The tactic of kidnapping enemy leaders, used in the recent wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, dates to the American Revolution. George Washington called such efforts "honorable" and supported attempts to kidnap the British commander-in-chief (twice), Benedict Arnold (after he turned traitor) and a future king of Great Britain. Washington in turn was targeted at his Morristown winter headquarters by British dragoons who crossed the frozen Hudson River. New Jersey Governor William Livingston went to considerable lengths to avoid being abducted by the Loyalist raider James Moody. Sometimes these operations succeeded, as with the spectacular captures of Major General Charles Lee, Major General Richard Prescott and North Carolina Governor Thomas Burke. The abducted, such as Declaration of Independence signatory Richard Stockton and Delaware's Governor John McKinly, faced risks to their reputations. The kidnapper risked all--if caught, he could be hanged. This book covers attempted and successful abductions of military and civilian leaders from 1775 to 1783.
And yet Morristown would mark a turning point. After a long winter of suffering, he was joined by Lafayette in May who promised Washington a second fleet of French support, leading to the final defeat of the British in 1783.
They were finally welcomed home by General George Washington at army headquarters in Newburgh, New York.This true story is told through the experience of the Mahan family, which traveled the Wilderness Road from Virginia to Martin's Station ...
In George Washington’s Nemesis, author Christian McBurney uses original documents (some newly discovered) to combine two dramatic stories to create one balanced view of one of the Revolutionary War’s most fascinating personalities.
Not only had Barton kidnapped an officer who could be exchanged for Lee, he had removed from action a man who had gained a reputation for his harsh treatment of American Patriots.In Kidnapping the Enemy: The Special Operations to Capture ...
In An Unbroken Agony, best-selling author and social justice advocate Randall Robinson chronicles his own cross-Atlantic journey to rescue the Haitian president from captivity in Africa while also connecting the fate of Aristide’s ...
The British Campaign Against the People of Acadia (Philadelphia, 2001), 10–55; Bona Arsenault, ... An EighteenthCentury History (New York, 2012), 4, 14–46; Warren A. Perrin, Acadian Redemption: From Beausoleil Broussard to the Queen's ...
He and Maxwell therefore travelled to Providence and showed the letter to Henry Ward, secretary of state in Rhode Island's Whigcontrolled government. Ward sent the men on to Brigadier General Nathanael Greene, commander of the Rhode ...
The Great Kentucky Kidnappings: The Revolutionary War at Ruddell's Fort and Martin's Station
New Hampshire couple Betty and Barney Hill provided Americans with what is essentially the original alien abduction story.
This book is also the first study to detail the many captures American privateers made of British slave ships during the Revolutionary War." --