1736–1801
Annis Boudinot Stockton
2
Events in Princeton
Biography
Annis Boudinot Stockton was born on July 1, 1736, in Darby, Pennsylvania, to Elias Boudinot and Catherine Williams. She was the sister of Elias Boudinot IV, who would later serve as President of the Continental Congress. In 1757, she married Richard Stockton, a Princeton lawyer who would become a signer of the Declaration of Independence. The couple settled at Morven, the Stockton family estate on what is now Stockton Street in Princeton, where Annis transformed the grounds into elaborate formal gardens.
Stockton was an accomplished poet whose work circulated widely in colonial literary circles. She published under the pen name "Emelia" and later "Amelia," contributing verses to newspapers, magazines, and private manuscript collections. Her poetry addressed themes of patriotism, friendship, nature, and loss. She was one of the few women of her era whose literary work received public recognition, and she corresponded with other writers and political figures, including George Washington, who received and responded to her poetry on multiple occasions.
The Revolution struck the Stockton family with devastating force. When British troops advanced on Princeton in late November 1776, Annis buried the family's valuables and important papers in the garden at Morven before fleeing with her children. Her husband Richard was captured shortly afterward and imprisoned in New York. When the British occupied Princeton, they used Morven as a headquarters, destroying much of its contents, burning furniture for fuel, and slaughtering livestock. Annis's efforts to hide the family papers saved some irreplaceable documents, but the destruction of the house and grounds was extensive.
After Richard Stockton's release and subsequent decline in health, Annis managed the family's affairs largely on her own. Richard died in 1781, leaving Annis to rebuild the estate and raise their children. She continued to write poetry and maintained her literary correspondence for the rest of her life. She died on February 6, 1801.
WHY SHE MATTERS TO PRINCETON
Annis Boudinot Stockton provides a window into the experience of elite women during the Revolution — women who did not fight on battlefields but who bore the consequences of war in their homes, their families, and their daily lives. Her efforts to save the family papers before fleeing Morven demonstrated practical courage, while her poetry gave voice to patriotic sentiment and personal grief. As the mistress of Morven, she shaped one of Princeton's defining properties, and her literary legacy makes her one of the few colonial women whose own words survive in significant quantity. Her story complicates the common assumption that the Revolution was exclusively a men's affair.
- 1736: Born July 1 in Darby, Pennsylvania
- 1757: Married Richard Stockton; settled at Morven in Princeton
- 1776: Buried family papers at Morven before fleeing British advance
- 1781: Managed family affairs after Richard Stockton's death
- 1801: Died February 6 in Princeton
SOURCES
- Mulford, Carla. "Only for the Eye of a Friend: The Poems of Annis Boudinot Stockton." University Press of Virginia, 1995.
- Stockton, Thomas Coates. "The Stockton Family of New Jersey." 1911. Princeton University Library Special Collections.
- Wulf, Karin. "Not All Wives: Women of Colonial Philadelphia." Cornell University Press, 2000.
In Princeton
Nov
1776
Capture of Richard StocktonRole: Wife who remained to manage family affairs after his capture
**The Capture of Richard Stockton: The Price of Independence** In the autumn of 1776, the American Revolution was careening toward what many feared would be its premature end. General George Washington's Continental Army had suffered a devastating string of defeats in New York, losing the Battle of Long Island in August and retreating across New Jersey through November and into December. British General William Howe and his formidable force of British regulars and Hessian mercenaries pursued Washington's battered troops with confidence, and as the redcoats advanced across New Jersey, the Revolution's hold on the middle colonies grew perilously thin. It was amid this atmosphere of desperation and collapse that one of the signers of the Declaration of Independence, Richard Stockton of Princeton, found himself swept up in the war's brutal tide. Richard Stockton was a prominent lawyer, a graduate of the College of New Jersey (later Princeton University), and one of the most respected civic figures in the colony. He had been appointed to the Continental Congress in 1776, where, after considerable deliberation, he affixed his signature to the Declaration of Independence that July — a document that effectively marked every signer as a traitor in the eyes of the British Crown. By autumn, as British forces closed in on central New Jersey, the consequences of that signature became terrifyingly real. Stockton, recognizing the danger, moved his family away from their beloved estate, Morven, in Princeton, and sought refuge at the home of a friend, John Covenhoven, in Monmouth County. He believed he would be safe there, far from the main British advance. He was wrong. In late November 1776, Loyalist informers — American colonists who remained faithful to King George III — identified Stockton's hiding place and reported his location to British forces. He was seized, turned over to the British military, and transported to New York, where he was imprisoned under conditions that were nothing short of inhumane. Accounts from the period describe brutal treatment of American prisoners in British custody, including exposure to freezing temperatures, starvation rations, and overcrowded, disease-ridden holding facilities. Stockton's imprisonment ravaged his health in ways from which he would never fully recover. Facing continued suffering and perhaps fearing he would not survive captivity, Stockton made a decision that would haunt his legacy: he signed a declaration of loyalty to the British Crown, a formal oath known as a "protection," in exchange for his release. While this act secured his freedom, it cast a long shadow over his reputation among his fellow patriots, some of whom viewed it as a betrayal of the cause he had pledged to support with his life, fortune, and sacred honor. While Stockton