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View Full Version : Good Morning...Thus begins "The Winter of Our Discontent"



Okla-homey
12/19/2006, 06:08 AM
December 19, 1777 Continental Army enters winter camp at Valley Forge

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Arrival at Valley Forge, Dec. 19, 1777

226 years ago today, with the onset of the bitter winter cold, the Continental Army under General George Washington, enters its winter camp at Valley Forge, Pennsylvania, 22 miles from British-occupied Philadelphia. Washington chose a site on the west bank of the Schuylkill River that could be effectively defended in the event of a British attack.

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One of the most enduring modern images of Washington at Valley Forge. Painting by Arnold Friberg.

Eighteenth century armies rairly campaigned in the winter, and instead sought a safe place to ride out the winter cold. Unfortunately for the Continental army, the relative warmth and comfort available to their enemy in Philadelphia or any other American city was denied them. Lucky for us they stuck it out.

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Washington's men built crude log huts to shelter themselves that winter. This is a reproduction at Valley Forge National Historic Site

1777 had been a very discouraging year, Patriot forces under General Washington suffered major defeats against the British at the battles of Brandywine and Germantown; Philadelphia, the capital of the United States, fell into British hands.

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Toughing it out at Valley Forge

The particularly severe winter of 1777-1778 proved to be a great trial for the American army, and of the 11,000 soldiers encamped at Valley Forge, hundreds died from disease. However, the suffering troops were held together by loyalty to the Patriot cause and to General Washington, who stayed with his men -- although he and his immediate staff quartered in a borrowed house.

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Washington's headquarters at Valley Forge. The property is now administered by the NPS.

Food and other necessities were in short supply. Correspondence between General Washington and the Congress exists which features the commanding general's impassioned pleas for food, clothing and other vitals. Unfortunately for the suffering army, these supplies were slow to arrive and scant in quantity. Despite their suffering, the men soldiered on.

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Poorly supplied by a Congress low on cash, the men struggled to survive.

As the winter stretched on, Prussian military advisor Frederick von Steuben kept the soldiers busy with drill and training in modern military tactics. The incessant drilling made Von Steuban's pupils better able to meet and defeat the previously better trained British and German regiments they would face in subsequent campaigns.

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Friedrich Wilhelm Augustin, Baron von Steuben, a German officer, took part during the American Revolution. Born in Magdeburg, Prussia, on Sept. 17, 1730, and died on Nov. 28, 1794, Von Stuben helped instill discipline in the Continental Army through his drilling techniques. Despite his claims, the genial von Steuben was only a captain, not a former Prussian general; but he was a superb drillmaster.

When Washington's army marched out of Valley Forge on June 19, 1778, the men were better disciplined and stronger in spirit than when they had entered proving the old adage, "What does not kill me, makes me stronger." Nine days later, they won a victory against the British under Lord Cornwallis at the Battle of Monmouth in New Jersey.

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Memorial Arch at Valley Forge

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OklahomaTuba
12/19/2006, 08:53 AM
Got to hang out there for about a day once when I was a kid. Pretty cool place.

It was truly by the grace of the Lord God that Washington was able to keep the army intact.

jk the sooner fan
12/19/2006, 09:06 AM
the monmouth battle field is small, but has a great story.....a fun place to visit

TUSooner
12/19/2006, 09:50 AM
Good stuff. I don't think many folks realize how close we were to the wheels coming off during that winter.

SoonerJack
12/19/2006, 10:11 AM
And you have to wonder how things would have turned out if Washington's men had gone home. Interesting to ponder.

Okla-homey
12/19/2006, 11:55 AM
These are the times that try men's souls. The summer soldier and the sunshine patriot will, in this crisis, shrink from the service of their country; but he that stands it now, deserves the love and thanks of man and woman.

Thomas Paine (1737-1809), political theorist, writer. Common Sense (1776).

and another of my favorites...

Terrorists often claim to be fighting wars, and to be doing no more than is necessary in war. This is nonsense. War is certainly the natural expression of collective resentment; but it occurs between organised groups and is fought openly, against a collective enemy. It is possible to fight a war with undiminished respect for the rights of the enemy individual. Indeed, that is the duty of every soldier. But the terrorist must disregard this duty and disobey the law of war. His feelings towards the individual are abolished by his loathing of the group, and it is this—rather than his cowardice, cruelty, or intemporate hate—that constitutes his true moral corruption.

Roger Scruton (b. 1944), British philosopher, author.