For example, McCullough highlights the lives of specific Continental soldiers, like the brave Israel Putnam, a "hero of the Battle of Bunker Hill, who at fifty-seven was known affectionately as 'Old Put'" (34) and small soldiers like Private Joseph Martin, who at 15 was rather excited for the war, enjoying the "muttering of cannon fire thinking the sound was musical, or at least grand" (138). ... The biggest player of all on the British side, (at least in starting things up) was King George III, who at the beginning had just been defeated at the Battle of Bunker ...
After the opening Battles of Lexington and Concord in April, 1775, the colonials had engaged the British in what was commonly known as the Battle of Bunker Hill. ... As McCullough writes, "At Bunker Hill, assuring his troops he would not ask them 'to go a step further than where I go myself,' he had marched in the front line...After one blinding volley during the third assault, he had been the only man in the front line still standing....
In September of 1952, the Boriqueeners embarked on a defense campaign to hold a hill known as Outpost Kelly after defending main lines of resistance for forty-seven days. ... Having been retrained under the Command of Colonel the Regiment again saw action in the "Heights" of Hill 391 in October of 1952. Later named after the Commander of G Company, Captain George Jackson; the lower sector of Hill 391 was perceived as a monumental victory by the opposition if ceased. As fate would align, in October of 1952, the regiment was ordered to defend the lower region of Iron Horse Hill; Co...
For this particular assignment, I chose to visit the Church of the Latter Day Saints. The worshippers that belong to this church are referred to as Mormons. I visited this church on April 27, 2003. The service was from about 9:00 a.m. until around 12:00 p.m. The particular church that I visited ...
No African-American Civil War regiment is more famous than the 54th Massachusetts Colored Infantry. In its ranks were the sons of prominent abolitionist Frederick Douglass; its colonel, Robert Gould Shaw, was the son of a prominent abolitionist family. African-American soldiers felt they had to pr...
The father of constitutional law, chief justice John Marshall played a pivotal role in the construction of democracy in the United States. Marshall was our nations fourth chief justice and is accredited with helping to establish the power of the United States Supreme Court and strongly enforcing co...
Troubled Farmers "In the first years of peacetime, following the Revolutionary War, the future of both the agrarian and commercial society appeared threatened by a strangling chain of debt which aggravated the depressed economy of the postwar years".1 This poor economy affected almost everyone i...