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A three-and-a-half story colonial brick house.
Thaddeus Kosciuszko National Memorial
NPS

Thaddeus Kosciuszko National Memorial

Thaddeus Kosciuszko Memorial allows visitors a look at the home of Polish freedom fighter Kosciuszko, to learn how the military engineer designed forts.

A bridge in New York City. A school in New Jersey. A town in Mississippi. Even a mountain in Australia! These are only some of the things which are named for Thaddeus Kosciuszko. Thaddeus Kosciuszko was one of the first European volunteers to aid the American revolutionary cause in 1776. A brilliant Polish military engineer, Kosciuszko designed and constructed fortifications to help defeat the British, most notably at Saratoga and West Point in New York.

Kosciuszko returned to Poland and led his own countrymen in a failed attempt to free them from foreign oppression. Seriously wounded in battle and imprisoned in Czarist Russia, upon his release, he returned to the United States. In a small rented room on the second floor of this house, Kosciuszko spent the winter of 1797-98 reading, sketching and receiving distinguished visitors like Vice-President Thomas Jefferson who said he was was "pure a son of liberty, as I have ever known."