Did you ever imagine history could taste this good?

In December of 1776, Alexander Hamilton negotiated the release of Continental General William Alexander, formerly known as Lord Sterling, from his captivity among the fable and feared Hessian forces.

On December 15th, 1776, Sterling rejoined Commander-In-Chief, George Washington & Hamilton at their traveling headquarters on Pineville Road: less than 1 mile from the Pineville Tavern. Sterling, who had yet to procure lodgings, was then accompanied by Hamilton to the Pineville Inn. Sterling urgently insisted that he speak to the Army's Chief Intelligence Officer in private once the pair arrived at the then-35 year-old hotel.

Once arrived, Sterling, who was formally educated in Frankfurt, Germany, and thus fluent in the Central German dialect, disclosed to Hamilton and the Intelligence Officer, that, toward the very end of his captivity, he had overheard that the balance of the Hessian forces were currently barracked not 10 miles down the Delaware River in Trenton, NJ.

Then, in what is now the Pineville Tavern, Alexander Hamilton began to articulate what became known informally as the "Pineville Plan." Just 10 days later, on Christmas Night 1776, Washington would execute that exquisite plan by crossing the Delaware River to lay siege upon the unsuspecting Hessian forces. This masterful military stroke would turn the tide of the Revolutionary War and help solidify, in perpetuity, the since- timeless conviction that the world ought never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens could forever change the world.