Revolutionary War Figure. He is remembered as "The Fighting Parson of the Revolution". He became Pastor of the First Presbyterian Church in Elizabeth, New Jersey (called "Elizabethtown" then) in 1762. When the Revolutionary war started he threw his full backing into the Patriot cause, and served first as an Army Chaplain, then as a commissary for New Jersey militia troops. His place in history was secured during the June 1780 Battle of Springfield, New Jersey, which was destined to be the last major engagement in the Northern part of the colonies during the war. British and Hessian forces, intent on trapping General George Washington's depleted army at Morristown, New Jersey, invaded from Staten Island, taking Elizabethtown and Connecticut Farms (today's town of Union, New Jersey) after resistance of New Jersey militia men and Regular troopers under Colonel Elias Dayton. Reverend Caldwell's wife, Hannah, was shot and killed during the struggle at Connecticut Farms, the deliberateness of which is still being debated today (some accounts state she was intentionally shot, some say she was killed by stray bullets). Whatever the true circumstances, her death became a defender's rallying cry, and Reverend Caldwell took part in the Rebel resistance a few days later in Springfield as the outnumbered men under Colonel Dayton fought to repulsed the foray. He has gone down in Revolutionary lore for, when supplies were running low, grabbing hymnal books containing Isaac Watts' hymns out of the nearby Springfield Presbyterian Church, and giving their pages to the soldiers to use as wadding for their muskets, exhorting the famous lines "Now, boys, give 'em Watts! Give 'em Watts!", The combination of Regulars and Militia men repulsed the English attack, but not before the British and Hessian soldiers burned all but five structures in the town. Reverend Caldwell was hailed as one of the heroes of the day, but did not live long to enjoy any acclaim. In November 1781 he was shot by a sentry, and accounts of the incident, like that of his wife, differ whether it was an accident or deliberate. He now lies next to his wife in the yard of the Church he served for nearly 30 years. The town of Caldwell, New Jersey was named in his honor.
Revolutionary War Figure. He is remembered as "The Fighting Parson of the Revolution". He became Pastor of the First Presbyterian Church in Elizabeth, New Jersey (called "Elizabethtown" then) in 1762. When the Revolutionary war started he threw his full backing into the Patriot cause, and served first as an Army Chaplain, then as a commissary for New Jersey militia troops. His place in history was secured during the June 1780 Battle of Springfield, New Jersey, which was destined to be the last major engagement in the Northern part of the colonies during the war. British and Hessian forces, intent on trapping General George Washington's depleted army at Morristown, New Jersey, invaded from Staten Island, taking Elizabethtown and Connecticut Farms (today's town of Union, New Jersey) after resistance of New Jersey militia men and Regular troopers under Colonel Elias Dayton. Reverend Caldwell's wife, Hannah, was shot and killed during the struggle at Connecticut Farms, the deliberateness of which is still being debated today (some accounts state she was intentionally shot, some say she was killed by stray bullets). Whatever the true circumstances, her death became a defender's rallying cry, and Reverend Caldwell took part in the Rebel resistance a few days later in Springfield as the outnumbered men under Colonel Dayton fought to repulsed the foray. He has gone down in Revolutionary lore for, when supplies were running low, grabbing hymnal books containing Isaac Watts' hymns out of the nearby Springfield Presbyterian Church, and giving their pages to the soldiers to use as wadding for their muskets, exhorting the famous lines "Now, boys, give 'em Watts! Give 'em Watts!", The combination of Regulars and Militia men repulsed the English attack, but not before the British and Hessian soldiers burned all but five structures in the town. Reverend Caldwell was hailed as one of the heroes of the day, but did not live long to enjoy any acclaim. In November 1781 he was shot by a sentry, and accounts of the incident, like that of his wife, differ whether it was an accident or deliberate. He now lies next to his wife in the yard of the Church he served for nearly 30 years. The town of Caldwell, New Jersey was named in his honor.
Bio by: RPD2
Family Members
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John Caldwell
1682–1750
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Mary Margaret Phillips Caldwell
1685–1748
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Hannah Ogden Caldwell
1733–1780
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William Findley Caldwell
1704–1761
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Thomas Caldwell
1706–1747
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David Robert Caldwell
1709–1769
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Margaret Amey Caldwell Mitchell
1712 – unknown
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John F. Caldwell
1715–1795
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Robert Caldwell
1732–1806
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Margaret Phillips Caldwell Canfield
1764–1831
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John Dickinson Caldwell
1765–1766
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John Edwards Caldwell
1769–1819
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Esther Flynt Caldwell Finley
1772–1844
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Josiah Flynt Caldwell
1774–1859
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Elias Boudinot Caldwell
1776–1825
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Sarah Ogden Caldwell Vredenburgh
1779–1826
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Maria Caldwell Robertson
1779–1852
Flowers
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Records on Ancestry
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