who provided meals here for Washington and his staff, later claimed to have thwarted an assassination attempt against Washington.[8] Demolished in 1849. | |
Brooklyn Heights | Atlantic Avenue, btw. Clinton & Court Streets, Brooklyn, New York City, New York 40°41′23″N 73°59′38″W / 40.689668°N 73.993763°W |
August 27 to 30, 1776 | August 27 – Battle of Long Island August 29–30 – Retreat to Manhattan | |
Manhattan, New York City, New York | August 30 to September 13, 1776 | |||
Archibald Kennedy House | NE corner Broadway & Battery Place, Manhattan, New York City, New York 40°42′17″N 74°00′51″W / 40.7048°N 74.0142°W |
Later headquarters for British General Howe.[9] | ||
Robert Murray House | 36th Street & 4th Avenue, Manhattan, New York City, New York |
September 13 to 14, 1776 | ||
Mott's Tavern | 143rd Street & 8th Avenue Manhattan, New York City, New York (now Hamilton Heights, Manhattan) |
September 14 to 15, 1776 | [10][11] | |
Roger Morris House, also known as Morris-Jumel Mansion |
Jumel Terrace & West 160th Street, Manhattan, New York City, New York 40°50′04″N 73°56′19″W / 40.834473°N 73.938583°W |
September 15 to October 21, 1776 | September 16 – Battle of Harlem Heights. | |
Valentine's Mile Square | Valentine's Hill, Yonkers, New York 40°55′52″N 73°51′52″W / 40.931141°N 73.864349°W |
October 21 to 22, 1776 | October 22 – "Expenses at Valentine's Mile Square – 20 Dollrs" Now the site of St. Joseph's Seminary. | |
Jacob Purdy House | 60 Park Avenue, White Plains, New York 41°02′12″N 73°46′26″W / 41.036667°N 73.773889°W |
October 22 to 28, 1776 | October 28 – Battle of White Plains | |
Elijah Miller House | Virginia Road, North White Plains, New York 41°03′33″N 73°46′15″W / 41.059167°N 73.770833°W |
October 28 to November 10, 1776 Summer 1778 Summer 1781 |
||
Van Cortlandt Upper Manor House, also known as "Upper Manor" (Pierre Van Cortlandt House) | 110 Oregon Road, Cortlandt Manor, New York 41°18′44″N 73°54′22″W / 41.312222°N 73.906111°W |
November 10 to 12, 1776 | Greatly altered.[12] Now part of Cortlandt Healthcare Nursing Care Center. | |
General Green's quarters Stephen Bourdette House |
near Burdett's Landing, Fort Lee, New Jersey 40°50′37″N 73°58′00″W / 40.8436°N 73.9667°W |
November 12 to 15, 1776 | November 12 – Washington crosses to the west side of the Hudson River at Fort Lee. Demolished in 1899. | |
Hackensack, New Jersey | November 15, 1776 | Washington is on his way south when he receives news of a British threat against Fort Washington (east side of the Hudson River). He returns to Fort Lee.[13] | ||
Returns to General Green's quarters Stephen Bourdette House |
near Burdett's Landing, Fort Lee, New Jersey 40°50′37″N 73°58′00″W / 40.8436°N 73.9667°W |
November 15 to 18, 1776 | November 16 – Battle of Fort Washington. From Fort Lee, on west side of the Hudson River, Washington can see the British attack, but cannot risk sending reinforcements on a daylight crossing. He abandons plans for a night crossing when boats of retreating soldiers begin arriving. | |
Peter Zabriskie Mansion | 50 Main Street, Hackensack, New Jersey 40°52′47″N 74°02′38″W / 40.879608°N 74.043789°W |
November 18 to 21, 1776 | Invasion of British troops and beginning of Great Retreat from Fort Lee Home of Col. Peter Zabriskie of General Washington's army. Later Judge and Signer of Ratification for the U.S. Constitution for Bergen Co.. . Demolished in 1945.[14][15] | |
Tap House Tavern James Leslie, proprietor[16] |
River Road, Acquackanonk Township now Passaic, New Jersey 40°51′19″N 74°07′16″W / 40.855222°N 74.121035°W |
November 21 to 22, 1776 | Battle of Acquackanonk Bridge, November 22, 1776 To James Leslie, tavern keeper, dr. "two bottles of toddy for the soldiers at work on the bridge, six shillings. Received payment." Later renamed Blanchard House.[17] Destroyed by fire in 1877. | |
Eagle Tavern | Broad Street at William Street Newark, New Jersey 40°44′03″N 74°10′21″W / 40.734167°N 74.172542°W |
November 22 to 28, 1776 | Major Samuel Sayres, proprietor. Washington himself was lodged a home of Reverend Alexander McWhorter[18][19][20][21][22][23] | |
Returns to White Hall Tavern[24] Myndert Van Voorhees, proprietor |
Albany Street, east of Neilson Street, New Brunswick, New Jersey 40°29′50″N 74°26′28″W / 40.497286°N 74.441139°W |
November 28 to December 1, 1776 | aka Cochrane's Tavern[25] | |
Kingston, New Jersey | December 1 to 2, 1776 | |||
Princeton, New Jersey | December 2 to 3, 1776 | |||
Trenton, New Jersey | December 3 to 8, 1776 | December 8 – The Army crosses to the west side of the Delaware River at Trenton. | ||
"Summerseat" (Thomas Barclay House) | Clymer Street & Morris Avenue, Morrisville, Pennsylvania 40°12′29″N 74°46′47″W / 40.2080879°N 74.7795874°W |
December 8 to 14, 1776 | ||
William Keith House | Pineville Road, Upper Makefield Township, Pennsylvania 40°17′44″N 74°56′49″W / 40.295556°N 74.946944°W |
December 14 to 24, 1776 | ||
Thompson-Neely House | River Road, Washington Crossing, Pennsylvania 40°19′50″N 74°56′14″W / 40.330495°N 74.937133°W |
December 24 to 25, 1776 | ||
December 25 – Washington's Crossing of the Delaware. December 26 – Battle of Trenton. | ||||
John Harris House | Sycamore Street & Swamp Road, Newtown, Pennsylvania 40°13′44″N 74°56′20″W / 40.2289869°N 74.9388018°W |
December 26 to 30, 1776 | Demolished in 1863. A gas station now occupies the site. | |
John Barnes House | Greene Street, Trenton, New Jersey |
December 30, 1776 to January 1, 1777 | Demolished. | |
True American Inn Jonathan Richmond, proprietor |
Broad Street, south of the bridge, Trenton, New Jersey 40°13′04″N 74°45′49″W / 40.2177°N 74.7637°W |
January 1 to 2, 1777 | Destroyed by fire in 1843. | |
Alexander Douglass House | 478 Centre Street, Trenton, New Jersey 40°12′21″N 74°45′29″W / 40.205865°N 74.758111°W |
January 2 to 3, 1777 | January 2 – Battle of the Assunpink Creek Relocated three times from its original location at 191 S. Broad Street, to 478 Centre Street in 1876, to Stacy Park in 1926, and to Mill Hill Park in 1972.[26] | |
Princeton, New Jersey | January 3 – Battle of Princeton. | |||
John Van Doren House | 1488 Main Street, Millstone, New Jersey 40°29′46″N 74°35′16″W / 40.4961°N 74.5879°W |
January 3 to 4, 1777 | Along march to winter encampment at Morristown | |
John Fenner House[27] | U.S. Route 206, Pluckemin, New Jersey 40°38′44″N 74°38′22″W / 40.64556°N 74.63944°W |
January 4 to 6, 1777[28] | Demolished in 1940.[29] | |
Arnold's Tavern Jacob Arnold, proprietor |
20 North Park Place, Morristown Green, Morristown, New Jersey 40°47′51″N 74°28′54″W / 40.7973796°N 74.4815604°W |
January 6 to May 29, 1777 | Destroyed by fire in 1918. | |
First Middlebrook encampment | Middlebrook, New Jersey | May 29 to June 24, 1777[30] | "The Army is now drawn together at this place, at least that part of it, which have been Cantoned all Winter in this state. The whole of them now Encamped in Comfortable Tents on a Valley covered in front and rear by ridges which affords us security. His excellency our good Old General, has also spread his Tent, and lives amongst us."[31] | |
Nathaniel Drake House | 602 West Front Street, Quibbletown (now Plainfield), New Jersey 40°36′49″N 74°25′56″W / 40.613611°N 74.432222°W |
June 24 to 26, 1777[32] | June 26 – Battle of Short Hills. | |
First Middlebrook encampment | Middlebrook, New Jersey | June 26 to July 3, 1777[33] | ||
Liberty Corner Tavern Bullion, proprietor[34] |
Liberty Corner, New Jersey 40°39′54″N 74°34′40″W / 40.664897°N 74.577818°W |
July 3, 1777 | July 3 – Expenses paid at Bullion's Tavern – £3. | |
Morristown, New Jersey | July 4 to 10, 1777[35] | Brief layover by the army | ||
July 11, 1777 | July 11 – Expenses paid to Mr. Hathaway – £5.12.6. | |||
Colonel William Colfax House[36] | 2343 Paterson-Hamburg Turnpike, Pompton (now Wayne), New Jersey 40°59′15″N 74°16′47″W / 40.9875°N 74.279722°W |
July 11 to 14, 1777[36] | July 14 – Expenses paid to Mrs. Van Twiller – £5.12.11. | |
Hendrick Van Allen House[37] | Ramapo Valley Road & Franklin Avenue, Oakland, New Jersey 41°01′47″N 74°14′11″W / 41.029722°N 74.236389°W |
July 14 to 15, 1777 | July 14 – "Vanaulens 8 Miles from Pumpton Plains ... I arrived here this Afternoon with the Army after a very fatiguing March"[38] | |
Suffern's Tavern John Suffern, proprietor |
Washington & Lafayette Avenues, The Clove (now Suffern), New York 41°06′54″N 74°08′58″W / 41.11511°N 74.14935°W |
July 15 to 20, 1777 | July 15 – "I have just arrived with the Army at this place where I shall remain till I see what turn Genl Howe takes."[39] Demolished. | |
Galloway's Tavern George Galloway, proprietor[40] |
Old Clove Road (now NY State Route 17), Southfields, New York 41°14′41″N 74°10′34″W / 41.244792°N 74.176026°W |
July 20 to 23, 1777 | July 22 – Expenses paid to "Mr. Galloway for house Room &c. – £4.5."[41] | |
Ramapo, New York | July 23 to 25, 1777 | July 25 – "cash paid at Ramapaugh for house room &c. – £2.5."[42] | ||
Abraham Lott House | South Beverwyck Road Troy Hills, New Jersey |
July 25, 1777 | "Mr Lott's, 8 Miles East of Morris Town"[43][44] Demolished. | |
Mandeville Inn | 493 Newark-Pompton Turnpike, Pequannock Township, New Jersey 40°57′40″N 74°17′40″W / 40.961051°N 74.29448°W |
