Posted on 03/12/2010 6:32:35 AM PST by Pharmboy
Thanks for your post...the story of Nathan Hale is all the more remarkable since his capture was coordinated by none other than Robert Rogers of Roger's Rangers fame during the French and Indian War.
Roger's story is a sad one, in that he became a drunk and wandered around the colonies rambling on with an incoherent politics. After Washington refused his offer, he joined the Brits.
Great thread. I am going to set up an an email reminder for July 1st to remind me to DVR this show.
Yeah...I was thinking about how to remind everyone when it is broadcast. I will just place it on my electronic calendar...D’oh! Thanks ...
Oh, Pedro Francisco!
I read a magazine article on him years ago in either American History or American Heritage (we got both).
I always wondered if this would make a good niche movie for the RevWar.
I highly doubt that story, no matter what his age.
1100 lbs is about impossible.
DRAGGED it, yes. Typically they had tow ropes anyway.
Yes...you are likely correct...some versions of the story have him attaching a rope and dragging it. Still an impressive feat.
If you have any recommendations for reading I'd love to hear 'em.
Hope they get it right
Thanks for posting this. I’ll have to read it later!
You are right, he certainly is still remembered here in the South.
(I am in North Carolina)
Don’t forget Mother Batherick!
Another great post with great comments.
Many thanks.
Well, at least he wasn’t sitting on his tokus on government handouts!
I give anything to have an Italian in my ancestry! I love Italy and Italians!
His brother Sam died in obscurity.
Cavalry Monument
Located on the edge of a large cleared field, on what was originally thought to be the third American line, this monument commemorates three men who fought for freedom, and those who served with them.
The inscriptions on the monument read:
1781 1909
TO THE MARQUIS OF BRITIGNY AND COL. WM. WASHINGTON
WHO WITH THEIR NORTH CAROLINA AND VIRGINIA CAVALRY CHARGED
AND RAN THROUGH AND OVER THE 2ND. QUEENS GUARDS IN THE
VALLEY BELOW.
(north face)
TO PETER FRANCISCO
A GIANT IN STATURE MIGHT AND COURAGE WHO SLEW IN THIS ENGAGEMENT ELEVEN OF THE ENEMY WITH HIS OWN BROAD SWORD RENDERING HIMSELF THEREBY PERHAPS THE MOST FAMOUS PRIVATE SOLDIER OF THE REVOLUTIONARY WAR
(west face)
Hooper-Penn Monument
The final resting place for two of the three signers of the Declaration of Independence from North Carolina. Buried beneath the monument are:
William Hooper
Born in Boston on June 17, 1742 he moved to Wilmington, NC in about 1765. He died in Hillsborough, North Carolina, on October 4, 1790.
John Penn
Born in Caroline County, Virginia, May 17, 1741. He died near Stovall, North Carolina in 1788.
Also remembered is North Carolina's third signer of the Declaration of Independence, Joseph Hewes. Hewes was born in Kingston, New Jersey, in 1720 and died in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on November 10, 1799. He is buried in an unknown location in Christ Churchyard in Philadelphia.
The inscription on the monument reads:
IN MEMORIAM
WILLIAM HOOPER AND JOHN PENN
DELEGATES FROM
NORTH CAROLINA 1776 TO THE
CONTINENTAL CONGRESS AND SIGNERS
OF THE DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE.
THEIR REMAINS WERE REINTERRED
HERE 1894. HEWES GRAVE IS LOST
HE WAS THE THIRD SIGNER
"LEE, HENRY AND HOOPER WERE THE
ORATORS OF THE CONGRESS"
JOHN ADAMS' DIARY VOL. 2. P. 396, 1774
Kerenhappuch Turner Monument
This monument was erected to the memory of the mother of a soldier who fought in the battle of Guilford Courthouse, Kerenhappuch Norman Turner, by two of her relatives.
The inscription on the monument reads:
1781 1902
A HEROINE OF '76
MRS. KERENHAPPUCH TURNER
MOTHER OF ELIZABETH
THE WIFE OF JOSEPH
MOREHEAD OF N.C. AND
GRANDMOTHER OF CAPTAIN
JAMES AND OF JOHN MOREHEAD
A YOUNG N.C. SOLDIER UNDER
GREENE, RODE HORSE-BACK FROM
HER MARYLAND HOME AND AT
GUILFORD COURTHOUSE NURSED
TO HEALTH A BADLY WOUNDED SON.
ERECTED BY
J. TURNER AND JOS. MOTLEY MOREHEAD
Joseph Winston Monument
This monument was erected to the memory of Joseph Winston and to two of his "Surry County Boys" of the Surry Militia.
The inscription on the monument reads:
IN MEMORY OF THE NORTH CAROLINA TROOPS UNDER MAJOR JOSEPH
WINSTON WHO WERE FIGHTING THE HESSIANS AND TARLETON'S
CAVALRY NEAR THIS SPOT AFTER THE CONTINENTAL LINE HAD
RETREATED FROM THE FIELD OF BATTLE MARCH 15, 1781
ERECTED BY GOVERNOR THOMAS M. HOLT 1893
MAJOR JOSEPH WINSTON
CAPTAIN JESSE FRANKLIN
RICHARD TALIAFERRO
PALAMAN QUI MERUIT FERAT
(Let him who has won the palm bear it)
Amazing story.
Thanks for posting this...makes terrific reading, and offers some great new facts (for me, at least). I look forward to visiting this park and other RevWar historic locations in the Southland.
Ya gotta watch those pesky Portugee pirates. They’ll run off with anything left lying around, even cannons.
There is a bit of a mystery regarding the Marquis of Britigny (Marquis de Bretagne). Apparently that was a nom de guerre, along with “Captain Cosmo de Medici.”
He is believed by the NC Grand Lodge to actually have been Francois Sevelinges, who settled after the war at New Bern, and prospered exporting tobacco there until the market went bust again (it was a continual boom-bust cycle from the 1600’s on).
Interesting history in it’s own right, with him.
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