I Was a Teenager in the American Revolution
21 Young Patriots and Two Tories Tell Their Stories
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About the Book
Teenagers were critical to the American victory in the Revolutionary War. Over half of the colonial population was under the age of 16. A draft of all boys between the ages of 16 and 19 was enacted to fill the ranks of the Continental Army, leaving their sisters to fill their places at home. These circumstances meant that teenagers played an essential role not only in combat but also on the home front.
Israel Trask joined the militia at the age of 10; by the time he turned 12 he was serving at sea. Abigail Foote, a 15-year-old from Connecticut, wove cloth, sewed clothes, weeded the garden and made cheese, providing much needed clothing and food. Henry Yeager, 13, barely escaped hanging for his army role as drummer. Dicey Langston, 16 when the war began, risked her life to pass loyalist information to the Patriots. Future president Andrew Jackson was only 14 when he was captured and sent to jail at Camden.
This book relates the Revolutionary War experiences of 23 teenagers. Drawing on firsthand accounts of young Americans from Massachusetts to South Carolina and from many different backgrounds—wealthy and poor, slave and free, Tory and Patriot—it provides a fascinating, varied look at America’s fight for independence and teenagers’ role in this struggle for liberty. Excerpts from journals and memoirs make up the body of the text. Appendices provide a chronology of events and a glossary of sailing terms.
About the Author(s)
Bibliographic Details
Elizabeth Ryan Metz
Format: softcover (6 x 9)
Pages: 240
Bibliographic Info: photos, maps, appendices, bibliographies, index
Copyright Date: 2006
pISBN: 978-0-7864-2509-9
Imprint: McFarland
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments v
Introduction 1
1. John Greenwood Was There at the Beginning of the War 5
2. Israel Trask Sees Washington for the First Time 17
3. Ebenezer Fox Runs Away to Sea 24
4. Abigail Foote Notes Each Day’s Tasks on the Home Front 51
5. A Dream Sends Mary Slocumb to the Battle 54
6. Michael Smith Meets a British Ship Up the Kills 58
7. British Soldier John Enys Sees Service in Canada 61
8. Sixteen-year-old Walter Bates Arrested as a Tory 68
9. Sybil Ludington Rides to Warn the Militia “the British Are Coming” 72
10. Ebenezer Fletcher Is Captured by the British at Hubbardton 77
11. David Holbrook at Bennington Heard “Boys Follow Me” 94
12. Lafayette Buys a Ship to Join the Americans 99
13. Henry Yeager: “You Are to Be Hanged Until You Are Dead! Dead! Dead!
14. Sally Wister: “My Teeth Rattled and My Hand Shook Like an Aspen Leaf” 116
15. African-American James Forten Was a Rebel 129
16. Eliza Faces the Enemy When They Invade Her Home 133
17. Dicey Langston: Spy/Courier Threatened by the Enemy 140
18. Grace and Rachel Capture Enemy Documents 145
19. Paul Hamilton: One of Marion’s Swamp Foxes 147
20. Andew Jackson: “Take It Altogether, I Saw and Heard a Good Deal of War” 163
21. James Armistead: A Spy for Lafayette 168
22. Joseph Plumb Martin: At Yorktown “We Thought the More the Merrier” 171
23. Peter Otsiquette: Liaison Between Iroquois and Americans at Treaties 207
A Chronology of Events, 1763–1787 223
A Glossary of Sailing Ship Terms 227
Index 231