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Phillis

Enslaved WomanCivilianWar Witness

Biography

Phillis was an enslaved woman living in Trenton, New Jersey, during the Revolutionary War. The documentary record for her life, like that of most enslaved people in eighteenth-century New Jersey, is fragmentary. She appears in local records associated with a Trenton household, though the precise details of her daily existence — her age, her origins, her family connections — are largely unrecoverable from the surviving documents. What is known is that she was present in Trenton during the Hessian occupation and the battle of December 26, 1776, making her a witness to events that would reshape the course of the war.

New Jersey had a significant enslaved population during the Revolutionary era. The 1790 census recorded over 11,000 enslaved people in the state, and Trenton, as a prosperous river town and the seat of Hunterdon County's court system, was home to numerous slaveholding households. Enslaved people in New Jersey performed agricultural labor, domestic service, and skilled trades. They lived under a legal system that denied them basic rights while simultaneously being surrounded by revolutionary rhetoric about liberty and equality.

The Hessian occupation of Trenton in December 1776 placed enslaved people like Phillis in a particularly precarious position. The Hessian soldiers requisitioned food, fuel, and labor from local households, including those where enslaved people lived and worked. During the battle itself, civilians of all conditions sheltered in cellars and homes as musket fire and cannon shot tore through the streets. The experience of the battle was not one of liberation for enslaved residents — the Continental Army that won at Trenton included both slaveholders and soldiers from slaveholding states, and the Revolution's promise of liberty would not extend to enslaved Black people in New Jersey for decades.

WHY SHE MATTERS TO TRENTON

Phillis represents the enslaved people whose labor sustained the communities where the Revolution was fought and whose experiences have been largely excluded from traditional narratives of the war. The Battle of Trenton is typically told as a story of generals, soldiers, and strategy, but it took place in a town where enslaved people lived and worked. Their presence complicates the narrative of a war fought for liberty. New Jersey did not pass a gradual emancipation law until 1804, and the last enslaved people in the state were not freed until the Thirteenth Amendment in 1865. Remembering Phillis means acknowledging that the Revolution's promise of freedom was not universal.

  • Dates of birth and death unknown
  • Documented as an enslaved woman in Trenton during the Revolution
  • Present during the Hessian occupation and Battle of Trenton, December 1776
  • New Jersey did not begin gradual emancipation until 1804

SOURCES

  • Hodges, Graham Russell. "Slavery and Freedom in the Rural North: African Americans in Monmouth County, New Jersey, 1665-1865." Madison House, 1997.
  • Gigantino, James J. II. "The Ragged Road to Abolition: Slavery and Freedom in New Jersey, 1775-1865." University of Pennsylvania Press, 2015.
  • Wright, Giles R. "Afro-Americans in New Jersey: A Short History." New Jersey Historical Commission, 1988.

In Trenton

  1. Dec

    1776

    Hessian Garrison Established at Trenton

    Role: Enslaved civilian witness to the occupation

    # The Hessian Garrison at Trenton, December 1776 By mid-December 1776, the American cause appeared to be collapsing. General George Washington's Continental Army, which had suffered a devastating defeat at the Battle of Long Island in August, had been driven out of New York City and chased relentlessly across New Jersey by a superior British force under General William Howe and his aggressive subordinate, Lord Cornwallis. Soldiers deserted in droves, enlistments were expiring at year's end, and morale had plummeted to its lowest point since the Declaration of Independence had been signed just five months earlier. Thomas Paine captured the desperation of the moment when he wrote, "These are the times that try men's souls." When Washington's battered and diminished army crossed the Delaware River into Pennsylvania in early December, many observers — British, Hessian, and American alike — believed the rebellion was all but over. As part of the British strategy to hold the territory they had seized, a chain of outposts was established across New Jersey along the Delaware River. The town of Trenton, a modest but strategically located settlement at a key river crossing, was assigned to a garrison of approximately 1,400 Hessian troops under the command of Colonel Johann Rall. These soldiers were German professionals, hired by the British Crown from the landgrave of Hesse-Kassel, and they were organized into three regiments that bore the names of their commanders. Rall's men were quartered throughout the town and in the Old Barracks, a stone structure that had been built during the French and Indian War to house colonial soldiers. The Hessian presence transformed Trenton into an occupied town, and the daily routines of its residents were now shaped by the rhythms of a foreign military force. The occupation was felt unevenly by Trenton's inhabitants. Abraham Hunt, one of the town's leading citizens and a man of considerable wealth and social standing, hosted Hessian officers in his home, navigating the delicate politics of occupation with outward hospitality. His interactions with Rall and other officers placed him at the center of a fraught social dynamic in which allegiance was never entirely certain. Meanwhile, enslaved people like Phillis, a civilian witness to the occupation, experienced the Hessian presence from a position of profound vulnerability. Individuals like Phillis observed the movements, habits, and dispositions of the garrison as part of the fabric of their daily existence, and their perspectives, though rarely recorded in official accounts, formed part of the broader web of knowledge that circulated through the occupied town. Colonel Rall himself proved to be a capable battlefield commander but a dangerously overconfident garrison leader. His superiors, including Colonel Carl von Donop, urged him to construct redoubts and defensive fortifications around Trenton to guard against a possible American attack. Rall reportedly dismissed these recommendations with open contempt for the ragged Continental forces across the river, expressing confidence that no fortifications were necessary against such a demoralized enemy. He did not establish a robust system of patrols or early warning measures, and the garrison fell into a pattern of routine that, while comfortable, left it exposed. This overconfidence proved catastrophic. Local residents, many of whom were patriot sympathizers, quietly gathered and relayed intelligence about Hessian troop strength, positions, and daily routines to agents of the Continental Army across the river. This flow of information gave Washington and his officers a remarkably detailed picture of the garrison's vulnerabilities. Combined with Rall's refusal to fortify, this intelligence laid the groundwork for one of the most consequential military decisions of the war. Just twelve days after the garrison was established, on the morning of December 26, 1776, Washington led his army back across the ice-choked Delaware in a daring nighttime crossing and struck the Hessians at Trenton in a surprise attack. The battle was swift and decisive. Rall was mortally wounded, and nearly the entire garrison was killed or captured. The victory at Trenton did not end the war, but it resurrected the American cause at its darkest hour, restored confidence in Washington's leadership, and inspired thousands of soldiers to reenlist. The Hessian garrison's brief and poorly defended tenure at Trenton thus became one of the pivotal turning points of the American Revolution, a story shaped not only by military strategy but by the choices and observations of every person — soldier, citizen, and captive — who lived through those extraordinary December days.

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