MOLLY PITCHER: THE BRAVE GUNNER OF THE BATTLE OF MONMOUTH
“Oh, but I would like to be a soldier!”
The exclamation did not come from
a man or boy as might have been expected, but from
Mary Ludwig, a young, blue-eyed, freckled, red-haired
serving-maid in the employ of General Irving’s
family, of Carlisle, Pennsylvania. Molly, as
they called her, had a decided ability to do well
and quickly whatever she attempted, and her eyes of
Irish blue and her sense of humor must have been handed
down to her somewhere along the line of descent, although
her father, John George Ludwig, was a German who had
come to America with the Palatines.
Having been born in 1754 on a small
dairy farm lying between Princeton and Trenton, New
Jersey, Molly’s early life was the usual happy
one of a child who lived in the fields and made comrades
of all the animals, especially of the cows which quite
often she milked and drove to pasture. Like other
children of her parentage she was early taught to
work hard, to obey without question, and never to waste
a moment of valuable time. In rain or shine she
was to be found on the farm, digging, or among the
live stock, in her blue-and-white cotton skirt and
plain-blue upper garment, and she was so strong, it
was said, that she could carry a three-bushel bag
of wheat on her shoulder to the upper room of the
granary. This strength made her very helpful in
more than one way on the farm, and her parents objected
strongly when she announced her determination to leave
home and earn her living in a broader sphere of usefulness,
but their objections were without avail.
The wife of General Irving, of French
and Indian war fame, came to Trenton to make a visit.
She wished to take a young girl back to Carlisle with
her to assist in the work of her household, and a friend
told her of Molly Ludwig. At once Mrs. Irving
saw and liked the buxom, honest-faced country girl,
and Molly being willing, she was taken back to the
Irvings’ home. There she became a much respected
member of the family, as well as a valuable assistant,
for Molly liked to work hard. She could turn
her hand to anything, from fine sewing, which she
detested, to scrubbing floors and scouring pots and
pans, which she greatly enjoyed, being most at home
when doing something which gave her violent exercise.
Meals could have been served off a floor which she
had scrubbed, and her knocker and door-knobs were always
in a high state of polish.
But though she liked the housework
which fell to her lot, it was forgotten if by any
chance the General began to talk of his experiences
on the battle-field. One day, when passing a dish
of potatoes at the noon meal, the thrilling account
of a young artilleryman’s brave deed so stirred
Molly’s patriotic spirit that she stood at breathless
attention, the dish of potatoes poised on her hand
in mid-air until the last detail of the story had been
told, then with a prodigious sigh she proclaimed her
fervent desire to be a soldier.
The General’s family were not
conventional and there was a hearty laugh at the expense
of the serving-maid’s ambition, in which Molly
good-naturedly joined. Little did she dream that
in coming days her wish was to be fulfilled, and her
name to be as widely known for deeds of valor as that
of the artilleryman who had so roused her enthusiasm.
So wholesome and energetic in appearance
was Molly that she had many admirers, some of them
fired with a degree of practical purpose, beyond their
sentimental avowals. Molly treated them one and
all with indifference except as comrades until John
Hays, the handsome young barber of the town, much
sought after by the girls of Carlisle, began to pay
her attention, which was an entirely different matter.
Molly grew serious-minded, moped as long as it was
possible for one of her rollicking nature to mope-even
lost her appetite temporarily-then she
married the adoring and ecstatic Hays, and gave her
husband a heart’s loyal devotion.
Of a sudden the peaceful Pennsylvania
village was stirred to its quiet center by echoes
of the battle of Lexington, and no other subject was
thought of or talked about. All men with a drop
of red blood in their veins were roused to action,
and Hays was no slacker. One morning he spoke
gently to his wife, with intent to hurt her as little
as possible.
“I am going, Molly,” he
said; “I’ve joined the Continental army.”
Then he waited to see the effect of
his words. Although he knew that his wife was
patriotic, he was utterly unprepared for the response
that flamed in her eager eyes as she spoke.
“God bless you!” she exclaimed;
“I am proud to be a soldier’s wife.
Count on me to stand by you.”
And stand by she did, letting no tears
mar the last hours with him, and waving as cheerful
a farewell when he left her as though he were merely
going for a day’s pleasuring. From the firing
of the first gun in the cause of freedom her soul
had been filled with patriotic zeal, and now she rejoiced
in honoring her country by cheerfully giving the man
she loved to its service, although she privately echoed
her wish of long ago when she had exclaimed, “Oh,
how I wish I could be a soldier!”
