Skip to main content
Drawn portrait of John Glover

John Glover

With morale in short supply, John Glover renewed hope in victory.

An illustrated map showing John Glover in Massachusetts with a marker at Marblehead.

"Duty & Regard"

Born in 1732 in Salem, Glover moved with his family to Marblehead, where he became a prominent merchant, ship owner, and community member.

"Urged by a sense of Duty & Regard" to his "much injured Country," John Glover took control of the Marblehead, Massachusetts militia as Colonel in May 1775, setting a course for Glover and his men to serve the Continental Army in a dire hour of need.

Same illustrated map with an additional battle marker in Boston.

After the events of called patriots to serve their country, Glover and his "Marbleheaders" saw service at the Siege of Boston before joining Washington's army as the 14th Continental Regiment.

This military commission signed by John Hancock, President of the Continental Congress, appoints Glover to the rank of Colonel of the 21st Massachusetts Regiment, effective July 1, 1775. The 21st Massachusetts became the 14th Continental Regiment in 1776.

An illustrated map showing Glover's marker and a US Troops marker by Brooklyn in New York.

Glover's men—many of them seasoned sailors—soon came to Washington's aid as the army retreated from Long Island at the . Under the cover of night, Glover's regiment ferried troops across the East River toward safer harbors in Manhattan.

An illustrated map showing Glover's marker and a US Troops marker by Pell's Point in New York.

Under Glover's command, the 14th continued to distinguish themselves in Continental service at the Battle of Pell's Point in October 1776, but the Continental Army had a disastrous remainder of the year and morale was dangerously low as the year was nearing its end.

Rallying the Troops

Despite this, Washington formulated a plan to attack Hessian troops at Trenton, New Jersey—an effort that necessitated the movement of both troops and artillery across the icy Delaware River.

Colonel John Fitzgerald, who kept a detailed diary of the events around the crossing, recalled on Christmas Day 1776 that "Colonel Glover's fisherman from Marblehead, Mass., are to manage the boats just as they did in the retreat from Long Island."

Fitzgerald recalled it was a terribly blistery night. By 6:00 p.m. the evening was "fearfully cold and raw" with wind and snow beating down on the faces of the men. According to Fitzgerald's diary, by 3:00 a.m. on December 26 Glover's men had rowed the troops across the Delaware, and were then setting out for the artillery. "Glover's men," he noted, "have had a hard time to force the boats through the floating ice with the snow drifting in their faces." Though Fitzgerald noted the whole operation was three hours behind schedule with both boats and weather conditions conspiring against them, Glover's men completed the crossing.

Image Credit: Washington Crossing the Delaware by Emanuel Leutze (American, Schwäbisch Gmünd 1816–1868 Washington, D.C.), 1851, Courtesy of The Metropolitan Museum of Art.

But Glover's work wasn't done—Washington's troops would complete two more crossings of the Delaware River by year's end. On December 28, John Sullivan wrote to Glover an appeal to his Marbleheaders to once again rally the troops—in more ways than one. "Dear Colonel," he wrote, "we must once more teach our brave men to conquer and thereby save our country."

This third and final crossing proved challenging in the extreme winter weather, but the troops prevailed.

Washington and Lafayette at Valley Forge, a painting

An Invaluable Officer

In March 1777 Glover received a promotion to Brigadier General, with Washington adding the task to rally more enlistments for a still beleaguered army. Glover was hesitant to accept and expressed to Washington his unworthiness to receive such a promotion. He wrote, "…when I Consider my owne inabilities, & inexperience, I Cannot think myself in any Degree Capable of doing the duty, necessary to be done…" and implored Washington to excuse him from accepting. Confident of Glover's abilities and leadership, Washington would not be moved, replying "I know of no man better qualified than you to conduct a Brigade."

Further, Washington linked Glover's hesitation and the resignation of officers with the crisis of army morale and dwindling enlistment numbers. Glover stayed on, participating in the Saratoga Campaign and enduring the hardships of Valley Forge.

Image Credit: Dunsmore, J. W. (ca. 1907) Washington and Lafayette at Valley Forge / painting by Dunsmore. Valley Forge United States Pennsylvania, ca. 1907. [Photograph] Retrieved from the Library of Congress, https://www.loc.gov/item/91792202/.

Tragedy struck Glover's personal life when his wife Hannah died in November 1778. With "a sense of Paternal duty & regard" for his "little flock," Glover was eager to return home to his eight young children and made General Washington aware of his intention to resign his commission. Washington lamented the request, offering that "should your resignation (be) accepted, it will be with that concern which I cannot help feeling on the loss of a good officer."

An illustrated map showing Glover's marker at Fort Arnold in New York.

Ultimately, Congress refused Glover's resignation, but allowed him a temporary furlough. Glover returned to his regiment and remained in service through 1782, stationed mainly in the Hudson River Valley and at Fort Arnold in West Point.

A sketch of John Glover.

Throughout the Revolution, Glover's sense of duty carried him through insurmountable tasks in the service of his country and in moments of personal hardship. Glover died in Marblehead in 1797

Brigadier General John Glover

Artist: John Trumbull (American, 1756–1843)

Yale University Art Gallery.

Purchased with gifts from Professor Jerome J. Pollitt, B.A. 1957, in memory of his mother, Doris Jordan Pollitt; Peter B. Cooper, B.A. 1960, LL.B. 1964, M.U.S. 1965; Evelyn H. and Robert W. Doran, B.A. 1955; Joseph G. Fogg III, B.A. 1968; Lionel Goldfrank III, B.A. 1965; Mrs. William S. Kilroy; and Ferdinand T. Stent, B.A. 1961; and with the Everett V. Meeks, B.A. 1901, Fund

Themes of the period
Modern Day Legacy

Glover's Rock in Pelham Bay Park in Bronx, New York is named after Glover, located near the site where Glover and his men held off British and Hessian troops on October 18, 1776. The Bronx Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution placed the original tablet at the site on October 18, 1901.

Glover’s Rock, Pelham Bay Park, Bronx, New York. Inscription reads: Near this site on October 12, 1776 Col. John Glover and 600 patriots held off British and Hessian forces under Gen Howe long enough to save Washington’s troops from destruction, enabling them to withdraw to Westchester and ultimate victory.

Bronx County Historical Society

Image Credit: Historical Marker Database. Photographed by Dan, October 21, 2024

Loading...