July 26 to 28, 1777 | July 26 – Expenses paid "at Mandevils for house room &c. – £2.5."[45] Demolished 1941, current site of Pequannock Valley Middle School[46] | |
Colonel John Mehelm House | New Bromley Road, Readington, New Jersey 40°38′16″N 74°45′29″W / 40.6379163°N 74.7579738°W |
July 28 to 29, 1777 | "4 Miles East of Flemingtown"[47] The nearby White House Tavern held a store of food for the army.[48] July 29 – Expenses paid to Mrs. Lowry – £1.2.6. Destroyed by fire in the 1960s. | |
Holcombe House[49][50] | 260 North Main Street (NJ State Route 29), Coryell's Ferry (now Lambertville), New Jersey 40°22′31″N 74°56′44″W / 40.375278°N 74.945556°W |
July 29 to 31, 1777 | British General Howe and 15,000 troops sail from New York City at the end of July. Washington moves his Army to Lambertville to be able to counter, north or south, depending on Howe's destination. Howe sails into the Chesapeake Bay, lands at Head of Elk, and begins a march toward Philadelphia. Holcombe is paid £5.10 for 22 suppers and 22 breakfasts.[51] | |
City Tavern Daniel Smith, proprietor |
138 South 2nd Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 39°56′49″N 75°08′42″W / 39.947°N 75.145°W |
July 31 to August 1, 1777[52] | ||
Chester, Pennsylvania | August 1 to 2, 1777 | |||
Returns to City Tavern Daniel Smith, proprietor |
138 South 2nd Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 39°56′49″N 75°08′42″W / 39.947°N 75.145°W |
August 2 to 4, 1777 | August 2 – Washington first meets the Marquis de Lafayette. Expenses paid to Mr. Smith – £263.4.[53] | |
Colonel Henry Hill House | Indian Queen Lane, Roxborough, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania |
August 4 to 8, 1777 | Expenses paid to Col. Hill's servants – £0.17.6. Demolished in 1780. | |
Encampment | near Germantown, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | August 8 to 10, 1777 | August 10 – Washington and staff dine at the Crooked Billet Tavern in Hatboro, en route to the Moland House.[54] | |
John Moland House | "The Cross Roads,"[55] Old York Road, Warwick Township, Pennsylvania |
August 10 to 23, 1777 | August 20 – Washington first meets Count Casimir Pulaski of Poland, who volunteers to join the American cavalry. August 23 – Expenses paid to Mrs. Moland – £5.5.0. | |
Stenton | 4601 North 18th Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 40°01′26″N 75°09′17″W / 40.023778°N 75.154611°W |
August 23 to 24, 1777 | ||
Rudolph's Tavern[56] | Chester Pike & Springfield Road, Darby Township, Pennsylvania 39°55′06″N 75°15′47″W / 39.91821°N 75.263013°W |
August 24 to 25, 1777 | August 24 – "Expenses paid Mr Rudulph at Derby for his Excellency & family – $16."[57] | |
George Forsythe House (Quaker Hill) | West Street, btw. 3rd & 4th Streets, Wilmington, Delaware 39°44′29″N 75°33′17″W / 39.741357°N 75.55472°W |
August 25 to 26, 1777 | Demolished. | |
"The Hermitage" (Robert Alexander House) | Gray's Hill, Hermitage Drive, near Elkton, Maryland 39°36′43″N 75°49′16″W / 39.61197°N 75.82105°W |
August 26 to 27, 1777 | The day after Washington's departure, British General Howe makes the Alexander House his headquarters. | |
Returns to George Forsythe House (Quaker Hill) | West Street, btw. 3rd & 4th Streets, Wilmington, Delaware 39°44′29″N 75°33′17″W / 39.741357°N 75.55472°W |
August 27 to September 6, 1777 | August 27 – Expenses paid to George Forsyth – £63.12.0. September 3 – Battle of Cooch's Bridge. Demolished. | |
Christiana Hundred, Newport, Delaware |
September 6 to 9, 1777[58] | Expenses "paid at Christiana for family's breakfast, horses &c. – £6.5."[59] Expenses "paid on the road from thence to Wilmington for lodging &c. – £6."[59] | ||
Hale-Byrnes House | Delaware Route 7 & Delaware Route 4, Stanton, Delaware 39°42′04″N 75°39′02″W / 39.701111°N 75.650556°W |
September 6, 1777 | "The General officers are to meet at 5 O'clock this afternoon at the brick house by White-Clay creek, and fix upon proper picquets for the security of the camp."[60][61] | |
Wilmington, Delaware | September 9, 1777 | Expenses "paid for breakfast the morning we crossed brandywine – £1.12."[59] | ||
Benjamin Ring House | Brandywine Battlefield, Chadds Ford, Pennsylvania 39°52′27″N 75°34′47″W / 39.874278°N 75.579611°W |
September 9 to 11, 1777 | September 9 – Council of War. | |
September 11 – Battle of Brandywine. | ||||
John McIlvane House | Leiperville (now Woodlyn), Pennsylvania | September 11 to 12, 1777 | ||
Darby, Pennsylvania | September 12 to 13, 1777 | |||
Returns to Henry Hill House[62] | Indian Queen Lane Roxborough, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania |
September 13 to 14, 1777 | ||
Buck Tavern Mary Miller, proprietor[63] |
Lancaster Pike & Old Buck Road, Haverford, Pennsylvania 40°01′01″N 75°18′35″W / 40.01703°N 75.30966°W |
September 14 to 15, 1777 | September 14 – The Army crosses to the west side of the Schuylkill River at Conshohocken. Demolished circa 1965. A car dealership now occupies the site. | |
Joseph (Randall?) Malin House | Conestoga & Swedesford Roads, Malvern, Pennsylvania 40°02′50″N 75°32′20″W / 40.0471888°N 75.5387792°W |
September 15 to 16, 1777 | September 16 – Battle of the Clouds | |
Yellow Springs Tavern[64] | Yellow Springs & Art School Roads, Yellow Springs, Pennsylvania 40°06′02″N 75°37′23″W / 40.1004589°N 75.6230205°W |
September 16 to 17, 1777 | Demolished by 1824. Rebuilt on the same site. | |
Reading Furnace[65] | Reading Furnace and Mansion Roads, Warwick Township 40°08′49″N 75°46′08″W / 40.146944°N 75.768889°W |
September 18, 1777 | General Washington retreated to Warwick to have the army's muskets repaired by Captain Samuel Van Leer's furnace.[66] Reading Furnace built 1736, near Warwick Furnace built 1737. | |
Parker's Ford Tavern[67] | 1806 Old Schuylkill Road, Parker Ford, Pennsylvania 40°11′54″N 75°34′51″W / 40.198445°N 75.580744°W |
September 19, 1777 | September 19 – The Army crosses to the east side of the Schuylkill River at Parker's Ford. This was followed by a night march to Fatland Ford and Swede's Ford. | |
Fatland (James Vaux House) | Pawlings Road, Lower Providence Township, Pennsylvania 40°07′09″N 75°26′35″W / 40.1191254°N 75.4431288°W |
September 19 to 20, 1777 | September 19 – Expenses paid at "Flat Land ford" for "Breakfasts &c. – £2.5.0."[68] Demolished 1843. Rebuilt on the same site. | |
Derrick Casselberry House | 275 Evansburg Road, Evansburg, Pennsylvania 40°10′57″N 75°25′40″W / 40.18254°N 75.4277884°W |
September 20 to 21, 1777 | after midnight September 21 – Paoli Massacre | |
Thompson's (Thomson's) Tavern Archibald Thomson, proprietor |
Ridge Pike (Reading Road) & Egypt Road, West Norriton Township, Pennsylvania |
evening of September 21, 1777 | Night march to Pottsgrove | |
"Pottsgrove" (John Potts Mansion) | High Street (Reading Road), Pottsgrove, Pennsylvania 40°14′52″N 75°39′35″W / 40.247778°N 75.659722°W |
September 21 to 23, 1777 | With his army at Valley Forge, British General Howe begins moving troops north to trick Washington into thinking that his goal is to capture the American military stores at Reading. When Washington moves his army north to defend Reading, Howe moves his army south, and captures Philadelphia. | |
Mr. Kennedy's House | Ridge Pike (Reading Road), northwest of Trappe, Pennsylvania |
September 22 to 23, 1777 | "Camp 28 miles from Philada on the Reading Road"[69] September 22 – "Expenses paid at Mr Kenedys for Sundries & trouble of the house – £3.10."[70] | |
Colonel Frederick Antes House | Colonial Road, Upper Frederick Township, Pennsylvania 40°17′32″N 75°32′26″W / 40.292222°N 75.540556°W |
September 23 to 26, 1777 | "Camp on Schuylkill 34 Miles from Philadelphia"[71] September 23 – Expenses paid at Mr Antes – £10.12.6.[72] | |
Henry Keely House[1] (west side of the Perkiomen Creek) |
North Limerick Road, southwest of Schwenksville, Pennsylvania 40°14′57″N 75°28′05″W / 40.2491412°N 75.4680425°W |
September 26 to 29, 1777 | The Army camps on the east side of the Perkiomen Creek, at Pennypacker Mills. September 26 – Philadelphia is captured by the British, who occupy the city until June 18, 1778. September 29 – Expenses paid "at Paulins mill for Sundries used in the house—& extra trouble – £5.10.0."[73] Demolished in 1834. | |
Jacob Smith House | Hedrick Road, Skippack, Pennsylvania 40°13′24″N 75°22′55″W / 40.223286°N 75.381828°W |
September 29 to October 2, 1777 | October 2 – Expenses paid at Mr. Smiths – £14.4.6.[74] Demolished in the 1970s. | |
Peter Wentz Homestead | Skippack Pike & Shearer Road, Worcester Township, Pennsylvania 40°11′56″N 75°20′02″W / 40.198889°N 75.333889°W |
October 2 to 4, 1777 | October 4 – Expenses paid to Mathias Wentz – £2.10.6.[75] | |
October 4, 1777 | Battle of Germantown | |||
Returns to Henry Keely House[1] (west side of the Perkiomen Creek) |
North Limerick Road, southwest of Schwenksville, Pennsylvania 40°14′57″N 75°28′05″W / 40.2491412°N 75.4680425°W |
October 4 to 8, 1777 | The Army camps on the east side of the Perkiomen Creek, at Pennypacker Mills.[76] October 8 – Expenses paid "at Picaomin for necessaries used in the house–bread; potatoes–Milk–fouls–&c. & trouble" – £5.[77] Demolished in 1834. | |
