THE STJAr OKlSGDl24 POXTLAjKI), "FEpjRUARY 18, 'l9iH5. 11 WASHINGTON if 1 nmnqumTERsjrr I - $ VHLLEXFORGE I 5Y Wtf m IN THE REVOLUTIONARY "WAR ' -y?-!' sc prMjlH Umu' !if(' tfz HE one' hundred and seventy-fourth anniversary of George "Washington's birth finds still in existence many famous buildings which are identified with the historic events in which he figured. In fact, for the Commander-in-Chief of the Continental forces merely to spend a "night under a roof, may be said to have assured to the structure it covered a far longer life than otherwise would have been granted to it. That reverence which even then was extended to the Father of his Country, has availed to save from destruction more than two score buildings which he used as headquarters during the War of the Revolution. It Is now more than 122 years since Washington laid down his arms, and re tired to private citizenship after having won one of the most unevenly matched wars in history. Tet to this day scattered through the 13 original states can be found many building In which he planned out his bat-, ties, sought retreat after defeats, ,or made the base of new operations. There has been no organized effort to save these buildings. In many cases they have been but poorly kept, and can not go much longer without rebuilding, but private patriotism has acted where public officials have been indifferent, and one can construct a very vivid picture of the war, and revive the trials that beset the com mander, merely by going from one to the other of houses In .which he sheltered during the conflict. There are so many that it would be impossible to mention them all. In Westerfleld. Conn., they show the Silas Dean House, where "Washington 1 lived Just after the war began, and while the operations were around Boston. In the Longfellow Home. j Cambridge. Mass., points proudly to two ' houses. First "Washington lived In the j residence set apart for principals of Har vard College. Then he moved to the house of a fugitive Loyalist, John Vassall.J Later this became the residence of Henry "W. Longfellow, the great poet, and here were written many of his most noted works. Many other eminent men have been res idents and guests of this historic mansion. Just to mention Tallyrand, Lafayette, Worcester and Everett gives a fair Idea. Washington had many houses in New York. None is more beautiful than the building now known as the Jumel Man sion. This was his headquarters from Sep tember 16 to October 21. 1776. It is also rich in memories of aron Burr, who married the widow of Stephen Jumel. Jumel gained possession of the house when Roger Morris and his wife fled be cause their Tory sympathies threatened to get them Jn .difficulties. r.iL''"5 Morris, who as Mars' Philipac, George .Washington wooed in vain. Until the evacuation of New York. Washington lived .In the Roger Morris r."8!' Harlem Heights. . The location, of ibis -building is now almost opposite the Intersection of 161st street Tenth avenue tnd the old Kingsbridge road. The Mil ler house at White Plains. Is another Washington's New York headduarters that still survives. In Pennsylvania. During most of the retreat through New Jersey, Washington lived in camp, but eventually he crossed the Delaware, and took up his headquarters at the home of Thomas Barclay, at Morrlsville Pa. This fine property at the tlmeof Wash ington's occupancy was only a few years . t. terMt Psed Into the possession of Robert Morris, the noted financier of the Revolution. It is still standing, a magnificent rambling stone mansion of the kind popular In that period. In its spacious ballroom was held a great en tertainment in honor of Lafayette when he came to the United Slates in 1821 Moving further Inland, Washington gave the dignity -of his august pres enc? tlie two-Btory stone dwelling thathad been built by William Keith, a Governor of Pennsylvania, at Brownsburg, Pa. This building has un dergone n0 changes whatever. It is still In the Keith family, and walls, doors and even the paints remain to a large extent unchanged. Washington passed In this mansion one of the most depressing peri ods of the war. It was here he received the disconcerting news that General Lee had ben taken a prisoner, a mishap the more irritating from the fact that tho Commander-in-Chief had predicted that it would take place unless he Joined the main army, Washington left Keith's on December S. and five days later made the never-to-be forgotten attack on Trenton that re sulted in the defeat of the Hessians and gave new hope to the Continental cause. The Van Doren residence, still standing 3ust outside the village of Millstone, shows where Washington had his head quarters after the battle of Princeton. "When Lafayette Came. At Neshamlny, 0 miles north of Phila delphia, is a headquarters -of Washington rich in historic memories, it is a rough stone bulldlBg. two itortes ia height, Jo--cated mct. Ue IwWge over ta Llttia, MBMrtaBiilMr--'iMrrr-rrriTfrTi-7iiii vr-i n--mii n titt i w liMWIW I Hi III' Hi li i I A; 4V sjM'T.Nva ZOmJFELLOTtfSIfOWE jrCJ&2B2UBGE,NISS. The White Marsh headquarters was veritable baronial hall, where George Emlen. dispensed hospitality with a lavish hand. Valley Forge Headquarters. The Valley Forge headquarters of Wash ington Is Justly famed as one of the holi est shrines of American freedom. This old stone house was the residence of th founder at the time when the fortunes o the cause went to their very" lowest. It is now maintained by Pennsylvania, an I being stoutly built, will