Re-enactment group  transports visitors back to the Revolutionary War era
Most days, Matt Murphy of Jersey City is an archive director at a  photo collective in New York City. But sometimes, he is a Revolutionary  War soldier.
Murphy portrays a Commander in the 2nd New Jersey Regiment, Helms’ Company, a  re-enactment group that will be setting up a living history camp on the  Quad as part of the College’s birthday celebration for the Marquis de  Lafayette on Sept. 6.
During the 2007-08 academic year, the College is planning a  celebration in recognition of the life and legacy of the man for whom it  is named. Major events will include a lecture series, entitled Lives  of Liberty, featuring renowned speakers; a historical exhibit at  the Williams Center for the Arts, entitled A Son and his Adoptive  Father: The Marquis de Lafayette and George Washington, and a  birthday party on Sept. 6.
- A web site dedicated to the celebration and to the Marquis’ unique connection to  the College provides information and updates.
Visitors to the living history camp will see men portraying  front-line Continental soldiers, such as those whom General Lafayette  would have commanded, and women portraying camp followers. The  re-enactors will discuss life during the Revolutionary War and answer  questions about the diet, lodging, recreation, and duties of soldiers.
“I love applying my knowledge of New Jersey Continental soldiers,”  Murphy says. “There’s no better way of getting away from everyday life  then by putting yourself into an environment so different than the  usual. Instead of commutes on the subway, city streets, and work issues,  you have the sounds and smells of an 18th century camp.”
The original 2nd New Jersey Regiment was formed on Oct. 9, 1775, at  Trenton, N.J., to serve the Continental Army under the command of  Colonel William Maxwell. The soldiers in the regiment saw action in a  number of Revolutionary War battles, including the battles of  Brandywine, Monmouth and Yorktown, as part of armies under both George  Washington and General Lafayette.
The story of the Marquis de Lafayette during the Revolution has close  ties to the 2nd New Jersey Regiment. During the legendary Battle of  Brandywine in 1777, Lafayette was wounded while in the vicinity of the  2nd New Jersey Regiment. At that time, he was serving under Colonel  Israel Shreve, who was  also wounded in the battle.
After returning from a period of recuperation in France, Lafayette  was given control of an elite corps of American light infantry and was  told to make operations difficult for the British army in Virginia. This  corps included the best soldiers from the 2nd New Jersey Regiment and  was involved in a number of skirmishes during the spring and summer of  1781.
In September 1781, the regiment joined a larger army under the  command of Lafayette and fought alongside General Washington’s  Franco-American army during the siege of Yorktown. British General  Charles Cornwallis’ eventual surrender at Yorktown led to the end of the  Revolutionary War.
The 2nd New Jersey Regiment was re-activated in 1975 to celebrate the  Bicentennial of the American Revolution. The group participates in  encampments, battle recreations, and town festivals, while portraying  the regiment as it appeared during the Monmouth campaign in 1778.
“There is no better way to teach history than to immerse the  spectator in an environment which replicates the event,” Murphy says.  “While books and television documentaries are informative, they are two  dimensional and can’t answer questions. If people can enter into the  living diorama of a reenactment – smell the campfires, foods and  gunpowder, feel the clothing and equipment, hear the drumming, singing,  and booms and see up-close the details of 18th century military life –  then they are most likely going to remember what they’ve witnessed.”
Many of the regiment’s current members live in western New Jersey,  where most of the 2nd New Jersey Regiment’s original soldiers resided,  but members also hail from Pennsylvania and New York.
The re-enactors work very hard to maintain historical accuracy in  everything from their clothing to their presentation of camp life to  their manner of speech.
“The general theme of the life of a Continental soldier is  destitution. In an army of ragged, starving men, those from the state of  New Jersey were worse off than most,” says Murphy. “While the soldiers  were supposed to receive new clothing from time to time, they were often  in a very bad state and many cases of nearly-naked and barefoot men  [have been documented].”
According to Murphy, an ideally equipped soldier was to have a cocked  hat, wool coat, vest, two shirts, breeches or trousers, shoes, two  pairs of stockings, leather neck-stock, blanket, knapsack, canteen,  cartridge box for ammunition, a haversack to hold his food, and a musket  and bayonet. The vast majority were never so lucky.
A typical soldier from the 2nd New Jersey Regiment in 1778 would have  had ragged clothing, a fringed linen hunting frock instead of a coat,  shoes (maybe), leather neck-stock, a blanket, a haversack, a musket and a  bayonet. His belongings would have been stored within his rolled-up  blanket and he would have had to use his pockets and haversack to hold  ammunition.
The state of soldiers’ nutrition was equally unfortunate, Murphy  says. The most common food items which were issued to Continentals were  flour and beef. Depending on the season and availability, dried peas,  molasses, rice, fish and pork were also options. Part of the regular  rations included an alcoholic drink such as rum, spruce beer, brandy,  whiskey or cider.
And the hardship did not end there. Soldiers rarely were paid, and  the Continental dollar was so deflated that their wages were rendered  nearly useless. Often, soldiers were away from home for years at a time.  When they were granted leave, they usually didn’t return to the front.
In the late 18th century, warfare was much different than today,  Murphy explains. Men stood side-by-side and, in unison, loaded and fired  their inaccurate smooth-bore muskets as quickly as possible. The  accompanying artillery pieces did the same. Battles were very loud and  chaotic, with the thick, sulfuric smoke from burnt gunpowder obscuring  the view. Commands were being given via drum beat. Many men who were  lucky enough to survive the thick of the fight died of disease.
“Americans must forever be reminded of their Revolutionary origins,”  Murphy stresses. “While the representatives who sat in Continental  Congress deserve a tremendous amount of credit for risking their  fortunes to keep the Revolution pure and moving forward, their actions  would have been nothing without the service of the soldiers who fought  the war.”