Frederick Wampole (Friedrick Wamboldt) House | Detwiler Road, Towamencin Township, Pennsylvania 40°15′35″N 75°20′59″W / 40.259841°N 75.3498511°W |
October 9 to 16, 1777 | October 15 – Expenses paid "Mr Wambol – £28.5.4."[78] Demolished in 1881. | |
Returns to Peter Wentz Homestead | Skippack Pike & Shearer Road, Worcester Township, Pennsylvania 40°11′56″N 75°20′02″W / 40.198889°N 75.333889°W |
October 16 to 20, 1777 | October 19 – Expenses paid to Mathias Wentz – £8.15.11.[79] | |
"Dawesfield" (James Morris House) | 565 Lewis Lane, Whitpain Township, Pennsylvania 40°09′12″N 75°14′53″W / 40.153333°N 75.248056°W |
October 20 to November 2, 1777 | ||
George Emlen House | 1901 Pennsylvania Avenue, Upper Dublin Township, Pennsylvania 40°07′29″N 75°11′23″W / 40.124736°N 75.189591°W |
November 2 to December 11, 1777 | December 5–8 – Battle of White Marsh | |
Swede's Ford | Norristown, Pennsylvania | December 11 to 13, 1777[80] | December 11 – Battle of Matson's Ford | |
Isaac Hughes House | Gulph Mills, Pennsylvania | December 13 to 19, 1777 | December 18 – "[T]his is Thanksgiving Day thro the whole Continent of America—but god knows We have very Little to keep it with this being the third Day we have been without flouer or bread—& are Living on a high uncultivated hill, in huts & tents Laying on the Cold Ground, upon the whole I think all we have to be thankful for is that we are alive & not in the Grave with many of our friends—we had for thanksgiving breakfast some Exceeding Poor beef which has been boil.d & Now warm.d in an old short handled frying Pan in which we ware Obliged to Eat it haveing No other Platter—"[81] | |
Isaac Potts House (occupied by Deborah Potts Hewes) |
PA State Route 23 & Valley Creek Road, Valley Forge, Pennsylvania 40°06′05″N 75°27′43″W / 40.101389°N 75.461944°W |
December 19, 1777 to June 19, 1778 | June 19 – Expenses paid to Mrs. Hewes – £100. | |
"Doctor Shennons" (Dr. Robert Shannon House) | Germantown Pike & Whitehall Road, East Norriton Township, Pennsylvania 40°09′02″N 75°20′52″W / 40.150453°N 75.347692°W |
June 19 to 20, 1778 | June 20 – Expenses paid to Dr. Shannon – £10.17.6.[82][failed verification] Now part of Norristown Farm Park.[83] | |
Jonathan Fell House | East State Street, Doylestown, Pennsylvania 40°18′47″N 75°07′08″W / 40.313004°N 75.118760°W |
June 20 to 21, 1778 | June 20 – Expenses "paid Jno Fell for Breakfast dinner & sup. for the General & suite – £6."[84] | |
Returns to Holcombe House | 260 North Main Street (NJ State Route 29), Coryell's Ferry (now Lambertville), New Jersey 40°22′31″N 74°56′44″W / 40.375278°N 74.945556°W |
June 21 to 23, 1778 | June 21 – Washington crosses to the New Jersey side of the Delaware River, but most of the Army camps on the west side (New Hope, Pennsylvania), and crosses the following day. June 22 – Expenses paid to Mr. Holcombe – £10.17.6.[85] | |
Joseph Stout House (Hunt House) | Province Line Road Hopewell Township, New Jersey 40°24′33″N 74°44′45″W / 40.409252°N 74.745735°W |
June 23 to 25, 1778 | June 24 – Council of War. June 25 – Expenses paid Mr Hunt "for Sundries" – £10.2.6.[86] | |
Captain Thomas Wetherill House | Georges Road, near Kingston, New Jersey 40°22′03″N 74°30′27″W / 40.367416°N 74.507607°W |
June 25 to 26, 1778 | Expenses paid "To Thos Wetheral the morning after we left Kingston – £14." | |
Dr. Hezekiah Stites House | 53 South Main Street, Cranbury, New Jersey 40°18′19″N 74°31′09″W / 40.3052624°N 74.5191278°W |
June 26 to 27, 1778 | Expenses paid to Dr. Stites – $9.[87] Demolished. | |
Encampment | Penelopen (now Manalapan), New Jersey | June 27 to 28, 1778 | ||
Monmouth County Courthouse | "The Burlington Path", Freehold Borough, New Jersey 40°15′37″N 74°16′30″W / 40.2603615°N 74.2748938°W |
June 28, 1778 | June 28 – Battle of Monmouth | |
Moses Laird House | Main Street & Hamilton Road, Englishtown, New Jersey 40°17′47″N 74°21′30″W / 40.2964131°N 74.3583716°W, |
June 29 to 30, 1778 | [88] | |
Village Inn | Main & Water Streets, Englishtown, New Jersey 40°17′50″N 74°21′31″W / 40.2970877°N 74.3587112°W |
June 30, 1778 | Court-martial of General Charles Lee begins. | |
Ross Hall | River Road and Ross Hall Boulevard Piscataway, New Jersey 40°30′39″N 74°26′55″W / 40.510833°N 74.448611°W |
July 1 to 7, 1778[89] | Demolished in 1957 July 2 – Court-martial of General Charles Lee continues. | |
Scotch Plains, New Jersey | July 7 to 8, 1778 | |||
July 8 to 9, 1778 | ||||
Colonel Thomas Cadmus House | Ashland Avenue & Washington Street, Bloomfield, New Jersey 40°47′33″N 74°12′17″W / 40.7926351°N 74.2046507°W |
July 9 to 10, 1778 | Demolished circa 1915. Rebuilt on the same site. | |
Great Falls (Passaic River) | Paterson, New Jersey | July 10, 1778 | Washington, Hamilton, Lafayette & aide-de-camp James McHenry visit Great Falls.[90] | |
"The Hermitage" (Theodosia Prevost House) | 335 North Franklin Turnpike, Ho-Ho-Kus, New Jersey 41°00′25″N 74°07′00″W / 41.00703°N 74.116629°W |
July 10 to 15, 1778[91] | July 14 – Expenses paid to Mrs. Prevost's servants – £4.10. July 15 – Expenses paid to Jacob Hardin – £3.8. | |
Colonel Ann Hawkes Hay House | Haverstraw (now West Haverstraw), New York 41°12′41″N 73°59′17″W / 41.211389°N 73.988056°W |
July 15 to 18, 1778 | Army crossing to east side of Hudson River at King's Ferry. July 16 – Washington inspects fortifications at West Point.[92] Col. Hay is living in the house of his brother-in-law William Smith.[93] Burned c. 1808–1809.[94] | |
Captain Samuel Delavan House | Hallock's Mill Road Yorktown, New York |
July 18 to 19, 1778 | July 18 – Expenses paid to Mr. Delavan – £10. Demolished. | |
Colonel Joseph Drake House | Pelham Road & Drake Avenue, New Rochelle, New York 40°53′40″N 73°47′03″W / 40.8945371°N 73.7840913°W |
July 19 to 20, 1778 | July 19 – "Drakes Farm"[95] | |
Wright's Mills | Mount Kisko Road, Valhalla, New York[96] 41°05′20″N 73°45′03″W / 41.0888°N 73.7509°W |
July 20 to 27, 1778[97] | July 25 – Council of War. July 28 – Expenses paid to Reuben Wright – £30.18.10. Demolished. | |
Returns to Jacob Purdy House | 60 Park Avenue, White Plains, New York 41°02′12″N 73°46′26″W / 41.036667°N 73.773889°W |
July 27 to September 16, 1778[98] | ||
Raymond House[99] | Bedford, New York | September 16 to 18, 1778[100][101] | ||
Colonel Stephen Moore House, also known as "The Red House" or "Moore's Folly" | Target Hill, United States Military Academy, West Point, New York 41°24′10″N 73°58′03″W / 41.402678°N 73.967565°W |
September 18 to 19, 1778 | Demolished, possibly as early as 1812. Now the site of Target Hill Athletic Fields. Image: The Moore House is in the upper left corner of the fort. | |
Mandeville's Tavern Jacob Mandeville, proprietor |
Lower Station Road, Garrison, New York 41°22′36″N 73°56′42″W / 41.376667°N 73.945000°W |
September 19 to 20, 1778 | September 19 – Expenses paid to Jacob Mandeville – £9.12.0. | |
"Faris's" (Reed Ferris House) | Old Quaker Hill Road, south of Brady Brook,[102] Pawling, New York 41°33′05″N 73°32′55″W / 41.55138°N 73.54874°W |
September 20 to 26, 1778[103][104] | September 25 – Expenses paid to "Reed Ferriss" for "House Rent" and "Lodging" – £20.1.0.[105] Demolished. Image: The Ferris property appears on the map, below center. | |
John Kane House | East Main Street, Fredericksburg (now Pawling), New York 41°33′22″N 73°35′39″W / 41.556111°N 73.594167°W |
September 26 to 30, 1778[106] | ||
John Brinckerhoff House | Fishkill, New York | September 30 to October 8, 1778 | October 8 – "I shall this afternoon return to my old Quarters at Mr Kanes Fredericsburg–"[107] | |
Returns to John Kane House | East Main Street, Fredericksburg (now Pawling), New York 41°33′22″N 73°35′39″W / 41.556111°N 73.594167°W |
October 8 to November 10, 1778[108] | ||
Poughkeepsie, New York | November 10, 1778 | |||
Returns to John Kane House | East Main Street, Fredericksburg (now Pawling), New York 41°33′22″N 73°35′39″W / 41.556111°N 73.594167°W |
November 11 to 28, 1778[109] | November 28 – Expenses "paid John Kane for use of his house, &c." – £57.12.0. | |
Philipsburg (now Hartsdale), New York[110] | November 28 to 29, 1778[111] | |||
"Mr Lents" - Thomas Storm House, also known as Storm-Adriance-Brinckerhoff House | Fishkill, New York 41°35′47″N 73°45′40″W / 41.596389°N 73.761111°W |
November 29 to December 1, 1778. | December 1 – The Army crosses to the west side of the Hudson River at King's Ferry.[112] | |
Returns to Colonel Ann Hawkes Hay House | Haverstraw (now West Haverstraw), New York 41°12′41″N 73°59′17″W / 41.211389°N 73.988056°W |
December 1 to 2, 1778[113] | Burned c. 1808–1809. | |
"Mr. Jones Baggat" | Ramapo, New York | December 2 to 3, 1778[114] | ||
"Mr Goods" | Pequannock, New Jersey | December 3 to 4, 1778[115] | ||
Returns to Abraham Lott House | South Beverwyck Road Troy Hills, New Jersey |
December 4 to 5, 1778[116] | Demolished. | |
Morristown, New Jersey | December 5 to 6, 1778[117] | |||
Paramus, New Jersey | December 5 to 8, 1778 | |||
Elizabeth, New Jersey | December 8 to 11, 1778 | |||
John Wallace House | 71 Somerset Street, Middlebrook (now Somerville), New Jersey 40°34′08″N 74°37′19″W / 40.568889°N 74.621944°W |
December 11 to 21, 1778 | Second Middlebrook encampment | |
December 21 to 22, 1778 | ||||
