Johann Rall

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Johann Gottlieb Rall (ca. 1726 - December 26, 1776 ) was a German soldier and officer, and was the colonel in command of Hessian troops in Trenton, New Jersey.

Rall was probably born as a so-called "soldier child " ca. 1725. He was a son of Captain Joachim Rall from Stralsund, who served in the regiment of Major General Donop. The first mention of Johann Rall was as a new cadet of the same regiment on 1 March 1740, which was commanded at this time by Colonel Prince Casimir von Isenburg of Isenburg-Birstein.

He was promoted to W01 on 25 July 1741; to second lieutenant on 28 August 1745; and to captain on 10 May 1753. Rall was promoted to major on 7 May 1760, under Major General Bischhausen and transferred, in January 1763, into the garrison regiment of Stone, where he was appointed the lieutenant colonel. On 22 April 1771, his transfer took place as full colonel to the infantry regiment from one brook. He became leader of the regiment in January 1772.

During this time, Rall fought in the War of the Austrian Succession and participated in campaigns in Bavaria, on the Rhine, in the Netherlands, and in Scotland. He fought in the Seven Years' War (also called the French and Indian War) and was involved in many battles. From September 1771 until August 1772, he was in Imperial Russia and fought for Catherine the Great under Count Orlov in the Fourth Russo-Turkish War.

By 1776, Rall belonged to the infantry regiment of the 1st Division under General Heister and commanded approximately 12,000 men fighting for Great Britain in the American Revolutionary War. He was at the Battle of Brooklyn at Flatbush, the Battle of White Plains, the Battle of Long Island, and figured prominently in the Battle of Trenton.

General George Washington crossed the Delaware River with his troops on the way to Trenton, New Jersey. The Hessian regiments, camped in and around Trenton, were attacked and decisively defeated by the American Continental Army. The Hessians had supposedly let their guard down to celebrate the Christmas holiday, and Rall himself was misled by John Honeyman, a spy of Washington who convincingly posed as a loyalist. According to one account, Rall was busy playing cards the night before the attack when he was handed a note from a local Loyalist who'd seen Washingtons forces gathering. He simply pocketed the warning without bothering to read it and went back to his card game. In this surprise attack on 26 December 1776, Rall was mortally wounded in the battle by a bullet wound.

General Washington and Major General Greene visited the dying Colonel after the battle, and rendered him thereby a last military honor. He died in the late evening at his headquarters, on Warren Street in the "House of Stacy Potts", at that time called King Street. Rall was buried in an anonymous grave on the cemetery of the First Presbyterian Church in Trenton on East State Street.

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This article incorporates text translated from the corresponding German Wikipedia article as of October 12, 2006.

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