languished in a British prison, his wife, Annis Boudinot Stockton, faced her own ordeal. As British and Hessian troops swept into Princeton, they occupied Morven, ransacking the property with a thoroughness that seemed designed to punish. They destroyed Stockton's extensive personal library and legal papers — an irreplaceable collection representing years of intellectual and professional labor. Annis, however, had anticipated the worst. Before fleeing, she had buried some of the family's most important valuables and documents, preserving a portion of their possessions from destruction. Her foresight and composure in the face of invasion stand as a testament to the resilience demanded of those on the home front during the Revolution. Stockton returned to Princeton a broken man. His health continued to deteriorate, and he died of cancer in 1781, before the war's conclusion. He never fully restored his standing among his revolutionary peers, and his story remained an uncomfortable chapter in the narrative of the Declaration's signers. Yet his experience serves as a powerful reminder that the Revolution was not an abstract political exercise. For the men who signed the Declaration of Independence, the pledge of "our Lives, our Fortunes, and our sacred Honor" was not mere rhetoric. Stockton lost all three. His capture illustrates the very real and personal dangers faced by those who dared to defy the most powerful empire on earth, and it reveals the agonizing choices that war imposes on individuals caught in its grip. In the broader story of the American Revolution, Richard Stockton's fate stands as evidence that independence was purchased not only on battlefields but also in prison cells, ransacked homes, and the quiet suffering of families torn apart by the conflict.
Dec
1776
Annis Stockton Buries Family Papers at MorvenRole: Buried family papers and valuables in Morven's garden before fleeing
# Annis Stockton Buries Family Papers at Morven In the waning weeks of 1776, the American Revolution had reached one of its most desperate chapters. The Continental Army, battered and diminished after a string of defeats in New York, was in full retreat across New Jersey. British and Hessian forces pursued closely, sweeping through towns and countryside with an air of inevitable triumph. For the residents of Princeton, New Jersey, the approaching enemy was not an abstract threat but an imminent reality. Among those who faced this crisis was Annis Boudinot Stockton, a poet, intellectual, and the wife of Richard Stockton, one of New Jersey's signers of the Declaration of Independence. What she did in those harrowing days — a quiet, determined act of preservation carried out in her own garden — would safeguard her family's legacy and stand as a testament to the critical yet often overlooked roles women played during the war. Richard Stockton had already fled Princeton before the British arrived, but his escape proved tragically short-lived. He was betrayed by loyalist sympathizers, captured, and handed over to the British, who imprisoned him under brutal conditions. His signing of the Declaration of Independence made him a marked man, and his captors treated him accordingly, subjecting him to harsh confinement that would permanently damage his health. With her husband gone and then seized by the enemy, Annis Boudinot Stockton found herself alone at Morven, the family's elegant estate in Princeton, facing the advancing columns of a hostile army with her children and household dependents relying on her judgment. Annis understood what the British occupation would mean for a household so closely associated with the patriot cause. The Stockton name was prominent in New Jersey politics and law, and the family's papers — legal documents, land deeds, personal correspondence, and other irreplaceable records — represented not just sentimental value but the very foundation of their financial and social standing. Destruction or confiscation of these materials could devastate the family for generations. Acting with remarkable composure under extreme pressure, Annis gathered the most important documents and valuables she could collect and buried them in the garden at Morven, concealing them beneath the earth where soldiers were unlikely to search. Only after securing what she could did she flee with her children to safety. Her foresight proved essential. When British forces occupied Princeton, they took over Morven and treated it with the contempt reserved for the property of known rebels. They destroyed much of the house's contents, ransacking rooms, burning furnishings, and laying waste to the comforts and possessions the family had accumulated over years. Had Annis not acted when she did, the family's papers would almost certainly have been lost to this destruction — consumed by fire or scattered beyond recovery. Instead, the documents survived beneath the frozen New Jersey soil, waiting to be unearthed when the crisis passed. The broader significance of this event extends well beyond the Stockton family. Annis Boudinot Stockton's actions at Morven illustrate a pattern repeated across the colonies during the Revolutionary War: women stepping into roles of decisive leadership when the men in their lives were absent, imprisoned, or dead. These women managed estates, protected property, made life-and-death decisions for their families, and preserved the documentary records that would later help rebuild households and communities shattered by conflict. Their contributions were rarely recorded with the same reverence afforded to battlefield heroics, yet they were no less vital to the survival of the revolutionary cause and the families who sustained it. Annis herself would go on to endure further hardship. Richard Stockton was eventually released from captivity, but he returned a broken man, his health irreparably compromised by his imprisonment. He died in 1781, leaving Annis to manage the family's affairs through the remainder of the war and beyond. Yet the papers she buried at Morven survived, a physical reminder that the American Revolution was won not only on battlefields but in gardens, parlors, and households where women like Annis Boudinot Stockton made the courageous, unglamorous choices that held a fractured world together.
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