Henry Laurens House | North side of Chestnut Street, between 4th & 5th Streets, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania |
December 22, 1778 to February 2, 1779 | Congress summons Washington to Philadelphia, where he spends 6 weeks as the guest of President of Congress Henry Laurens. Martha Washington joins him in the city, and accompanies him back to Middlebrook.[118] Demolished in the mid-19th century. Image: The Henry Laurens House is in the background, left. | |
February 2 | ||||
February 3 | ||||
February 4 | ||||
Returns to John Wallace House | 71 Somerset Street, Middlebrook (now Somerville), New Jersey 40°34′08″N 74°37′19″W / 40.568889°N 74.621944°W |
February 5 to June 4, 1779 | June 4 – "Received of Major Gibbs one thousand dollars for the use of my house Furniture &c. &c. which His Excellency General Washington had for his Head quarters – John Wallace."[119] | |
Pompton, New Jersey | June 4 to 5, 1779 | |||
Robert Erskine House | Sloatsburg Road, Ringwood Manor State Park, Ringwood, New Jersey 41°08′40″N 74°15′10″W / 41.144444°N 74.252778°W |
June 5 to 6, 1779[120] | Demolished by 1810. Rebuilt on the same site. | |
Sloat House | NY State Route 17 & Sterling Avenue, Sloatsburg, New York 41°09′06″N 74°11′38″W / 41.151687°N 74.193889°W |
June 6 to 7, 1779[120] | ||
Francis Smith's Tavern | Smith's Clove (now Woodbury), New York | June 7 to 14, 1779 | ||
Returns to Colonel Stephen Moore House | Target Hill, United States Military Academy, West Point, New York 41°24′10″N 73°58′03″W / 41.402678°N 73.967565°W |
June 15 to 19, 1779 | June 18 – Washington visits Fishkill, New York Demolished, possibly as early as 1812. Now the site of Target Hill Athletic Fields. Image: The Moore House is in the upper left corner of the fort. | |
Returns to Smith's Clove | June 19 to 21, 1779[121] | June 19 – Expenses paid to Francis Smith for 22 dinners – £15.4.0. | ||
Colonel Thomas Ellison House | River Road, New Windsor, New York 41°28′23″N 74°00′55″W / 41.472976°N 74.015286°W |
June 24 to July 21, 1779[122] | Demolished. | |
Returns to Colonel Stephen Moore House | Target Hill, United States Military Academy, West Point, New York 41°24′10″N 73°58′03″W / 41.402678°N 73.967565°W |
July 21 to November 28, 1779 | Demolished, possibly as early as 1812. Now the site of Target Hill Athletic Fields. Image: The Moore House is in the upper left corner of the fort. | |
Returns to Mandeville's Tavern Jacob Mandeville, proprietor |
Lower Station Road, Garrison, New York 41°22′36″N 73°56′42″W / 41.376667°N 73.945000°W |
July 26, 1779 | Expenses "to cash paid at Mandevils for house–rooms &c. – £2.5.0." | |
Returns to Van Cortlandt Upper Manor House | 110 Oregon Road, Cortlandt Manor, New York 41°18′44″N 73°54′22″W / 41.312222°N 73.906111°W |
November 28 to 30 1779 | ||
Jacob Ford Mansion | 30 Washington Place, Morristown, New Jersey 40°47′52″N 74°27′55″W / 40.797795°N 74.465203°W |
December 1, 1779 to June 7, 1780 | "December 31st. Lady Washington arrived at Head Quarters at Morristown."[123] | |
Briant's Tavern Jacob Briant, proprietor |
Broad Street & New Jersey Route 24, Springfield Township, Union County, New Jersey 40°43′04″N 74°19′56″W / 40.7177958°N 74.3321648°W |
June 7 to 22, 1780 | June 7 – Battle of Connecticut Farms June 22 – Expenses paid to Jacob Briant – $800. Demolished. | |
Rockaway Bridge | Rockaway Township, New Jersey | June 23, 1780 | June 23 – Battle of Springfield | |
Henry Doremus House[124] | Main Road & Heritage Court, Whippany (now Montville), New Jersey 40°55′06″N 74°21′15″W / 40.918358°N 74.354192°W |
June 24 to 27, 1780 | June 25 – Expenses paid to Uzal Coe – $180 June 25 – Expenses paid to Mrs. Doremus – $40. | |
Isaac Vanderbeck House | Preakness, New Jersey[125] | June 27 to 29, 1780 | Expenses paid to Isaac Vanderbeck – $452. | |
Mr. Hopper | Ramapo (now Mahwah), New Jersey[126] | June 29 to July 1, 1780 | Expenses paid to Mr. Hopper – $200. | |
Passaic, New Jersey | ||||
Colonel Theunis Dey Mansion | 199 Totowa Road, Wayne, New Jersey 40°54′56″N 74°14′00″W / 40.915556°N 74.233333°W[127] |
July 1 to 29, 1780 | July 29 – Expenses paid to Col. Dey's servants – $50. | |
Beverley Robinson House (headquarters of General Benedict Arnold) |
Garrison, New York (opposite West Point) 41°21′54″N 73°56′59″W / 41.36493333°N 73.94975°W |
July 30 to 31, 1780 | Destroyed by fire in 1892. | |
Daniel Birdsall House | 979 Main Street, Peekskill, New York 41°17′29″N 73°55′13″W / 41.2914958°N 73.9202865°W |
July 31 to August 6, 1780 | Demolished. A restaurant opposite the site is named "Birdsall House." | |
Verplanck's Point, New York 41°14′57″N 73°57′44″W / 41.249167°N 73.962222°W |
August 6 to 7, 1780 | The Army crosses to the west side of the Hudson River. | ||
Talman House | Clarkstown, New York | August 7 to 8, 1780 | August 8 – Expenses paid to Mrs. Talman – $80. | |
DeWint House "near Orangetown" |
20 Livingston Avenue, Tappan, New York 41°01′11″N 73°56′48″W / 41.019722°N 73.946667°W |
August 8 to 24, 1780 | ||
Encampment near Liberty Pole Tavern Tunis Cooper, proprietor |
NE corner of Palisade Avenue & Tenafly Road, Teaneck and Englewood, New Jersey 40°53′50″N 73°58′47″W / 40.89718°N 73.97969°W |
August 24 to September 4, 1780 | "Head Quarters near the Liberty Pole."[128] Demolished circa 1880. | |
Zabriskie House | Old New Bridge Road, Steenrapie (now River Edge), New Jersey 40°54′49″N 74°01′51″W / 40.913611°N 74.030833°W |
September 4 to 17, 1780[129] | The house was confiscated from Loyalist Jan Zabriskie. | |
Hopper House | Peekskill, New York | September 17 to 18, 1780 | ||
September 18 to 19, 1780 | ||||
Samuel Keeler's Tavern | Ridgebury Road & George Washington Highway, Ridgefield, Connecticut 41°21′39″N 73°31′29″W / 41.360850°N 73.524717°W |
September 19 to 20, 1780 | September 20 – In Washington's absence, the Army marches from Steenrapie to Orangetown, New York.[130] | |
Jeremiah Wadsworth House | 600 Main Street, Hartford, Connecticut 41°45′48″N 72°40′26″W / 41.763333°N 72.673889°W |
September 20 to 23, 1780 | September 20–22 – Conference at Hartford.[131] Washington meets with French General Rochambeau and French Admiral De Ternay. Demolished in 1887. Wadsworth Atheneum now occupies the site. | |
Oliver Wolcott House | South Street, Litchfield, Connecticut 41°44′36″N 73°11′16″W / 41.743333°N 73.187778°W |
September 23 to 24, 1780 | ||
Peekskill, New York | September 24 to 25, 1780 | |||
Returns to Beverley Robinson House | Garrison, New York (opposite West Point) 41°21′54″N 73°56′59″W / 41.36493333°N 73.94975°W |
September 25 to 28, 1780 | September 25 – Washington arrives at the Robinson House an hour after Benedict Arnold flees to the British warship HMS Vulture. Destroyed by fire in 1892. | |
Returns to DeWint House | 20 Livingston Avenue, Tappan, New York 41°01′11″N 73°56′48″W / 41.019722°N 73.946667°W |
September 28 to October 7, 1780[132] | September 29 – British Major John André is tried and sentenced to death for spying. October 1 – Washington visits Preakness, New Jersey. October 2 – Major André hanged on nearby Gallows Hill. | |
Paramus, New Jersey | October 7 to 9, 1780[133] | |||
Returns to Theunis Dey Mansion | 199 Totowa Road, Wayne, New Jersey 40°54′56″N 74°14′00″W / 40.915556°N 74.233333°W |
October 9 to 26, 1780 | ||
William Crane House[134] | Valley Road and Claremont Avenue, Cranetown (now Montclair, New Jersey, 40°49′14″N 74°13′16″W / 40.820556°N 74.22111°W |
October 26, 1780 | Temporary headquarters.[135] The house was torn down in 1900.[136] | |
near Passaic Falls[137] | Preakness, New Jersey | October 27 to 30, 1780 | ||
Returns to Theunis Dey Mansion | 199 Totowa Road, Wayne, New Jersey 40°54′56″N 74°14′00″W / 40.915556°N 74.233333°W |
October 30 to November 27, 1780 | ||
Passaic, New Jersey | November 27 to 28, 1780 | |||
Morristown, New Jersey | November 28 to | |||
Returns to Colonel Thomas Ellison House[138][circular reference] | 1048 River Rd, New Windsor, NY 12553 | December 6, 1780[139] to May 18, 1781 | The Thomas Ellison House was built by William Bull of Orange County, NY, in 1754. A copy of the contract is in possession of the William Bull and Sarah Wells Stone House Association. The house was one of five known houses built by Bull, an immigrant from Ireland.[140] | |
Morgan's Tavern Gideon Morgan, proprietor[141] |
Litchfield, Connecticut | May 18 to 19, 1781 | ||
Joseph Webb House | Wethersfield, Connecticut 41°42′43″N 72°39′11″W / 41.7120569°N 72.6531069°W |
May 19 to 24, 1781 | ||
Cogswell's Tavern William Cogswell, proprietor |
Christian Street, New Preston, Connecticut |
May 24 to 25, 1781 | The tavern is now a private residence, owned by one of Cogswell's descendants.[142] | |
Returns to Colonel Thomas Ellison House | River Road, New Windsor, New York 41°28′23″N 74°00′55″W / 41.472976°N 74.015286°W |
May 25 to June 26, 1781 | ||
Returns to Van Cortlandt Upper Manor House | 110 Oregon Road, Cortlandt Manor, New York 41°18′44″N 73°54′22″W / 41.312222°N 73.906111°W |
June 26 to July 2, 1781 | ||
Tarrytown, New York | July 2, 1781 | |||
Returns to Valentine's Mile Square | Valentine's Hill, Yonkers, New York 40°55′52″N 73°51′52″W / 40.931141°N 73.864349°W |