Like a brave and sensible young woman,
Molly stayed on with the Irvings, where she scrubbed
and scoured and baked and brewed and spun and washed
as vigorously as before, smiling proudly with no sharp
retort when her friends laughingly predicted that she
“had lost her pretty barber, and would never
set eyes on him again.” She was too glad
to have him serving his country, and too sure of his
devotion, to be annoyed by any such remarks, and kept
quietly on with her work as though it were her sole
interest in life.
Months went by, and hot July blazed
its trail of parched ground and wilted humanity.
One morning, as usual, Molly hung her wash on the
lines, then she took a pail and went to gather blackberries
on a near-by hillside. As she came back later
with a full pail, she saw a horseman, as she afterward
said, “riding like lightning up to General Irving’s
house.” Perhaps he had brought news from
her husband, was her instant thought, and she broke
into a run, for she had received no tidings from him
for a long time, and was eager to know where he was
and how he fared. She had been right in her instinct,
the messenger had brought a letter from John Hays,
and it contained great news indeed, for he wrote:
“When this reaches you, take
horse with bearer, who will go with you to your father’s
home. I have been to the farm and seen your parents,
who wish you to be with them now. And if you are
there, I shall be able to see you sometimes, as we
are encamped in the vicinity.”
Molly might have objected to such
a peremptory command, but the last sentence broke
down any resistance she might have shown. Hastily
she told Mrs. Irving of the letter and its tidings,
and although that lady was more than sorry to lose
Molly at such short notice, she not only made no objections
to her departure, but helped her with her hurried
preparations and wished her all possible good fortune.
In less time than it takes to tell it, Molly had “unpegged
her own clothing from the lines,” then seeing
they were still wet, she made the articles into a
tight bundle which she tied to the pommel, the messenger
sprang into the saddle, with Molly behind him, and
off they started from the house which had been Molly’s
home for so long, journeying to the farm of her childhood’s
memories.
Although she missed the kind-hearted
Irving family who had been so good to her, it was
a pleasure to be with her parents again, and Molly
put on her rough farm garments once more, and early
and late was out among the cattle, or working in the
fields. And she had a joyful surprise when her
husband paid her a flying visit a few days later.
After that, he came quite frequently, though always
unexpectedly, and if proof was wanting that she was
the kind of a wife that John Hays was proud to have
his fellow-soldiers see, it lies in the fact that he
allowed Molly to visit him in camp more than once.
She saw him at Trenton, and at Princeton, before the
Continental army routed the British there, on January
3, 1777.
In order to surprise the three British
regiments which were at Princeton at that time, General
Washington, Commander-in-chief of the Continental
force, quietly left Trenton with his troops, and crept
up behind the unsuspecting British at Princeton, killing
about one hundred men and taking three hundred prisoners,
while his own losses were only thirty men. Then,
anxious to get away before Lord Cornwallis could arrive
with reinforcements for the British, he slipped away
with his men to Morristown, New Jersey, while the
cannon were still booming on the battle-field, their
noise being mistaken in Trenton for thunder.
With the Continental troops went John Hays, gunner,
and as soon as Molly heard of the engagement, and
the retirement of General Washington’s troops,
she hastened to the field of action to seek out any
wounded men whom she could care for or comfort in their
last hours. Picking her way across the littered
field, she brought a drink of water here, lifted an
aching head there, and covered the faces of those
who had seen their last battle. As she passed
slowly on, she saw a friend of her husband’s,
Dilwyn by name, lying half buried under a pile of
debris. She would have passed him by but for a
feeble movement of his hand under the rubbish, seeing
which, she stooped down, pushed aside his covering,
and felt for his pulse to see whether he were still
alive. As she bent down her quick eye saw a cannon
near where the wounded man lay, a heavy, cumbersome
gun which the Continentals had evidently left
behind as being of a type too heavy to drag with them
on their hasty march to Morristown. Beside the
cannon Molly also saw a lighted fuse slowly burning
down at one end. She had a temptation as she
looked at the piece of rope soaked in some combustible,
lying there ready to achieve its purpose. She
stooped over Dilwyn again, then she rose and went
to the cannon, fuse in hand. In a half-second
the booming of the great gun shook the battle-field-Molly
had touched it off, and at exactly the right moment,
for even then the advance guard of Lord Cornwallis
and his men was within range!
