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To: SAMWolf
It's amazing how close the Revolution came to failing a few times. But something always happened to keep it alive.

This is why I like to learn more about it. The more I learn, the greater respect I have for these men and women. We cannot forget what they have bequeathed to us and future generations. The @%%$#^^@^ democreeps are trying very hard to do so.

35 posted on 02/28/2004 8:38:01 AM PST by Professional Engineer (Americans~Proud Country Clowns since 1775.)
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To: Professional Engineer
The one thing that really bugs me is the effort by groups in this Country to try and tear down the Founders. They try to apply today's PC standards to them and want us to believe they were like the low-life career politicians of today. They concentrate on and point out their faults in efforts to demean the good they did.
39 posted on 02/28/2004 8:45:02 AM PST by SAMWolf (I even have boring dreams...I fall asleep in my sleep!)
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To: Professional Engineer
If today's Press were covering the Revolution

Dark Hour for the Rebels

Washington's Recruits Go Home in One Week's Time

Latest in a Series of Misfourtunes
for the Continentals

Washington's Next Move????

Christmas week, 1776
Near Trenton, New Jersey

George Washington and his beleaguered Continental Army are spending a grim holiday season on the road. Four long months of harassment and battle with the British Army have left the 6,000 rebels tired, footsore and hungry. To make matters worse for Washington, he can expect more than half of his volunteers to drift home by the New Year, their enlistments up.

An evaporating army is just the latest in a long string of misfortunes to beset Washington. Since the signing of the Declaration of Independence in July, American forces have been mostly on their heels. The sobering sight of a huge British fleet in New York harbor in the wake of the celebration was the first indication that the road to American independence would be no promenade for the Continentals.

Washington and his troops were subsequently swept off Long Island, and chased the length of Manhattan. The disaster in New York was capped by American defeats at Forts Washington and Lee on the Hudson. The Continental Army has subsequently limped through New Jersey, on the road to its present encampment here on the Delaware River, close to nearby Trenton (see map, above), and a brigade of Hessians garrisoned there.

Through all of this, Washington supporters could be forgiven for wondering what Congress has been doing to relieve the abject condition of the army. While much criticism has been levelled at Washington's pitiful defense of New York, the general's friends insist that the current state of the army would be dramatically improved if Congress would put aside its bickering over the pros and cons of a standing army and find a way to keep the Continentals in the field.

Meanwhile observers are speculating that Washington will have to shelve his dream of a "European-style" army disciplined enough to effectively engage the British regulars in field combat. Already the sense is that new tactics are evolving. "Unless we are absolutely forced into," Washington wrote recently, "we shall avoid a large battle. With the fate of America at stake, our job is to prolong this war as much as possible."

Inspiration for the cause was recently provided by the brilliant pampleteerist Thomas Paine. Paine, who's essay "Common Sense" helped inspire the colonials to independence a year ago, recently penned another essay, "The Crisis," which Washington subsequently ordered read to his troops. Said to have been written on a drumhead, Paine's opening refrain has a stirring beat of its own: "These are the times that try men's souls. . ."

It is doubtful, however, whether Paine's words alone will be enough to invigorate the American cause. The sense here is that Washington needs to take a gamble. He desperately needs a victory to hold his troops together, and to keep the hopes of the revolution alive.

Meanwhile, the Hessian force across the Delaware is preparing a sumptuous Christmas feast . . .

www.pbs.org/ktca/liberty/ chronicle/episode3.html

42 posted on 02/28/2004 8:53:06 AM PST by SAMWolf (I even have boring dreams...I fall asleep in my sleep!)
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