July 2 to 4, 1781 | Now the site of St. Joseph's Seminary. | |
"Appleby Place" (Joseph Appleby House)[143] | Secor Road, Philipsburg (now Hartsdale), New York 41°01′32″N 73°49′40″W / 41.025607°N 73.8278573°W |
July 4 to 21, 1781 | Demolished. | |
Returns to Elijah Miller House | Virginia Road, North White Plains, New York 41°03′33″N 73°46′15″W / 41.059167°N 73.770833°W |
July 5 to 7, 1781 | July 6 – Washington visits French troops at White Plains. | |
King's Bridge, Bronx, New York City, New York |
July 21 to 22, 1781 | |||
Returns to "Appleby Place" (Joseph Appleby House) | Secor Road, Philipsburg (now Hartsdale), New York 41°01′32″N 73°49′40″W / 41.025607°N 73.8278573°W |
July 23 to August 19, 1781 | Demolished. | |
King's Ferry (now Verplanck), New York | August 19 to 20, 1781 | |||
Joshua Hett Smith House, also known as "Treason House" | Treason Hill, West Haverstraw, New York 41°12′48″N 73°59′19″W / 41.213333°N 73.988475°W |
August 20 to 25, 1781 | On the march to Virginia, the combined Continental and French Armies cross to the west side of the Hudson River at King's Ferry. Demolished circa 1921.[144] Now the site of Helen Hayes Hospital. | |
John Phenix's Tavern "at the Larger Cross Roads in Bedminster." | Ramapo (now Mahwah), New Jersey | August 26 to 27, 1781 | ||
Jacob Morrel House | 63 Main Street, Chatham, New Jersey 40°44′21″N 74°22′28″W / 40.739127°N 74.374471°W |
August 27 to 29, 1781 | Now a restaurant. | |
Trenton, New Jersey | August 29 to 30, 1781 | |||
Robert Morris House | Front Street, south of Dock Creek, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania |
August 30 to September 5, 1781 | Demolished | |
Wilmington, Delaware | September 5 to 6, 1781 | |||
St. Patrick's Inn John Pritchard, proprietor |
108 West Main Street, Newark, Delaware 39°40′59″N 75°45′22″W / 39.683184°N 75.755982°W |
September 6 to 7, 1781 | Demolished 1851 | |
Darlington, Maryland | September 7 to 8, 1781 | |||
Fountain Inn Tavern Daniel Grant, proprietor |
SE corner of Baltimore & Hanover Streets, Baltimore, Maryland 39°17′22″N 76°36′59″W / 39.2893723°N 76.6162927°W |
September 8 to 9, 1781 | September 8 – Expenses paid to Daniel Grant – £10.10.7.[145] Demolished circa 1872. | |
September 9, 1781 | Expenses "from Baltimore to my house" – £14.16.9. | |||
Mount Vernon | Fairfax County, Virginia 38°42′28″N 77°05′09″W / 38.707778°N 77.085833°W |
September 9 to 12, 1781 | ||
Dumfries, Virginia | September 12 to 13, 1781[146] | |||
Bolling Green, Virginia? | September 13 to 14, 1781 | |||
George Wythe House | west side of Palace Green, Williamsburg, Virginia 37°16′18″N 76°42′12″W / 37.271667°N 76.703333°W |
September 14 to 17, 1781 | ||
Aboard the Queen Charlotte | September 17 to 22, 1781[147] | Washington sails down the James River to meet with French Admiral de Barras aboard the Ville de Paris, off Cape Henry Virginia. "Expenses of a Trip to the French Fleet off Cape Henry" – £25. | ||
Returns to George Wythe House | west side of Palace Green, Williamsburg, Virginia 37°16′18″N 76°42′12″W / 37.271667°N 76.703333°W |
September 22 to 28, 1781 | ||
Encampment | Yorktown, Virginia 37°12′09″N 76°31′58″W / 37.202533°N 76.532816°W |
September 28 to 29, 1781 | September 28 – Siege of Yorktown begins. | |
October 19, 1781 | British General Cornwallis surrenders at Yorktown | |||
Burwell Bassett House, Eltham Plantation | Eltham Road, Eltham, Virginia 37°31′44″N 76°50′21″W / 37.528808°N 76.839138°W |
November 5 to 11, 1781 | November 5 – Washington rushes to the bedside of his stepson, John Parke Custis, who dies that day. Destroyed by fire in 1876. | |
Returns to Mount Vernon | Fairfax County, Virginia 38°42′28″N 77°05′09″W / 38.707778°N 77.085833°W |
November 13 to 20, 1781 | ||
Annapolis, Maryland | November 21 to 23, 1781 | |||
Governor John Penn House | 242 South 3rd Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 39°56′45″N 75°08′49″W / 39.94585°N 75.14683°W |
November 26, 1781 to March 22, 1782 | Confiscated from Loyalist Governor John Penn. Following the October 1781 victory at Yorktown, George and Martha Washington spend the winter in Philadelphia. Demolished circa 1850. Image: The Governor John Penn House is in the background, right. | |
Trenton, New Jersey | March 23 to 24, 1782 | |||
Returns to John Wallace House | 71 Somerset Street, Middlebrook (now Somerville), New Jersey 40°34′08″N 74°37′19″W / 40.568889°N 74.621944°W |
March 24 to 25, 1782 | ||
Returns to Jacob Ford Mansion | 30 Washington Place, Morristown, New Jersey 40°47′52″N 74°27′55″W / 40.797795°N 74.465203°W |
March 25 to 28, 1782 | ||
Returns to Sloat House ("Mr. Lots House").[148] | NY State Route 17 & Sterling Avenue, Sloatsburg, New York 41°09′06″N 74°11′38″W / 41.151687°N 74.193889°W |
March 29 to 30, 1782 | ||
Returns to Colonel William Colfax House | 2343 Paterson-Hamburg Turnpike, Pompton (now Wayne), New Jersey 40°59′15″N 74°16′47″W / 40.9875°N 74.279722°W |
March 30 to 31, 1782 | Washington meets with Colonel Philip Van Cortlandt. Visits "York Hutts" (New York militia encampment).[149] | |
Returns to Robert Erskine House | Sloatsburg Road, Ringwood Manor State Park, Ringwood, New Jersey 41°08′40″N 74°15′10″W / 41.144444°N 74.252778°W |
March 31, 1782[150] | Demolished or destroyed by fire by 1810. | |
Jonathan Hasbrouck House, Washington's Headquarters State Historic Site |
Washington Street, Newburgh, New York 41°29′52″N 74°00′36″W / 41.497778°N 74.01°W |
March 31 to June 24, 1782 | ||
Poughkeepsie, New York | June 24, 1782 | |||
Albany, New York | June 26 to 28, 1782 | |||
Saratoga, New York | June 29 to 30, 1782 | |||
Albany, New York | June 30 to July 1, 1782 | |||
Returns to Jonathan Hasbrouck House, Washington's Headquarters State Historic Site |
Washington Street, Newburgh, New York 41°29′52″N 74°00′36″W / 41.497778°N 74.01°W |
July 1 to 11 or 12, 1782 | ||
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | July 14 to 22 or 23, 1782 | July 19 – Conference with French General Rochambeau. | ||
Moravian Sun Inn | 564 Main Street, Bethlehem, Pennsylvania 40°37′19″N 75°22′54″W / 40.621944°N 75.381667°W |
July 24, 1782 | ||
Returns to Jonathan Hasbrouck House, Washington's Headquarters State Historic Site |
Washington Street, Newburgh, New York 41°29′52″N 74°00′36″W / 41.497778°N 74.01°W |
July 28 to August 30, 1782 | August 17 – Visit to West Point | |
Encampment | Verplanck's Point, New York 41°14′57″N 73°57′44″W / 41.249167°N 73.962222°W |
August 31 to October 27, 1782[151] |
Washington at Verplanck's Point (1790) by John Trumbull, depicts Washington, on September 14, 1782, reviewing the French troops under General Rochambeau on their return from Virginia after the victory at Yorktown.[152] | |
Returns to Colonel Stephen Moore House | Target Hill, United States Military Academy, West Point, New York 41°24′10″N 73°58′03″W / 41.402678°N 73.967565°W |
October 27 to 28, 1782 | Demolished, possibly as early as 1812. Now the site of Target Hill Athletic Fields. Image: The Moore House is in the upper left corner of the fort. | |
Returns to Jonathan Hasbrouck House, Washington's Headquarters State Historic Site |
Washington Street, Newburgh, New York 41°29′52″N 74°00′36″W / 41.497778°N 74.01°W |
October 28 to November 14 or 15, 1782 | ||
Cornelius Wynkoop Stone House | 3721 Main Street, Marbletown, New York 41°50′48″N 74°08′43″W / 41.846667°N 74.145278°W |
November 15 to 16, 1782 | ||
Major Christopher Tappen House | North Front Street, Kingston, New York |
November 16 to 17, 1782 | Demolished. November 16 – Washington visits the rebuilt Old Dutch Church, that had been burned by the British. | |
Colonel Johannes Hardenbergh House Jacob Rutsen House |
Rosendale, New York | November 17, 1782 | The house burned July 5, 1911, and was demolished.[153] November 17 – Washington dines with Col. Hardenbergh. | |
Returns to Jonathan Hasbrouck House, Washington's Headquarters State Historic Site |
Washington Street, Newburgh, New York 41°29′52″N 74°00′36″W / 41.497778°N 74.01°W |
November 17 or 18, 1782 to May 3, 1783 | ||
Dobbs Ferry, New York | May 3 to 4, 1783 | |||
Returns to DeWint House | 20 Livingston Avenue, Tappan, New York 41°01′11″N 73°56′48″W / 41.019722°N 73.946667°W |
May 4 to 8, 1783 | Peace negotiations with Sir Guy Carleton | |
Dobbs Ferry, New York | May 8 to 9, 1783 | |||
Returns to Jonathan Hasbrouck House, Washington's Headquarters State Historic Site |
Washington Street, Newburgh, New York 41°29′52″N 74°00′36″W / 41.497778°N 74.01°W |
May 9 to July 18, 1783 | May 16 – Washington visits Poughkeepsie, New York. | |
General Philip Schuyler Mansion | 32 Catherine Street, Albany, New York 42°38′23″N 73°45′38″W / 42.639722°N 73.760556°W |
July 18 to 19, 1783 | July 18 to August 5 – Tour of northern New York forts.[154] "I have resolved to wear away a little Time, in performg a Tour to the Northward, as far as Tyconderoga & Crown–point – and perhaps as far up the Mohawk River as fort Schuyler—"[155] | |
General Schuyler House | Saratoga National Historical Park, Schuylerville, New York 43°05′44″N 73°34′56″W / 43.095692°N 73.582203°W |
Washington tours the Saratoga Battlefields with General Philip Schuyler. | ||
Fort William Henry | South end of Lake George, Lake George, New York 43°25′13″N 73°42′40″W / 43.420278°N 73.711111°W |
