Burlington City, N.J.

Travel Info
Driving Directions
Lodging
Public Transportation

Historical Groups
Burlington County
Historical Society

City of Burlington
Historical Society

Colonial Burlington
Foundation

Historic Yorkshire
Alliance

Oliver Cromwell
Black History Society

Historic Figures
William R. Allen
William J. Allinson
James H. Birch
Joseph Bloomfield
Elias Boudinot
Susan Bradford
Marguerite V. Burton
Henry C. Carey
Cyrus Bustill
Isaac Collins
James Fenimore Cooper
Oliver Cromwell
The Jersey Devil
Benjamin Franklin
William Franklin
Stephen Grellet
John Gummere
Samuel R. Gummere
James Healy
Patrick Healy
James Kinsey
James Lawrence
Lydia Sherman
The 3 Richard Smiths
Garret Dorset Wall
James Walter Wall

Assorted History
Board of Island Managers
Council of Proprietors
The Friendly Institution
The Mantas Tribe
Old Burlington Laws
Purchase from the Lenape
The Quakers

Shippen House

Located on the corner of Talbot Street at the Delaware River, this house was originally built in 1756 as a summer home for the family of Judge Edward Shippen, a wealthy Philadelphian. In 1778, seventeen-year-old Margaret (Peggy), the youngest of Shippen's three daughters, fell in love with a widower twenty years her senior named Benedict Arnold. Arnold had recently been appointed Military Governor of Philadelphia, after being wounded in the battle of Ticonderoga.

Peggy's father was uncertain about their pairing. Judge Shippen had never expressed support for the Revolution, and was actually prohibited from traveling extensively due to suspicion that he sympathized with the British. And Shippen certainly didn't approve of his daughter marrying anyone on the shaky financial footing of a soldier, when many wealthier suitors could likely be found.

Despite her father's concern, the two were married before Peggy's 19th birthday. Living up to the social status the Shippens expected proved beyond their means, and Arnold tried various schemes to bring in more money, and wound up court-martialed for using government supplies for his own purposes. The grandest scheme began less than two weeks after their marriage, when - quite likely arranged by Peggy - a Philadelphian china dealer who sympathized with the British carried a letter from Benedict Arnold to the British in New York, offering his services as a spy.

The rest, of course, is history. In 1780, Arnold persuaded George Washington to put him in command of West Point, intending to turn it over to the British. His contact with the British - an adjutant general Peggy had befriended during the British occupation of Philadelphia - was captured in disguise behind enemy lines, and Arnold fled West Point in a panic to a British ship. By the end of the war, the family had moved to London, where they lived for nearly twenty years.

In 1801, with their eldest son serving in India in the British army, the Arnolds moved to New Brunswick, Canada, where Benedict Arnold failed to succeed as a trader and died of a respiratory illness. Peggy arranged for their four younger children to be educated, including military school for the three remaining boys, but died three years later. The Shippen house in Burlington remains a private residence.

Related reading:

Peggy
ISBN 0845347179 - Amazon. Barnes & Noble. Borders.
Finishing Becca: A Story About Peggy Shippen and Benedict Arnold
ISBN 0152008802 - Amazon. Barnes & Noble. Borders.
Americas' First Conspiracy: The Story of Peggy Shippen and Benedict Arnold
ISBN 189250118X - Amazon. Barnes & Noble. Borders.

Churches
Broad Street Methodist
Burlington Meeting House
New St. Mary's
Old St. Mary's
Temple B'nai Israel

Fire Companies
Endeavor #1
Hope #1
Young America #3
Mitchell #4
Neptune #5
Niagara #6

Other Historic Sites
Alcazar
Allen School
Bard-How House
Biddle-Pugh House
Birch-Bloomfield Mansion
Birch Opera House
Blue Anchor Inn
Boudinot-Bradford House
Burlington Island
Burlington Pharmacy
Carriage House
Coleman House
Collins-Jones House
Cooper House
Friends' Schoolhouse
Grant House
Grellet House
Grubb Estate
Hoskins House
Lawrence House
Library Company
Lyceum Hall
Dr. Pugh House
Railroads in Burlington
Revell House
Shippen House
Ship Shield Marker
Smith House

Last modified Monday, March 19, 2007 at 10:35 AM