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Thomas Olden

FarmerQuakerCivilian

Biography

Thomas Olden was a farmer who lived on a property along the Stony Brook near Princeton, New Jersey, during the American Revolution. The Olden family had been established in the Princeton area for several generations, and Thomas Olden's farm occupied land along the route that Washington's army would use during its approach to Princeton on January 2-3, 1777. The Olden farmhouse, which still stands today as one of the oldest houses in Princeton, served as a landmark during the battle.

During the night march from Trenton to Princeton on January 2-3, 1777, Washington's army passed through the area near the Olden farm. The march was conducted in extreme secrecy and cold — temperatures were well below freezing, and the soldiers wrapped their feet in rags to muffle their footsteps and protect against frostbite. The Quaker Road, which the army used to bypass British positions along the Post Road, ran near Olden's property. Local residents like Olden, who knew the back roads and paths of the area, were valuable sources of information for the Continental Army as it navigated the dark countryside.

Olden's experience was typical of the Princeton-area farmers who found themselves caught between two armies during the New Jersey campaign. Whether they supported independence or remained neutral, these families had little choice but to endure the passage of troops through their lands, the requisitioning of food and livestock, and the destruction that accompanied military operations. The Olden farmhouse survived the battle and the war, a testament to both luck and the relatively brief nature of the Princeton engagement.

WHY HE MATTERS TO PRINCETON

Thomas Olden represents the ordinary residents of Princeton who lived through the Revolution without holding rank, signing declarations, or commanding troops. His farmhouse, now known as Drumthwacket (though the current mansion was built later by the Olden family), connects the agricultural landscape of colonial Princeton to the military events of January 1777. The Olden family's long presence in the area illustrates the deep roots of the community that existed before, during, and after the war. Their story reminds us that revolutions are fought not only by soldiers and statesmen but by the farming families whose land becomes the battlefield.

  • Birth/death dates: Exact dates uncertain; active in Princeton area during the Revolution
  • 1777: Farm was along the route of Washington's night march to Princeton
  • Olden family presence in Princeton area spanned multiple generations

SOURCES

  • Hageman, John F. "History of Princeton and Its Institutions." J.B. Lippincott, 1879.
  • Fischer, David Hackett. "Washington's Crossing." Oxford University Press, 2004.
  • Princeton Battlefield Society. "The Battle of Princeton: A Guide." 2017.

In Princeton

  1. Dec

    1776

    British Occupation of Princeton

    Role: Local farmer whose property was affected by troop movements

    **The British Occupation of Princeton, 1776–1777** By the late autumn of 1776, the American cause appeared to be on the verge of collapse. General George Washington's Continental Army had suffered a devastating string of defeats in New York, losing Brooklyn, Manhattan, and Fort Washington in rapid succession. Pursued relentlessly by British and Hessian forces under General William Howe and Lord Charles Cornwallis, Washington led his battered troops on a desperate retreat across New Jersey, crossing the Delaware River into Pennsylvania in early December. As the Americans fled, British forces fanned out across the state, establishing a chain of garrisons in towns stretching from New Brunswick to Trenton. Princeton, a small but strategically significant college town situated along the main road between those two posts, became one of the key links in this chain of occupation. British forces marched into Princeton in early December 1776, and Cornwallis established a garrison there under the command of Colonel Charles Mawhood, a seasoned officer tasked with holding the town and maintaining communications between the larger British posts in the region. Mawhood's troops quickly made themselves at home in ways that left a lasting mark on the community. Soldiers were quartered not only in private homes but also in Nassau Hall, the grand centerpiece of the College of New Jersey — the institution that would later become Princeton University. The college's president, John Witherspoon, a Scottish-born clergyman and signer of the Declaration of Independence, had already suspended the institution's operations as the crisis deepened. During the occupation, British soldiers caused significant damage to Nassau Hall, ransacking its library and destroying much of its scientific equipment, instruments that had taken years to acquire and that represented the intellectual ambitions of a young nation. The suffering was not limited to the college. Across Princeton and the surrounding countryside, residents endured the full weight of military occupation. Soldiers looted homes and farms, tore down wooden fences to burn as firewood against the bitter winter cold, and commandeered livestock and provisions with little or no compensation. Local farmers like Thomas Olden, whose property lay in the path of troop movements, found their fields trampled and their livelihoods disrupted. For many residents who had tried to remain neutral in the escalating conflict between Crown and colonies, the brutality and indifference of the occupying forces proved to be a turning point. The abstract political arguments about rights and representation suddenly became intensely personal when a soldier slaughtered your hog or burned your fence rails. This pattern repeated itself across New Jersey during the winter of 1776–1777. Town after town experienced similar depredations, and the cumulative effect was a profound shift in public sentiment. Communities that had been divided or indifferent increasingly tilted toward the patriot cause, and New Jersey's militia activity surged in the weeks that followed. The British strategy of establishing far-flung garrisons, intended to project control and encourage loyalist sympathies, instead generated resentment and resistance. The occupation of Princeton came to an abrupt end on January 3, 1777, when Washington executed one of the most audacious maneuvers of the war. Fresh from his celebrated crossing of the Delaware and his surprise victory over the Hessian garrison at Trenton on December 26, Washington slipped around Cornwallis's main force under cover of darkness and struck Princeton at dawn. In the ensuing Battle of Princeton, American forces clashed with Colonel Mawhood's troops in fierce fighting that swept across the frozen fields south of town and into the streets of Princeton itself. The British garrison was routed, and Washington's army seized valuable supplies before withdrawing to winter quarters in Morristown. The twin victories at Trenton and Princeton rescued the American Revolution at its lowest ebb. They revived morale among soldiers and civilians alike, encouraged reenlistments in the Continental Army, and demonstrated to both domestic skeptics and foreign observers that the American cause was far from finished. For Princeton itself, the weeks of occupation and the battle that ended it left scars — physical damage to homes, farms, and the college — but also forged a shared memory of sacrifice and resilience. The experience of ordinary people like Thomas Olden and institutional leaders like John Witherspoon, caught between armies and forced to endure the consequences of war firsthand, reminds us that the Revolution was not only fought on battlefields but also lived in the daily hardships of communities under occupation.