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MAJ Dale E. Wilson, Ph.D.
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Edited 1 mo ago
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ILLUSTRATIONS: (1) British troops land on Long Island to reinforce troops already there on 26 Aug. 1776. (2) Col. William Alexander exhorts his men while deploying them as the rearguard at the Battle of Long Island on 27 Aug. (3) General Washington personally oversees the retreat from Long Island. (4) Militia troops retreat from Long Island in the face of the relentless British advance. (5) The 1st Delaware Regt. at the Battle of Long Island on 27 Aug. (6) Militiamen and continental soldiers battle with British troops trying to prevent their evacuation from Long Island. (7) Militia troops retreat during the withdrawal to Manhattan.
(8) General Washington transfers men and guns across the East River following the Battle of Long Island.
(9) Patriots retreat from Long Island to Manhattan on the night of 27-28 Aug. (10) Men and guns are ferried to Manhattan from Long Island on 27-28 Aug.

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1SG Dean Mcbride (MPER) (CPHR)
1SG Dean Mcbride (MPER) (CPHR)
1 mo
Love the ship photo!
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SGT Robert Urbaniak
SGT Robert Urbaniak
1 mo
This is what made us to be, the greatest nation in history.
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LTC David Brown
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Edited 1 mo ago
The British put together an armada and massive amounts of men at arms to crush the colonial revolt.. it is miraculous, as in Devine intervention, that Washington was able to extract the colonial army and save much of the badly needed supplies. John Glover and his Marble head men did a tremendous job in stealthily ferrying men and supplies across the river. A thick fog moved in during the night that covered Washington’s retreat and made the British very cautious. Great share
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MAJ Dale E. Wilson, Ph.D.
MAJ Dale E. Wilson, Ph.D.
1 mo
Glad you enjoyed it.
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SGT James Murphy
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There's a Great Story that I heard from a great historian We call him Rich Roy down in the Savannah Area. About 50 miles south of Savannah There is an old plantation that was on the Salt Marshes that the British attacked and started to fire upon because they housed enemy troups. What they didn't know was that the Tide there had a 10-foot difference in depth so so, While they were firing on the Plantation which still stands today. The Tide Went out and their ship fell over! They had to surrender to slaves at the plantation whom helped them wade thru the mud and brought them to shore. An Actual piece of history that if you're not from the Savannah Area you'd never know. Hell of a Story.
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MAJ Dale E. Wilson, Ph.D.
MAJ Dale E. Wilson, Ph.D.
1 mo
That is a great story--and new to me. Does that art show the British ship and its troops on the beach> Hadn't heard about that gov before. . . .
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1SG Dean Mcbride (MPER) (CPHR)
1SG Dean Mcbride (MPER) (CPHR)
1 mo
SGT James Murphy MAJ Dale E. Wilson, Ph.D. Chief William McIntosh, Jr. was born the son of a Scottish Captain in the British Tory Army around the time of the American Revolutionary War and a native Creek Indian woman belonging to the influential Wind Clan of the Creek Nation. McIntosh was not only well connected at the national level of U.S. society, but also at a state level. His paternal cousin George McIntosh Troup was elected Governor of the State of Georgia on the platform of removing all Native Americans from the state. He advocated the removal of the Creek Indians from western Georgia. That may be the Governor you referenced.
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SGT James Murphy
SGT James Murphy
1 mo
MAJ Dale E. Wilson, Ph.D. - Ya we have some friends down a Kips Landing a little Shrimp boat area and they live right on the salt marsh. They took us to the Plantation and we saw the graveyard there with headstones Pre-USA 1700's dates. It's not even a Park. They are in the poorest county in GA. and they can't afford to keep these places up so everything is aged just like you'd find it untouched for about 100 years. It's beautiful and scary. The Building isn't safe anymore though so we couldn't go in it.
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SGT James Murphy
SGT James Murphy
1 mo
1SG Dean Mcbride (MPER) (CPHR) - THAT'S THE GUY! Another Weird Story Huh? The Guy had "Issues". 8-)
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