Got an education, yesterday, with a deeper look into the Revolutionary War - from reading a Master's thesis: 136 pages, 176 with appendix and bibliography:
"A MOST INTRICATE DEPARTMENT: THE COMMISSARY GENERAL OF MILITARY STORES OR ORDNANCE DEPARTMENT UNDER BENJAMIN FLOWER AND SAMUEL HODGDON, 1777-1782"
by Frank Carl Barna
It was a unique perspective - long, full of details, used some of the same records genealogists use to learn more details about individuals in those times. He used many uncataloged documents from government archives of little studied records of the Military Stores or Ordnance Department from those years. And while that was the focus, it was also a revealing look at Logistics/QM/supply/transportation . . . actually how it was necessary to do what turned into a lot of trial and error parallel organizing of all aspects of the military and the government - on the fly after the war had started. It was absolutely not a series of easy tasks - at first patterned after Britain's system. That the British had more problems with supplies, particularly ordinance, even though our system was not well organized at the time, was definitely in our favor.
I found this and much more about this time and place at Academia.edu, which is a place to share and follow research. Free registration, with research available for reading, download, from those who share what they have written. It is possible to get weekly notification of new material about topics you are interested in. Some share what they have published in professional journals; research papers written for classes; Master's theses - others what they are writing, asking for feedback. I do not take the time to actually access items, often. When I do it is always worthwhile.