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metsurf t1_j2sqzea wrote

The winter in Morristown was just about every bit as miserable as the more famous one at Valley Forge. Feet of snow in Jockey Hollow area.

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Jsnooots t1_j2svqo9 wrote

After the battle the American troops headed north following what would be rt27 from Princeton area towards New Brunswick.

Obviously there was no Carnegie lake but the millstone river was an obstacle.

The American troops crossed and then destroyed the bridge behind them.

It is dangerous to get your troops wet in the winter so that stopped any pursuit that day by the British.

I like to imagine when I'm at the bottom of the lake by the little bridge by the mill what it must have been like to be a soldier at that time. It must have mostly sucked but not that day.

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AspireAgain t1_j2sz48e wrote

We relocated from Illinois to Morris County for about 6 years and it was amazing how much Revolutionary War history there was in the area. Jockey Hollow was quite an eye-opener, as was when a reenactor at the Colonial Farm there joked that the farmhouse on site was probably the ONLY place in New Jersey that no one claim Washington visited, as History shows he never visited the troops in Jockey Hollow at all while they were there.

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metsurf t1_j2tiy0s wrote

I haven't been to any of the sites since my son was in elementary school. The HQ is in Morristown proper and there is a house called Schuyler Hamilton house where Hamilton met Elizabeth Schuyler his wife. The owner's apparently set them up.

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Longtermthrowaway5 t1_j2w58a0 wrote

trying to start another jersey border argument disguised as a history lesson. I see you.

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Jsnooots t1_j2weug2 wrote

Andrew Carnegie, the Scottish American industrialist/philanthropist, went to visit Princeton University.

He didn't think you could properly mold a young man with just rough sports, like American Football, so he donated money for a dam on the millstone river that would create Carnegie lake so.....that Princeton University could have men's rowing, a proper gentleman pastime.

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THE_some_guy t1_j2zyros wrote

It may be apocryphal- I'm skeptical that "bread" as slang for money was a thing in 1905, or that Wilson would have used it even if it was.

But if it's a lie, it's an entertaining one.

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