"Mr Dimler ... precedes us to make arrangments [sic], and particularly to have some light Boats provided & transported to Lake George that we may not be delayed on our Arrival there,"[156] | ||
Fort Ticonderoga | South end of Lake Champlain, Ticonderoga, New York 43°50′30″N 73°23′15″W / 43.841667°N 73.3875°W |
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Fort Crown Point | West side of Lake Champlain, Crown Point, New York 44°01′45″N 73°25′52″W / 44.029167°N 73.431111°W |
July 21, 1783? | ||
High Rock Spring? | High Rock Park, Maple Avenue, Saratoga Springs, New York 43°05′11″N 73°46′48″W / 43.0863679°N 73.7801308°W |
July 26 – Washington dates at letter from Saratoga.[157] Reputedly, Washington and General Schuyler camp at High Rock Spring.[158] Image: High Rock Spring in 1875. | ||
Fort Schenectady[159] | South side of the Mohawk River, Front & Ferry Streets, Schenectady, New York 42°49′06″N 73°56′46″W / 42.818258°N 73.946°W |
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Fort Johnstown | North side of the Mohawk River, Perry & Montgomery Streets, Johnstown, New York 43°00′11″N 74°22′16″W / 43.003056°N 74.371111°W |
|||
Fort Rensselaer[160] Peter Wormuth House? |
South side of the Mohawk River, Wiles Park, Fort Plain, New York 42°56′12″N 74°38′11″W / 42.936706°N 74.636383°W |
Demolished. Image: Fort Rensselaer (marked "Old Fort Plains") is near the top of the map. | ||
Fort Herkimer | South side of the Mohawk River, German Flatts, New York 43°01′01″N 74°57′09″W / 43.016944°N 74.9525°W |
August 1, 1783[161] | "I find it indispensably necessary to the public service that a magazine of Provisions should be laid up immediately at the Post of Fort Herkemer"[162] Demolished in 1840. | |
Fort Dayton | North side of the Mohawk River, Herkimer, New York 43°01′45″N 74°59′24″W / 43.029167°N 74.99°W |
|||
Old Fort Schuyler | South side of the Mohawk River, Main Street, Utica, New York 43°06′15″N 75°13′28″W / 43.10425°N 75.22441667°W |
|||
Fort Schuyler (formerly Fort Stanwix) | North side of the Mohawk River, Park Street, Rome, New York 43°12′38″N 75°27′19″W / 43.210556°N 75.45525°W |
Located at the portage between the Mohawk River and Wood Creek. | ||
Wood Creek | 43°12′12″N 75°41′35″W / 43.203333°N 75.693056°W | |||
Lake Otsego, source of the Susquehanna River | Council Rock Park, Cooperstown, New York 42°42′05″N 74°55′13″W / 42.701308°N 74.920416°W |
|||
Fort Alden | Cherry Valley, New York 42°48′32″N 74°44′14″W / 42.808889°N 74.737222°W |
Located at the portage between Lake Otsego and the Mohawk River. | ||
Van Alstyne House? | Canajoharie, New York 42°54′12″N 74°34′22″W / 42.903333°N 74.572778°W |
|||
Returns to Fort Rensselaer[160] | South side of the Mohawk River, Wiles Park, Fort Plain, New York 42°56′12″N 74°38′11″W / 42.936706°N 74.636383°W |
August 3 – Washington dates a letter from Fort Rensselaer.[163] Demolished. Image: Fort Rensselaer (marked "Old Fort Plains") is near the top of the map. | ||
Returns to General Philip Schuyler Mansion | 32 Catherine Street, Albany, New York 42°38′23″N 73°45′38″W / 42.639722°N 73.760556°W |
August 4 to 5, 1783 | August 5 – Washington and his staff leave Albany by boat. Return to Newburgh.[164] | |
Returns to Jonathan Hasbrouck House, Washington's Headquarters State Historic Site |
Washington Street, Newburgh, New York 41°29′52″N 74°00′36″W / 41.497778°N 74.01°W |
August 5 to 19, 1783[165] | "I have lately made a tour through the Lakes George & Champlain as far as Crown point; then returning to Schenectady, I proceeded up the Mohawk river to Fort Schuyler (formerly Fort Stanwix), & crossed over to the Wood Creek which empties into the Oneida Lake, & affords the water communication with Ontario. I then traversed the country to the head of the Eastern Branch of the Susquehanna & viewed the Lake Otsego, & the portage between that lake & the Mohawk river at Canajohario."[166] | |
Returns to Colonel Stephen Moore House | Target Hill, United States Military Academy, West Point, New York 41°24′10″N 73°58′03″W / 41.402678°N 73.967565°W |
August 19 to 20, 1783 | Demolished, possibly as early as 1812. Now the site of Target Hill Athletic Fields. Image: The Moore House is in the upper left corner of the fort. | |
Thomas or Nathan Birdsall House | southeast of Fredericksburg, New Jersey | Expenses paid "at Birdsalls" – £5.2.6. Demolished. | ||
Major Johannes Joseph Blauvelt House | Western Highway, Blauvelt, New York 41°03′23″N 73°57′22″W / 41.05645°N 73.95598°W |
Expenses paid "at Majr Blauvets for the use of his Hs [House] Furniture &c." – £18.13.4. | ||
"Rockingham" (John Berrien House) | Rocky Hill, New Jersey 40°23′54″N 74°37′32″W / 40.398333°N 74.625556°W |
August 23 to November 10, 1783 | Congress is in session in nearby Princeton. Washington makes daily trips there to meet with them. He composed his Farewell Orders to the Armies of the United States here. August 23 to 31 – "To Beakman's Tavern in Princeton for Horses & Servants at Sundry times – £5.10.0." The house was relocated in 1897, 1956, and 2001 because of quarry expansion. Now a state historic site near Kingston, New Jersey.[167] | |
Hackensack, New Jersey | November 10, 1783 | Addressed the Militia Officers of Bergen County.[168] | ||
Returns to DeWint House | 20 Livingston Avenue, Tappan, New York 41°01′11″N 73°56′48″W / 41.019722°N 73.946667°W |
November 11 to 14, 1783 | Forced to stay here on the way to West Point by a snowstorm.[169] "Lieutenant-Colonel Benjamin Walker's expense account shows the route from Rocky Hill to have been: Brunswick, Elizabethtown, Second River Ferry, Hackensack, Tappan, King's Ferry, and from King's Ferry to West Point by barge."[170] | |
Returns to Colonel Stephen Moore House | Target Hill, United States Military Academy, West Point, New York 41°24′10″N 73°58′03″W / 41.402678°N 73.967565°W |
November 14 to 15, 1783 | Demolished, possibly as early as 1812. Now the site of Target Hill Athletic Fields. Image: The Moore House is in the upper left corner of the fort. | |
Poughkeepsie, New York | November 15 to 16 or 17, 1783 | |||
Returns to Colonel Stephen Moore House | Target Hill, United States Military Academy, West Point, New York 41°24′10″N 73°58′03″W / 41.402678°N 73.967565°W |
November 17 to 21, 1783 | Demolished, possibly as early as 1812. Now the site of Target Hill Athletic Fields. Image: The Moore House is in the upper left corner of the fort. | |
Egbert Benson's | Poughkeepsie, New York | November 21 to 22, 1783 | ||
Blue Bell Tavern Jacob Moore, proprietor |
Broadway & 181st Street, Harlem, Manhattan, New York City, New York |
November 22 to 24, 1783 | Demolished in 1876. | |
Leggett's Halfway Tavern | west of 5th Avenue & 106th Street, Harlem, Manhattan, New York City, New York |
November 24 to 25, 1783 | Now part of Central Park. | |
November 25 – British evacuation from New York City. | ||||
Bull's Head Tavern | The Bowery, below Canal Street, Manhattan, New York City, New York 40°42′58″N 73°59′48″W / 40.716106°N 73.996556°W |
November 25 to 26, 1783 | Destroyed by fire in 1828. | |
Fraunces Tavern | Broad & Pearl Streets, Manhattan, New York City, New York 40°42′12″N 74°00′41″W / 40.703333°N 74.011389°W |
November 26 to December 4, 1783 | December 4 – Washington's farewell dinner for his officers. |
See also
editCitations
edit- ^ a b c Washington to Samuel Kennedy, 26 September 1777 from the National Archives.
- ^ Benjamin Wadsworth House Archived 2014-04-16 at the Wayback Machine from Historic Buildings of Massachusetts.
- ^ a b c Expenses paid on the Road ... April 1776. from the George Washington Papers.
- ^ a b Expense Account of Journey to and from Philadelphia from National Archives.
- ^ Varnum Lansing Collins, The Continental Congress at Princeton (University Library, 1908), p. 126.
- ^ William H. Benedict, "Early Taverns in New Brunswick," Proceedings of the New Jersey Historical Society, vol. 3, no. 3 (July 1918), p. 137.
- ^ Queen's College (now Rutgers University) held classes at the tavern from 1771 to 1774. They were suspended when the only teacher, Frederick Frelinghuysen, joined the Continental Army. There is a short bio of Frelinghuysen available from Founders Online. See footnote 1 in Proclamation to the Friends of America in the State of New Jersey, 31 December 1776.
- ^ Petition of Samuel Fraunces to the U.S. Congress, March 5, 1785. — "That he [Fraunces] was the Person that first discovered the Conspiracy which was formed in the Year 1776 against the Life of his Excellency General Washington ..." "Memorials Addressed to Congress, 1775-88," Papers of the Continental Congress, Record Group 360, M.247, Reel 49, National Archives, Washington, D.C.
- ^ "Washington's New York City Headquarters – No. 1 Broadway". 9 July 2013.
- ^ McKinley, Jesse (21 July 1996). "F.Y.I." The New York Times.
- ^ Moscow, Henry (1990). The Street Book: An Encyclopedia of Manhattan's Street Names and Their Origins. Fordham University Press. ISBN 978-0-8232-1275-0.
- ^ Van Cortlandt Upper Manor House from Westchester County Historical Society.
- ^ Washington to John Hancock, 16 November 1776 from the National Archives.
- ^ "Peter Zabriskie's Mansion House Site".
