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Pennsylvania Revolutionary War Sites: Surprisingly Fresh Picture Of The Era: Battles In Pennsylvania During The Revolutionary War
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Pennsylvania Revolutionary War Sites: Surprisingly Fresh Picture Of The Era: Battles In Pennsylvania During The Revolutionary War in Brampton, ON
By None
Current price: $11.95

Coles
Pennsylvania Revolutionary War Sites: Surprisingly Fresh Picture Of The Era: Battles In Pennsylvania During The Revolutionary War in Brampton, ON
By None
Current price: $11.95
Loading Inventory...
Size: Paperback
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Everybody knows that American soldiers suffered terribly during the winter the Continental Army spent at Valley Forge. Few recall that Brigadier General Anthony Wayne couldn't get Pennsylvania political officials to provide suitable clothing for the troops of the Pennsylvania Line although he repeatedly documented that hundreds of men lacked even "a single rag of a shirt." With the sesquicentennial of the American Revolution on the horizon, this book delves deeply into contemporary accounts of the times that so severely tried the souls of Rebels and Tories alike. The author paints a surprisingly fresh picture of the era. His true stories range from the eastern cities to the rustic frontier. There's a common misconception that the American Revolutionary War pretty much ended when the British surrendered at Yorktown, Virginia, in 1781. Not true. More than eight months later, a force of Indians and British burned the western Pennsylvania settlement of Hannastown, then the Westmoreland County seat. The town was never rebuilt.
Everybody knows that American soldiers suffered terribly during the winter the Continental Army spent at Valley Forge. Few recall that Brigadier General Anthony Wayne couldn't get Pennsylvania political officials to provide suitable clothing for the troops of the Pennsylvania Line although he repeatedly documented that hundreds of men lacked even "a single rag of a shirt." With the sesquicentennial of the American Revolution on the horizon, this book delves deeply into contemporary accounts of the times that so severely tried the souls of Rebels and Tories alike. The author paints a surprisingly fresh picture of the era. His true stories range from the eastern cities to the rustic frontier. There's a common misconception that the American Revolutionary War pretty much ended when the British surrendered at Yorktown, Virginia, in 1781. Not true. More than eight months later, a force of Indians and British burned the western Pennsylvania settlement of Hannastown, then the Westmoreland County seat. The town was never rebuilt.





