At the sound of the cannon they halted
abruptly, in alarm. The foe must be lurking in
ambush dangerously near them, for who else would have
set off the gun? They spent an hour hunting for
the concealed Continentals, while Molly picked
Dilwyn up and laid him across her shoulder as she
had carried the wheat-bags in childhood, and coolly
walked past the British, who by that time were swarming
across the battle-field, paying no attention to the
red-headed young woman carrying a wounded soldier
off the field, for what could she have to do with
discharging a gun!
Molly meanwhile bore her heavy burden
across the fields for two miles until she reached
the farm, where she laid the wounded man gently down
on a bed which was blissfully soft to his aching bones,
and where he was cared for and nursed as if he had
been Molly’s own kin. When at last he was
well again and able to ride away from the farm, he
expressed his admiration for his nurse in no measured
terms, and there came to her a few days later a box
of fine dress goods with the warmest regards of “one
whose life you saved.” As she looked at
the rich material, Molly smoothed it appreciatively
with roughened hand, then she laid the bundle away
among her most cherished possessions, but making use
of it never entered her mind-it was much
too handsome for that!
Every hour the British troops were
delayed at Princeton was of great advantage to the
Continental forces, and by midnight they had come to
the end of their eighteen-mile march, to their great
rejoicing, as it had been a terrible walk over snow
and ice and in such bitter cold that many a finger
and ear were frozen, and all had suffered severely.
The men had not had a meal for twenty-four hours, had
made the long march on top of heavy fighting, and
when they reached their destination they were so exhausted
that the moment they halted they dropped and fell
into a heavy sleep.
While they were marching toward Morristown,
Lord Cornwallis was rushing his troops on to New Brunswick
to save the supplies which the British had stored
there. To his great relief he found them untouched,
so he gave up the pursuit of Washington’s fleeing
forces, and the Continental army, without resistance,
went into winter quarters at Morristown, as their
Commander had planned to do. While John Hays,
with the American army, was following his Commander,
Molly, at the farm, had become the proud mother of
a son, who was named John Hays, Jr., and who became
Molly’s greatest comfort in the long months when
she had no glimpse or tidings of her husband.
Then came news-General Washington’s
troops were again on the march, passing through New
Jersey toward New York. There would be a chance
to see her husband, and Molly determined to take it,
whatever risk or hardship it might entail, for not
only did she long to see Hays, but she could not wait
longer to tell him of the perfections of their son.
And so Molly went to the scene of the battle of Monmouth.
It was Sunday, the 28th of June, 1778,
a day which has come down in history, not only because
of the battle which marks its date, but because of
its scorching heat. The mercury stood near the
100 mark, and man and beast were well-nigh overcome.
History tells us that the British
had remained at Philadelphia until early in June,
when they had evacuated that city and crossed the
Delaware River on June the eighteenth, with an intention
to march across New Jersey to New York. Having
heard of this movement of the British, General Washington,
with a force nearly equal to that of the enemy, also
crossed into New Jersey, with the purpose of retarding
the British march and, if opportunity offered, bring
on a general engagement. By the 22d of June the
whole of the American force was massed on the east
bank of the Delaware in a condition and position to
give the enemy battle. Despite some opposition
on the part of General Lee and other officers, Lafayette
and Greene agreed with General Washington in his opinion
that the time to strike had come, and soon orders
were given which led to the battle of Monmouth.
Lafayette was detached with a strong
body of troops to follow up the British rear and act,
if occasion presented. Other riflemen and militia
were in advance of him and on his flanks, making a
strong body of picked troops. To protect his
twelve-mile baggage-train from these troops, Sir Henry
Clinton placed them with a large escort under Knyphausen,
while he united the rest of his force in the rear to
check the enemy, if they came too close. The
distance between Knyphausen’s force and that
which brought up the rear suggested the idea to Washington
to concentrate his assault on the rear force, and to
hasten the attack before the British should reach
the high ground of Middletown, about twelve miles
away, where they would be comparatively safe.
At once General Lee was sent forward
to join Lafayette, with instructions to engage the
enemy in such action as was possible until the remainder
of the troops should arrive. Lee carried out his
part of the command in such a half-hearted way as
to bring severe censure on him later, and when General
Greene arrived on the scene of action, Lee and his
men were in retreat.