- ^ Leiby, Adrian C. (1980). The Revolutionary War in the Hackensack Valley: The Jersey Dutch and the Neutral Ground, 1775–1783. Rutgers University Press. ISBN 978-0-8135-0898-6.
- ^ Scott, William W. (September 1, 1931). "Passaic's Victory Day: How Washington's Retreat Became Stabilized at Passaic". Passaic County Historical Society. Archived from the original on 19 December 2015. Retrieved 2 December 2015.
- ^ "The Blanchard House Historical Marker".
- ^ Cummings, Chareles (May 13, 1999). "Visitors (Presidential and Otherwise) Have Made the Scene". Newark Star-Ledge.
- ^ Barber, John Warner; Howe, Henry (1844). Historical Collections of the State of New Jersey: Containing a General Collection of the Most Interesting Facts, Traditions, Biographical Sketches, Anecdotes, Etc. Relating to Its History and Antiquities, with Geographical Descriptions of Every Township in the State. NYPL.
- ^ "George Washington slept here: NJ homes where our founding father spent time". The Star-Ledger. February 13, 2014. Retrieved January 20, 2019.
- ^ Tuttle, Brad R. (2009). How Newark Became Newark: The Rise, Fall, and Rebirth of an American City. Rutgers University Press. ISBN 978-0-8135-4656-8.
- ^ "Newark Hostelries Opened Their Doors to Diverse New Worlds". Newark Public Library. December 2, 1999.
- ^ Demasters, Karen (October 14, 2001). "ON THE MAP; With Roots in Earliest Newark, This Tree Has Seen It All". The New York Times.
- ^ Washington to Gen. William Heath, 29 November 1776 from the National Archives.
- ^ "George Washington slept here: NJ homes where our founding father spent time". 13 February 2014.
- ^ Rojas, Christina (July 24, 2017). "Historic house being restored for $300K. Yes, George Washington stayed here". NJ.com. Retrieved 24 July 2017.
- ^ John Fenner House from Historic American Buildings Survey.
- ^ Washington to John Hancock, 5 January 1777 from the National Archives.
- ^ Pluckemin, Washington's Headquarters from Rutgers University.
- ^ General Orders, 29 May 1777 from the National Archives.
- ^ General Orders, 29 May 1777 (footnote 1, Gen. George Weedon to John Page, 31 May 1777) from the National Archives.
- ^ General Orders, 24 June 1777 from the National Archives.
- ^ Gen. Stirling to Washington, 3 July 1777 from the National Archives.
- ^ "Bullion's Tavern" (PDF). National Park Service.
- ^ "Continental Army Winter Encampments. Morristown, New Jersey and vicinity" (PDF). National Park Service.
- ^ a b Washington to Gen. John Sullivan, 12 July 1777 from the National Archives.
- ^ General Orders, 14 July 1777 from the National Archives.
- ^ Washington to John Hancock, 14 July 1777 from the National Archives.
- ^ Washington to Gen. Israel Putnam, 15 July 1777 from the National Archives.
- ^ John P. Galloway Jr., George Galloway: A Loyalist's Story (2012)
- ^ General Orders, 21 July 1777 from the National Archives.
- ^ General Orders, 25 July 1777 from the National Archives.
- ^ Washington to Col. Daniel Morgan, 26 July 1777 from the National Archives.
- ^ Washington to Col. Theodorick Bland, 26 July 1777 from the National Archives.
- ^ General Orders, 26 July 1777 from the National Archives.
- ^ "Pequannock Township Master Plan" (PDF).
- ^ Washington to Gen. Israel Putnam, 28 July 1777 from the National Archives.
- ^ Washington to Christopher Ludwick, 25 July 1777 from the National Archives.
- ^ "Holcombe House, Lambertville, Hunterdon County, Hew Jersey" (PDF). Historic American Buildings Survey, HABS NJ-56.
- ^ Holcombe House Information Sign. Hunterdon County Cultural & Heritage Commission.
- ^ General Orders, 27 July 1777 from the National Archives.
- ^ Washington to Gen. Nathanael Greene, 1 August, 1777 from the National Archives.
- ^ General Orders, 5 August, 1777 from the National Archives.
- ^ Washington to John Hancock, 10 August, 1777 from the National Archives.
- ^ Washington to Col. Daniel Morgan, 10 August, 1777 from the National Archives.
- ^ Jacob Rudolph was listed as a tavernkeeper in Lower Darby Township in 1774. Pennsylvania Archives, 3rd series, vol. 12 (J. Severns & Company, 1897), p. 10. In 1777, he was a captain in the Pennsylvania Militia. During the retreat from Brandywine, he was captured by the British at Darby on September 12. Decennial Register of the Pennsylvania Society of Sons of the Revolution (F.B. Lippincott, 1898), p. 403.
- ^ General Orders, 24 August, 1777 from the National Archives.
- ^ Washington to Capt. Benjamin Pollard, 6 September 1777 from the National Archives.
- ^ a b c Bill for Expenses of George Washington's Staff [21 September 1777] from the National Archives.
- ^ "George Washington Witness Tree of Delaware - History of the Hale-Byrnes House and the George Washington Witness Tree of". www.georgewashingtonwitnesstreeofdelaware.org. Retrieved 2022-12-09.
- ^ General Orders, 6 September 1777 from the National Archives.
- ^ General Orders, 13 September 1777 from the National Archives.
- ^ Buck Tavern from Lower Merion Historical Society.
- ^ From George Washington to Brigadier General William Maxwell, 17 September 1777; at Yellow Springs
- ^ General Orders, 18 September 1777; at Reading Furnace
- ^ "General Washington retreated to passed Warwick to Reading to have the army's muskets repaired," Reading Furnace Historical Marker, May 12, 1948.
- ^ "Upgrades coming to historic Parker Ford Tavern," The Pottstown Mercury News, January 26, 2009.[1]
- ^ General Orders, 19 September, 1777 from the National Archives.
- ^ Washington to Gen. Philemon Dickinson, 22 September 1777 from the National Archives.
- ^ General Orders, 22 September 1777 from the National Archives.
- ^ Washington to Gen. Israel Putnam, 23 September 1777 from the National Archives.
- ^ General Orders, 23 September 1777 from the National Archives.
- ^ Washington to Dr. Samuel Kennedy, 26 September 1777 from the National Archives.
- ^ General Orders, 30 September 1777 from the National Archives.
- ^ General Orders, 2 October 1777 from the National Archives.
- ^ Washington to John Gill, 6 October 1777 from the National Archives.
- ^ General Orders, 5 October 1777 from the National Archives.
- ^ General Orders, 9 October, 1777 from the National Archives.
- ^ General Orders, 16 October 1777 from the National Archives.
- ^ General Orders, 11 December 1777 from the National Archives.
- ^ Revolutionary War Journals of Henry Dearborn, 1775–1783, Lloyd A. Brown & Howard H. Peckham, eds. (New York: 1939, reprinted 1971), p. 118.
- ^ General Orders, 19 June 1778 from the National Archives.
- ^ Judith A. Meier, An Historic District within the Boundaries of the Norristown State Hospital Archived 2019-10-22 at the Wayback Machine (East Norriton Township, 2000).
- ^ General Orders, 20 June 1778 from the National Archives.
- ^ General Orders, 21 June 1778 from the National Archives.
- ^ Washington to Gen. Charles Lee, 22 June 1778 from the National Archives.
- ^ Gen. Lafayette to Washington, 25 June 1778 from the National Archives.
- ^ "Englishtown, New Jersey Revolutionary War Sites – Englishtown, New Jersey Historic Sites". www.revolutionarywarnewjersey.com.
- ^ "Ross Hall". The Metlar-Bodine House Museum.
- ^ Steiner, Bernard Christian (1907). The Life and Correspondence of James McHenry: Secretary of War Under Washington and Adams. Burrows Brothers Company. p. 22 – via Internet Archive.
After viewing these falls we seated ourselves.
- ^ "It was about 6 o'clock in the (15 July) morning when we bade adieu to the Hermitage —" McHenry, p. 23.
- ^ Alexander Hamilton to Capt. Patrick Dennis, 16 July 1778 from the National Archives.
- ^ Rasnick, Marvin (1979). "Staunch Patriot: Ann Hawkes Hay". South of the Mountains. New York: The Historical Society of Rockland County: 7–13.
- ^ Levy, Steven S. (April 22, 1976). "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: Hoyer House".
- ^ Washington to Gen. Horatio Gates, 19 July 1778 from the National Archives.
- ^ Gen. Charles Scott to Washington, 20 September 1778 from the National Archives.
- ^ "The 20th. [A]fter twelve miles March we Come to Mr. Right's mills on the age [edge] of the White Planes." Elijah Fisher's Journal.
- ^ "The 27th. Head Quarters moved Down to the White Planes" Elijah Fisher's Journal.
- ^ This may be the house of Lieutenant Ephraim Raymond of the New York Militia, who was from Bedford.
- ^ "Sept. 16. We Left the White planes and Marching through North Castel and after sixteen miles March we Come to Mr. Rayemand in Bedford." Elijah Fisher's Journal.
- ^ "The 18th. We Left Bedford and Marched and Come to Fredrexburg, after the March of fifteen miles and Pitched our tents." Elijah Fisher's Journal.
- ^ The Ferris property appears on a 1778 map, prepared for Washington's use by Robert Erskine, geographer with the Continental Army. A detail of the map was published in Rev. Warren H. Wilson, Quaker Hill in the Nineteenth Century (Quaker Hill Conference Association, 1907), frontispiece. [2]
- ^ "The 19th. We Left Fredericksburg and after thirteen miles march we pitched our tents at Mr. Reed [Ferris]'s field in Oblong." Elijah Fisher's Journal.
- ^ The 26th. Head Quarters and likewise the guard Left Oblong and come to Mr. Cain's, in Fredrexburg four miles and pitched tents." Elijah Fisher's Journal.
- ^ Washington to Gen. Johann DeKalb, 22 September 1778 from the National Archives.
- ^ "The 30th. His Exelency with his adde-camps went to Fishkill." Elijah Fisher's Journal.
- ^ Washington to Gen. Charles Scott, 8 October 1778 from the National Archives.
- ^ '"The 8th. His Exelency and Addecamp returned from Fishkill to Mr. Cane's." Elijah Fisher's Journal.
- ^ "Nov. 28th. His Exelency and also his Gard Left Fredericksburg and Marched for the Jarseys [New Jersey]" Elijah Fisher's Journal.
- ^ Washington to Maj. John Bigelow, 29 November 1778 from the National Archives.
- ^ "Nov. 28th. [A]t Night we Pitched our tents by Clane's tavern in Philipsepatten [Philipsburg] after the March of sixteen miles." Elijah Fisher's Journal.
