Facts and Resources | Little Known Facts About the American Revolutionary War
Little Known Facts About the American Revolutionary War
Painting by Jean Leffel, based upon illustrations of H. A. Ogden and Lt. Charles M. Lefferts.
What
follows are a few little known facts about the American Revolutionary
War era. Most Americans think they know all about the Revolution
simply because they are Americans. In fact, the real story -- not the
one in most textbooks -- is crammed with little known facts.
Information has been drawn from multiple sources for this report. The
main source being information compiled by Mr. Thomas Fleming, a noted
historian.
The
Americans of 1776 had the highest standard of living and the lowest
taxes in the Western World!
Farmers,
lawyers and business owners in the Colonies were thriving, with some
plantation owners and merchants making the equivalent of $500,000 a
year. Times were good for many others too. The British wanted a
slice of the cash flow and tried to tax the Colonists. They resisted
violently, convinced that their prosperity and their liberty
were at stake. Virginia's Patrick Henry summed up their stance with
his cry: "Give me liberty or give me death!"
There
were two Boston tea parties!
Everyone
knows how 50 or 60 "Sons of Liberty," disguised as
Mohawks, protested the 3 cents per pound British tax on tea by
dumping chests of the popular drink into Boston Harbor on December
16, 1773. Fewer know that the improper Bostonians repeated the
performance on March 7, 1774. The two tea parties cost the British
around $3 million in modern money.
Benjamin
Franklin wrote the first Declaration of Independence!
In
1775, Franklin, disgusted with the arrogance of the British and
appalled by the bloodshed at Lexington and Concord, wrote a
Declaration of Independence. Thomas Jefferson was enthusiastic. But,
he noted, many other delegates to the Continental Congress were
"revolted at it." It would take another year of bitter
conflict to persuade the Congress to vote for the Declaration of
Independence written by Jefferson -- with some astute editorial
suggestions by Franklin.
John
Adams defended the British Soldiers after the Boston Massacre!
Captain
Thomas Preston led some British Soldiers to aid another British
Soldier who was having things thrown at him and was also hit several
times with a board. After their arrival, the people continued to
pelt the soldiers and finally shots were fired and the infamous
"Boston Massacre" was over. Captain Thomas Preston and
eight soldiers were charged with murder. Future President John Adams
took up the defense of the soldiers. He, along with Joshua Quincy,
was able to get all but two acquitted by a local jury. Those two
were found guilty of manslaughter, but claimed benefit of clergy.
This means that they were allowed to make penance instead of being
executed. To insure that they never could use benefit of clergy
again they were both branded on the thumbs.
History's
first submarine attack took place in New York Harbor in 1776!
The
Connecticut inventor David Bushnell called his submarine the Turtle
because it resembled two large tortoise shells of equal size joined
together. The watertight hull was made of 6-inch-thick oak timbers
coated with tar. On September 6, 1776, the Turtle targeted
the HMS Eagle, flagship of the British fleet. The submarine
was supposed to secure a cask of gunpowder to the hull of the Eagle
and sneak away before it exploded. Unfortunately, the Turtle
got entangled with the Eagle's rudder bar, lost ballast and
surfaced before the gunpowder could be planted.
Benedict
Arnold was the best general in the Continental Army!
"Without
Benedict Arnold in the first three years of the war," says the
historian George Neumann, "we would probably have lost the
Revolution." In 1775, the future traitor came within a whisker
of conquering Canada. In 1776, he built a fleet and fought a bigger
British fleet to a standstill on Lake Champlain. At Saratoga in
1777, his brilliant battlefield leadership forced the British army
to surrender. The victory persuaded the French to join the war on
the American side. Ironically, Arnold switched sides in 1780 partly
because he disapproved of the French alliance.
By
1779, as many as one in seven Americans in Washington's army was
black!
At
first Washington was hesitant about enlisting blacks. But when he
heard they had fought well at Bunker Hill, he changed his mind. The
all-black First Rhode Island Regiment -- composed of 33 freedmen and
92 slaves who were promised freedom if they served until the end of
the war -- distinguished itself in the Battle of Newport. Later,
they were all but wiped out in a British attack.
There
were women in the Continental Army, even a few who saw combat!
Probably
the best known is Mary Ludwig Hays, nicknamed "Molly
Pitcher." She replaced her wounded husband at his cannon during
the Battle of Monmouth in 1778. Another wife of an artilleryman,
Margaret Corbin, was badly wounded serving in her husband's gun crew
at the Battle of Harlem Heights in 1776. Thousands of other women
served in Washington's army as cooks and nurses.
George
Washington was the best spymaster in American History!
He
ran dozens of espionage rings in British-held New York and
Philadelphia, and the man who supposedly could not tell a lie was a
genius at disinformation. He constantly befuddled the British by
leaking, through double agents, inflated reports on the strength of
his army.
By
1779, there were more Americans fighting with the British than with
Washington!
There
were no less than 21 regiments (estimated to total 6,500 to 8,000
men) of loyalists in the British army. Washington reported a field
army of 3,468. About a third of Americans opposed the Revolution.
At
Yorktown, the victory that won the war, Frenchman outnumbered
Americans almost three to one!
Washington
had 11,000 men engaged in the battle, while the French had at least
29,000 soldiers and sailors. The 37 French ships-of-the-line played
a crucial role in trapping the 8,700 strong British army and winning
the engagement.
King
George almost abdicated the throne when the British lost!
After
Yorktown, George III vowed to keep fighting. When parliament
demurred, the King wrote a letter of abdication -- then withdrew it.
He tried to console himself with the thought that Washington would
become a dictator and make the Americans long for royal rule. When
he was told that Washington planned to resign his commission, the
monarch gasped: "If he does that, sir, he will be the greatest
man in the world."
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