A sharp reproof from General Washington
brought Lee partially to his senses; he turned about
and engaged in a short, sharp conflict with the enemy,
and retired from the field in good order. At that
time Greene’s column arrived, and as a movement
of the British threatened Washington’s right
wing, he ordered Greene to file off from the road
to Monmouth and, while the rest of the army pushed
forward, to fight his way into the wood at the rear
of Monmouth Court-House. Greene was obeying orders
when, foreseeing that by the flight of Lee Washington
would be exposed to the whole weight of the enemy’s
attack, he suddenly wheeled about and took an advantageous
position near the British left wing.
As he hoped, this diverted the enemy’s
attention from the fire of the American army.
A furious attack followed, but was met by a cool resistance
which was the result of the army’s discipline
at Valley Forge.
The artillery of Greene’s division,
well posted on a commanding position, was in charge
of General Knox, and poured a most destructive fire
on the enemy, seconded by the infantry, who steadily
held their ground. Repeated efforts of the British
only increased their losses.
Colonel Monckton’s grenadiers,
attempting to drive back the American forces, were
repulsed by General Knox’s artillery with great
slaughter. A second attempt was made, and a third,
when Colonel Monckton received his death-blow and
fell from his horse. General Wayne then came
up with a force of farmers, their sleeves rolled up
as if harvesting, and they forced the British back
still farther, leaving the bodies of their wounded
and dead comrades on the field.
Through the long hours of the desperate
fighting on that June day, the mercury rose higher
and higher, and many of the men’s tongues were
so swollen with the heat that they could not speak,
and they fell exhausted at their posts. Seeing
this, Molly, who was with her husband on the field
of battle, discovered a bubbling spring of water in
the west ravine, and spent her time through the long
hours of blistering heat tramping back and forth carrying
water for the thirsty men, and also for her husband’s
cannon. She used for her purpose “the cannon’s
bucket,” which was a fixture of the gun of that
time, and she told afterward how every time she came
back with a brimming bucket of the sparkling water,
the men would call out:
“Here comes Molly with her pitcher!”
As the battle grew fiercer and her
trips to the spring became more frequent, the call
was abbreviated into, “Molly Pitcher!”
by which name she was so generally known from that
day that her own name has been almost forgotten.
Higher and higher rose the sun in
a cloudless sky, and up mounted the mercury until
the suffering of the soldiers in both armies was unspeakable,
although the British were in a worse state than the
Americans, because of their woolen uniforms, knapsacks,
and accoutrements, while the Continental army had
no packs and had laid off all unnecessary clothing.
Even so, many of both forces died of prostration,
despite Molly’s cooling drinks which she brought
to as many men as possible. John Hays worked
his cannon bravely, while perspiration streamed down
his face and heat blurred his vision. Suddenly
all went black before him-the rammer dropped
from his nerveless hand, and he fell beside his gun.
Quickly to his side Molly darted, put a handkerchief
wet with spring water on his hot brow, laid her head
on his heart to see whether it was still beating.
He was alive! Beckoning to two of his comrades,
Molly commanded them to carry him to the shade of
a near-by tree. And soon she had the satisfaction
of seeing a faint smile flicker over his face as she
bent above him. At that moment her keen ears
heard General Knox give a command.
“Remove the cannon!” he
said. “We have no gunner brave enough to
fill Hays’s place!”
“No!” said Molly, hastening
to the General’s side and facing him with a
glint of triumph in her blue eyes. “The
cannon shall not be taken away! Since my brave
husband is not able to work it, I will do my best
to serve in his place!”
Picking up the rammer, she began to
load and fire with the courage and decision of a seasoned
gunner, standing at her post through long hours of
heat and exhaustion. When at a late hour the enemy
had finally been driven back with great loss, and
Washington saw the uselessness of any renewal of the
assault, General Greene strode over to the place where
Molly Pitcher was still manfully loading the cannon,
and gripped her hand with a hearty:
“I thank you in the name of the American army!”
One can fancy how Molly’s heart
throbbed with pride at such commendation, as she picked
her way over the bodies of the dead and wounded to
the spot where her husband was propped up against a
tree, slowly recovering from his prostration, but
able to express his admiration for a wife who had
been able to take a gunner’s place at a moment’s
notice and help to rout the British.
“That night the American army
slept upon their arms; Greene, like his Commander,
taking his repose without couch or pillow, on the naked
ground, and with no other shelter than a tree beneath
the broad canopy of heaven. But this shelter
was not sought, nor sleep desired, until every wounded
and hungry soldier had been cared for and fed with
the best food the camp could supply. Rising at
dawn, Washington found the enemy gone! They had
stolen silently away with such rapidity as would,
when their flight became known, put them beyond the
chance of pursuit-and so the American army
had been victorious at Monmouth, and Molly Pitcher
had played an important part in that victory.”
