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the family were eating breakfast, and requesting his mother and sisters to retire lest they faint from the sight of his wounds, as was the habit of gentlewomen of the last century, told the story of his escape to his father. The statue of his distinguished brother, George,[1] stands in Newburgh's business centre on the Square which oddly enough bears the name of Colden, the leading family of colonial days. The distinguished Coldens, although not patriots, added a lustre to the town, and the Clintons will not quarrel with their shades.

Mad Anthony Wayne, the Rough Rider of his day, had his headquarters on the Glebe near the present corner of Liberty Street and

  1. GEORGE CLINTON
    MEMBER OF CONTINENTAL CONGRESS
    1775-1777
    BRIGADIER-GENERAL CONTINENTAL ARMY
    1777
    GOVERNOR OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK
    1777-85—1801-4
    VICE-PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES
    1804-1812

    Cara Patria Carior Libertas.

    Inscription on Clinton Statue in Colden Square, Newburgh. Statue by Henry Kirke Brown. Presented to the city by the Historical Society of Newburgh Bay and the Highlands and other citizens. Unveiled on the 119th anniversary of the battles of Forts Clinton and Montgomery in the Highlands.