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By Frank R. Stockton
Originally published in 1896
When he had kept Honeyman as long as was
necessary, Washington called the guards, and told
them to take the prisoner to a log cabin which was
used as a military jail, and there to watch him carefully
during the night, and in the morning he would
be tried by court-martial. Honeyman was taken to
the prison, which had but one window and one door,
and supper was given to him. . He was locked in,
and two sentinels went on guard outside the walls of
the log house.
In the middle of the night these men saw a fire
burning not far from headquarters, and, fearing that
it might prove dangerous to allow it to burn, they
thought it their duty to run and put it out. This
they did, and returned to the log house, where everything
looked the same as they had left it. But in
the morning, when they opened the door, there was
no prisoner inside.
It is said that the whole plan of this escape, probably
by means of the window, was arranged by
Washington himself, but of this we are not certain.
We know, however, that Washington looked upon
Honeyman as one of the most valuable men in the
employ of the army, and that he would take every
means to prevent him from coming to harm on account of this service.
It was in consequence of the information that
Honeyman, at the cost of such great risk and danger,
had brought to Washington, that three days afterwards
the Americans crossed the Delaware, attacked Trenton,
routed the British, and thus gained one of the
greatest and most important victories of the Revolution.
If it had been John Honeyman, instead of the
British officer, who was struck by a cannon ball
crossing the St. Lawrence, it is likely that Washington would not have dared to attack the British army
in Trenton, which, before his half hour's conversation
with his spy, was believed to be entirely too strong
to be meddled with by the Continental soldiers on
the other side of the river.
But the report which Honeyman had made to
Washington was not the only service which he did
to the American cause. Having left his peace principles
at home, as he was bound to do if he wanted
to act as a truly serviceable spy, he had more work
before him. As soon as he got out of the log house,
he ran from the camp, and, although he was fired at
by a sentinel, he got safely away. He crossed the
river on the ice whenever there was any, and when
he came to open water, he jumped in and swam, and
so he got safely over into the British lines.
There, wet and shivering, he demanded to be taken
to the commander; and to him he told the dreadful
story of how he had been captured by the American
soldiers while he was looking for beef cattle, and
how he had been taken to headquarters, questioned,
and afterwards shut up in prison, to be shot in the
morning, and how he had quietly escaped and come
back to his friends. Colonel Rahl, who was in command of the British, was delighted to get hold of
this Tory butcher who had been taken prisoner by
the Continentals, and he put him through a course
of examination about the condition of the enemy.
Of course, it was to the benefit of the Americans
that the British should think their army as small and
as weak as possible ; and so Honeyman gave an
account of the wretched condition of the American
soldiers, how few they were, how badly they were
armed, how miserably they were officered, and how
they were half starved and discouraged. He told
this story so well, that he made the colonel laugh,
and declare that there was no reason to apprehend
any danger from such a pack of ragamuffins as
were collected together under Washington, and
that, if anybody wished to keep
Christmas in a jolly way in
his camp, there was no reason
why he should not do so.
When Honeyman had
finished telling his tales,
one to one army and another
other to the other, he
knew that it would
be better for him to
get out of the neighborhood.
He was
quite sure that Washington
would take Trenton,
and, if he should be found in
that city when it was captured, it
might be hard for even the commander in chief to
prevent him from being shot. So he hastened away
to take refuge with the British in New Brunswick.
This Web version, edited by GET NJ, COPYRIGHT 2003
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