- ^ "Dec. 1st. The guard Left Fishkill and Crossed at King's farrey Marched on to Col. Hazes and Encampt after Marching two and three is five miles." Elijah Fisher's Journal.
- ^ "The 2d. We left Col. Hazes and after seventeen miles March we Come to Mr. Jones Baggat in Romepawe [Ramapo] and Picht our tents." Elijah Fisher's Journal.
- ^ "The 3d. We left Romepawe and after twenty miles March we Come to Mr. Goods in Prequannackit [Pequannock]." Elijah Fisher's Journal.
- ^ "The 4th. We Left Mr. Goods and after twenty miles March we Come to Mr. Lott's in Troy and Pitcht our tents." Elijah Fisher's Journal.
- ^ "The 5th. We left Troy and Marched and Come to Morristown." Elijah Fisher's Journal.
- ^ "The 6th. We left Morristown and after twenty-three miles March we Come to Mr. Wallase, where His Exelency had his winter Quarters" Elijah Fisher's Journal.
- ^ "His Excellency's stay was rendered the more agreeable by the company of his lady, and the domestic retirement which he enjoyed at the house of the Honorable Henry Laurens, Esquire, with whom he resided." —Pennsylvania Packet, February 4, 1779.
- ^ General Orders, 6 February 1779 from the National Archives.
- ^ a b Alexander Hamilton to Gen. Arthur St. Clair, 5 June 1779 from the National Archives.
- ^ "The 21st. We Left Smith's Clove and after fourteen miles march we Come to Mr. Ellis in New Winsor where the Gen. had his Quarters" Elijah Fisher's Journal.
- ^ "The 20th. After putting all the baggage aboard the sloop we left New Winsor at four in the Afternoon and went by water to West Point and staid aboard that Night twelve miles." Elijah Fisher's Journal.
- ^ Elijah Fisher's Journal.
- ^ Henry Doremus House from Revolutionary War New Jersey.
- ^ "George Washington slept here: NJ homes where our founding father spent time". 13 February 2014.
- ^ "George Washington slept here: NJ homes where our founding father spent time". 13 February 2014.
- ^ "George Washington slept here: NJ homes where our founding father spent time". 13 February 2014.
- ^ Washington to Henry Lee, 24 August 1780 (Early Access Document) from the National Archives. Also available via Internet Archive as archived on January 7, 2020. Washington to Henry Lee, 24 August 1780 (Early Access Document).
- ^ "The 17th. Gen. Washington and Gen. Nocks [Knox] and Gen. DeMarkee [Lafayette] with there Addes set out from Head Quarters for Hartford to meet the French troops that was a coming to jine our army." Elijah Fisher's Journal.
- ^ "The 20th. The whole army had orders to March, the gard was beat, the tents loded into wagons and at ten in the morning the army left Strumpee and after Eleven miles march we come to Oringetown or Tappan and Encampt." Elijah Fisher's Journal.
- ^ Conference at Hartford, 22 September 1780 from the National Archives.
- ^ "The 7th. The army left Oringtown the genl. [general ] was beat at seven of the Clock in the morning and we Marched at Nine and after twelve miles march we Come to Puramas at half past ten in the Evening" Elijah Fisher's Journal.
- ^ The 9th. We left Puramas and Come to Quackit [Kakiat] and Encampt." Elijah Fisher's Journal.
- ^ Adams, W. I. Lincoln (1922). "The "Washington Headquarters" in Montclair". In Honeyman, A. Van Doren (ed.). Proceedings of the New Jersey Historical Society. Vol. 7. New Jersey Historical Society. pp. 143–5.
- ^ Temporary headquarters marker. Daughters of the American Revolution.
- ^ "To Mark Washington's Headquarters". The New York Times. November 29, 1912.
- ^ Washington to Jonathan Trumbull, 28 October, 1780 (Early Access Document) from the National Archives. Also available via Internet Archive as archived on January 7, 2020. Washington to Jonathan Trumbull 28 October 1780 (Early Access Document).
- ^ "Knox's Headquarters State Historic Site". Wikipedia.
- ^ Washington to Board of War, 7 December 1780 (Early Access Document) from the National Archives. Also available via Internet Archive as archived on January 7, 2020. Washington to Board of War, 7 December 1780 (Early Access Document).
- ^ "Bull Stone House".
- ^ "Colonel Gideon Morgan, I". geni_family_tree. 15 June 1751.
- ^ "Cogswell Tavern, New Preston, Connecticut." Daughters of the American Revolution Magazine, vol. 23, no. 5 (November 1903), pp. 360-62.[3]
- ^ Washington, George. Diary entry: 6 July 1781 from the National Archives.
- ^ Joshua Hett Smith House, Treason Hill from Hudson River Valley Heritage.
- ^ Washington, George. Diary Entry: 8 September 1781 from the National Archives.
- ^ Washington to Thomas McKean, 12 September 1781 (Early Access Document) from the National Archives. Also available via Internet Archive as archived on January 7, 2020. Washington to Thomas McKean, 12 September 1781 (Early Access Document).
- ^ Washington, George. Diary entry: 17 September 1781 from the National Archives.
- ^ Washington to Henry Knox (and Gouverneur Morris), 30 March 1782 (Early Access Document) from the National Archives. Also available via Internet Archive as archived on January 5, 2020. Washington to Henry Knox (and Gouverneur Morris), 30 March 1782 (Early Access Document).
- ^ Washington to Henry Knox, 30 March 1782 (Early Access Document) from the National Archives. Also available via Internet Archive as archived on January 13, 2020. Washington to Henry Knox, 30 March 1782 (Early Access Document).
- ^ Benjamin Walker to Gen. William Heath, 31 March 1782 (Early Access Document) from the National Archives. Also available via Internet Archive as archived on January 13, 2020. Benjamin Walker to Gen. William Heath, 31 March 1782 (Early Access Document).
- ^ Washington, George (1931). "General Orders". In Fitzpatrick, John C. (ed.). The Writings of George Washington from the Original Manuscript Sources, 1745–1799. Vol. 25. United States George Washington Bicentennial Commission. pp. 93–97.
- ^ Washington, George (1931). "Honors to Rochambeau". In Fitzpatrick, John C. (ed.). The Writings of George Washington from the Original Manuscript Sources, 1745–1799. Vol. 25. United States George Washington Bicentennial Commission. pp. 157–8.
- ^ Alan MacKenzie, "Old Stone Houses of Rosendale," Ulster County Historical Society, October 16, 1930.[4]
- ^ "I have always entertained a great desire to see the Northern part of this State before I returned to the Southward ... I have therefore concerted with Governor Clinton to make a Tour to reconnoitre those places where the most remarkable Posts were established, and the ground which became famous by being the theatre of Action in 1777—" Washington to Philip J. Schuyler 15 July 1783 (Early Access Document) from the National Archives. Also available via Internet Archive as archived on January 13, 2020. Washington to Philip John Schuyler, 15 July 1783 (Early Access Document).
- ^ Washington to Elias Boudinot, 16 July 1783 (Early Access Document) from the National Archives. Also available via Internet Archive as archived on January 13, 2020. Washington to Elias Boudinot, 16 July 1783 (Early Access Document).
- ^ Washington to Philip J. Schuyler 15 July 1783 (Early Access Document) from the National Archives. Also available via Internet Archive as archived on January 13, 2020. Washington to Philip John Schuyler, 15 July 1783 (Early Access Document).
- ^ "I wrote to you from Saratoga on the 26th Ulto" Washington to Timothy Pickering, 6 August 1783 (Early Access Document) from the National Archives. Also available via Internet Archive as archived on January 13, 2020. Washington to Timothy Pickering, 6 August 1783 (Early Access Document).
- ^ "History of Olde Bryan Inn: A Historic Saratoga Springs Restaurant Steeped in Regional Lore".
- ^ Fort Schenectady from New York State Military Museum.
- ^ a b Fort Plain from New York State Military Museum.
- ^ Leslie W. Devereux, March 1, 1932 presentation. Quoted by A.J. Berry, "Washington's Mohawk Valley Tour," Three Rivers: Hudson-Mohawk-Schoharie.[5]
- ^ Washington to William Duer, 26 July 1783 (Early Access Document) from the National Archives. Also available via Internet Archive as archived on January 13, 2020. Washington to William Duer, 26 July 1783 (Early Access Document).
- ^ Washington to Baron von Steuben, 3 August 1783 (Early Access Document) from the National Archives. Also available via Internet Archive as archived on January 13, 2020. Washington to Baron von Steuben, 3 August 1783 (Early Access Document).
- ^ Washington to Elias Boudinot, 6 August 1783 (Early Access Document) from the National Archives. Also available via Internet Archive as archived on January 13, 2020. Washington to Elias Boudinot, 6 August 1783 (Early Access Document).
- ^ "I returned to this place yesterday afternoon from a tour of Nineteen days through the Northern & Westwern parts of this State." Washington to William Stephens Smith, 6 August, 1783 (Early Access Document) from the National Archives. Also available via Internet Archive as archived on January 13, 2020. Washington to William Stephens Smith, 6 August 1783 (Early Access Document).
- ^ Washington to the Marquis de Chastellux, 12 October 1783 (Early Access Document) from the National Archives. As available via Internet Archive as archived on January 13, 2020. Washington to the Marquis de Chastellux, 12 October 1783 (Early Access Document).
- ^ Newman, Margaret (December 1, 2008). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory/Nomination: Rockingham". National Park Service.
- ^ Washington, George (1938). "To the Militia Officers of Bergen County". In Fitzpatrick, John C. (ed.). The Writings of George Washington from the Original Manuscript Sources, 1745–1799. Vol. 27. United States George Washington Bicentennial Commission. p. 240.
- ^ Cecil McKithan (January 1978). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination: De Wint House". National Park Service.
- ^ Washington, George (1917). Fitzpatrick, John Clement (ed.). George Washington's Accounts of Expenses While Commander-in-chief of the Continental Army, 1775–1783. Houghton Mifflin. p. 131.
General sources
edit- "Washington's Revolutionary War Itinerary and the Location of His Headquarters, 1775–1783". The Papers of George Washington, University of Virginia. 16 June 2018.
- William Spohn Baker, Itinerary of General Washington from June 15, 1775, to December 23, 1783, (Philadelphia: J.B. Lippincott Company, 1892).[6]
- Elijah Fisher's Journal while in the War for Independence, William B. Lapham, ed. (Augusta, Maine: Press of Badger and Manley, 1880).[7] Fisher joined Washington's life-guards March 30, 1778, while at Valley Forge.
- Bernard Christian Steiner, The Life and Correspondence of James McHenry: Secretary of War under Washington and Adams (Burrow Brothers Company, 1907).
External links
edit- Media related to Headquarters of George Washington - Revolutionary War at Wikimedia Commons
- Official Website: George Washington Witness Tree of Delaware Museum