She, too, had slept that night under
the stars, and when morning came she was still in
the dusty, torn, powder-stained clothing she had worn
as cannonier, and afterward while working over the
wounded. Her predicament was a bad one when a
messenger arrived from General Washington requesting
an interview with her. She, Molly Pitcher, to
be received by the Commander-in-chief of the American
forces in such a garb as that! How could she
make herself presentable for the interview? With
her usual quick wit, Molly borrowed an artilleryman’s
coat, which in some measure hid her grimy and torn
garments. In this coat over her own petticoats,
and a cocked hat with a feather, doubtless plucked
from a straying hen, she made no further ado, but
presented herself to Washington as requested, and from
the fact that she wore such a costume on that June
day has come the oft-repeated and untrue story that
she wore a man’s clothing on the battle-field.
General Washington’s eyes lighted
with pleasure at the sight of such a brave woman,
and he received her with such honor as he would have
awarded one of his gallant men. Molly was almost
overcome with his words of praise, and still more
so when he conferred on her the brevet of Captain,
from which came the title, “Captain Molly,”
which she was called by the soldiers from that day.
General Washington also recommended that she be given
a soldier’s half-pay for life, as a reward for
her faithful performance of a man’s duty at the
battle of Monmouth.
That was enough to make John Hays,
now completely recovered from his prostration, the
proudest man in the army; but added to that he had
the satisfaction of seeing Molly given a tremendous
ovation by the soldiers, who cheered her to the echo
when they first saw her after that fateful night.
To cap the climax, the great French General Lafayette
showed his appreciation of her courage by asking Washington
if his men “might have the pleasure of giving
Madame a trifle.”
Then those French officers who were
among the American regiments formed in two long lines,
between which Captain Molly passed in her artilleryman’s
coat, cocked hat in hand, and while lusty cheers rang
out, the hat was filled to overflowing with gold crowns.
And so it was that Molly Pitcher,
a country girl of New Jersey, played a prominent part
in the battle of Monmouth and won for herself an enviable
place in American history.
It is of little importance to us that
when the war was over, Molly with her husband and
child lived quietly in Carlisle, John Hays going back
to his trade, Molly doing washing and enjoying her
annuity of forty dollars a year from the government.
After John Hays’s death Molly
married again, an Irishman named McCauley, and it
would have been far better for her to have remained
a widow, for her life was unhappy from that time until
her death in 1833, at the age of seventy-nine.
But that does not interest us.
Ours it is to admire the heroic deeds of Molly Pitcher
on the battle-field, to thrill that there was one
woman of our country whose achievements have inspired
poets and sculptors in the long years since she was
seen
loading, firing that six-pounder,-
when, as a poet has said,
Tho’ like tigers fierce
they fought us, to such zeal had Molly brought
us
That tho’ struck with
heat and thirsting, yet of drink we felt no lack;
There she stood amid the clamor,
swiftly handling sponge and rammer
While we swept with wrath
condign, on their line.
At Freehold, New Jersey, at the base
of the great Monmouth battle monument are five bronze
tablets, each five feet high by six in width, commemorating
scenes of that memorable battle. One of these
shafts is called the “Molly Pitcher,”
and shows Mary Hays using that six-pounder; her husband
lies exhausted at her feet, and General Knox is seen
directing the artillery. Also forty-three years
after her death, on July 4, 1876, the citizens of
Cumberland County, Pennsylvania, placed a handsome
slab of Italian marble over her grave, inscribed with
the date of her death and stating that she was the
heroine of Monmouth.
In this, our day, we stand at the
place where the old and the new in civilization and
in humanity stand face to face. Shall the young
woman of to-day, with new inspiration, fresh courage,
and desire to better the world by her existence, face
backward or forward in the spirit of patriotism which
animated Molly Pitcher on the battle-field of Monmouth?
Ours “not to reason why,” ours “but
to do and die,” not as women, simply, but as
citizen-soldiers on a battle-field where democracy
is the golden reward, where in standing by our guns
we stand shoulder to shoulder with the inspired spirits
of the world.
Molly Pitcher stood by her gun in
1778-our chance has come in 1917.
Let us not falter or fail in expressing the best in
achievement and in womanhood.