undoubtedly sur vlve for long years to come. From the time Washington quit Valley Forge he was more or less on the move The shifting of his forces took him to Fishkill. X. Y.. and here he took quarter at the home of Colonel John Blckerhoft The house remains as it was at thnt time. He also lived for a time at th home of Colonel Derrick Bickerhoff. a nephew of John. This house has also been preserved. The Wallace house at Middlebrook. N, J., is one of the best preserved of the structures that, Washington occupied. Ho went there in December, 177S. His fond ness for the Wallace house was shown when, having been away for a time, ho returned there in 1779. Along the Hudson arc a number of houses that have the fame of being put to the services of their country s make West Point i3 very proud of its Mooro's house, located in what is now called Washington's Valley, ope mile above the town. Near AV'cst Point. Further up the river is th venerably structure that did Washington ser!.-e at Newburgh. This had a military use T: was situated on a bluff that overlook! the river for eight miles to West Point From this outlook he could watch to find if the enemies' ships had managed ti make their way up the river. This house was erected in 1730 and stands today just as It did in Washing ton's time. It Is a plain onc-storv build ing, built of stone with walls two feet thick. Among the other headquarters that sur vive may be mentioned the Jacob Ford mansion at Morrlstown. N. J : the Dev t mansion at Preakness. N. J.: the Robin ! son house, on the opposiie side of th Hudson, below West Point, whkh was also the headquarters of Benedict Arnold ( when he betrayed tho cause: the Hopper house, on the road to Morristown. in New i Jersey: the Van Courtlandt house, a Peekskill; the home of Joshua Hett Smi'h two miles below Stony Point: the hom' I of Chancellor Wythe, In Williamsburg I Va.: and Mount Vernon, where Wash-1 J Ington stayed after the surrender of Corn-I wallis. from November 12 to 20, when he went to Philadelphia. It Is a great list and conveys a com forting- thought that the birthday of the founder finds hallowed even the housp" in which he slept during that time of stress. 5 -wwy mm m m jj ' . v v v 1 i ',vw 1 1 its szsryzrrri t r r rf Hrr " r - - - - - - ' - 3TENTON J TUB LOGAN 24BNSI0N, Neshaminy Creek. Here 'Washington held an Important council of war, at which for the first time the young Mar quis de Lafayette took his place tm one of Washington's advisers. He hd len comaaKloned Major-General only a few days bef&re. Whftn Wahlngtoi received newa f jUw eignal CotiUI-vIotocy at. Baaiatoiit he nroke camp and moved nearer the city. He took up his abode at Stenton, near Nicetown, about Ave miles .Treat the heart of Philadelphia. This mansion lias an interesting history that goes all the way back to the days ef WilliaJB Pesn. It hms keen punaa-ted by an organisation o: petdoUe FhOalpMa oww, and J preei!r4 a amoaeuia. n&iaj York. for relics of-Washington and other Rcvo IuUom o' feoroes. The. lKHtta of John Potts, founder of PoUatown, had. the CoiMmder.-la-Chiaf for a guest briefly, then he moved to Pcnnypackcr's Mills, now known as Schwenksville. This is the home of Gov ernor Pcnnypacker, of Pennsylvania. Both the Potts house and the Penny packer house. In which Washington - had his headquarters, are stll standing. The former Is used as & hotel. Betweeo the SJppaclc and Morris xoadr, about a mile from the present village of Ambler, is another Morris house, which answered for a timers the military head quarters for tho chief of the Continental forces. From here to Valley Forge are a num ber of buildings that saw the commander planning hew with his pitiful force ha could bold back the forces; of Lord Howe The Old Home. An old lane, an old sate, an old hous by a tree. A wild wood, a wild brook they will net! let me be; In boyhood I knew them and atlll they call! to me. Down deep In my heart's core I hear them, and my eyes Through tear mists behold them, beneath thJ old time skies. Mid bee boom and rose blossoms and or chard lands, arise. I hear them; and heartsick with longing- iH my soul To walk there, to dream there, beneath the! sky's blue bowl; Around me. within me, the weary work made whole. To talk with tne wold ' brook of all the Ion;; ago: To whl&per the wood wind of things used to know When we were old companions, before mA heart knew woe. To walk with the morning: and wateh it rose unfold; To drowse with the noontide lulled on It.1 heart of gold; To He with the night time and dream thr; dream of old. To telt to the old trees, and to each listen i Inc leaf. The longing-, the yearning, as in my boy. hood brief. The old hope, the old love, would ease m: heart of grief. The old lane, the old "gate, the old house M the tree. The wild wood, the wild brook they win noJl let me be; In boyhood I knew them, and still they call to me. Madison Caweln in the Criterion. The Quiet Time. A shadowy gleam In the golden West, A cooling breeze In the trees; The low farewell of a parting guest. The ringdove's plaint in the eaves. The whlp-o-wlll's call from the woodland near. The star's soft gleam in the sky; The dusk of night that creeps without fea On the night wind's fragrant sign. Across the heavens silvery band. That trails far o'er the blue: And the moon looms up from shadow land To lighten the diamond dew. The sable robe' falls away from Care, And Grief has ceased hsr toll: Joy Is absent, but Peace is there. In th quiet time of the soul A. G. in New pf leans Pica runs.