The Day is Ours! is a dramatic account of two battles that turned the tide of the American Revolution. In this distinguished, highly readable, and richly detailed narrative history, William M. Dwyer reveals as vivid a picture as we are likely to see of a critical period in the American Revolution. He lets the participants--from American, British, and Hessian soldiers to myriad fearful and ambivalent citizens--tell the story in their own words.
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The Day is Ours! is a dramatic account of two battles that turned the tide of the American Revolution.
Foreword PART ONE: A GAME PRETTY NEAR UP 1. Ye Should Never Fight Against Your King 3 2. All Who Are My Grenadiers, Forward! 3. A Set of Rascals Skulked Out of the Way 4. Spare the King's Subjects 5. Whether They Will Obey Orders, God Only Knows 6. Their Army Is Broken All to Pieces 7. No Lads Show Greater Activity in Retreating 8. The Rebels Fly Before Us 9. They Perpetrate the Grossest Robberies 10. A Push for Philadelphia? PART TWO: NOT ALL FIRE AND FURY     11. As the Fire Came Closer, Many Drew Away 12. The Devil of Desertion PART THREE: A HANDFUL DAILY DECREASING       13. They Don't Want to Finish the War! 14. The Enemy's Approach Alarmed Our Fears 15. The Rebels Were Always Barely Ahead of Us 16. They Pillaged Friend and Foe 17. We Sustained an Orderly Retreat 18. Neither Boats Nor a Ferry 19. A Neighborhood of Very Disaffected People 20. Sad Work This Day 21. They Called Us Damned Rebels 22. Tell Them General Lee Submitted 23. Our Army Forms a Chain 24. Are Our People Fast Asleep? 25. Some Winter Quarters Indeed! 26. The Worthy Inhabitants Were Seized Upon 27. Our Worst Fears Were Soon Fulfilled 28. Philadelphia Made a Horrid Appearance 29. A Country Filled with Tories and Informers 30. What Was There to Fear from the Rebels? PART FOUR: SOME LUCKY CHANCE MAY TURN UP       31. Boats Were in Readiness 32. Take Care Now and Fire Low 33. Der Feind! Heraus! 34. We Should Have Gone On 35. All Our Hopes Were Blasted 36. Your Country Is at Stake 37. The Women Would Have Killed Us 38. The Colonel Was Detained by Love 39. Haussegger Said It Was Mutiny 40. All Was Now Hurry, Confusion, and Noise 41. They Were to Kill All the Rebels 42. This Was the Moment 43. This May Be the Last Letter 44. A Profound Silence to Be Enjoined 45. A Great Number of Rebels Fell 46. I Never Saw Men Looked So Furious 47. We Suffered Much 48. Not a Man Among Them But Showed Joy 49. They Arrived in a Most Infernal Sweat 50. O, That We Had 500 Fresh Men Epilogue         Notes       Acknowledgments  Select Bibliography      Index      
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"Telling this story from the perspective, and often in the words, of men in the ranks, Dwyer has written a dramatic account of this turning point in the American Revolution."

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780813526089
Publisert
1998-09-01
Utgiver
Vendor
Rutgers University Press
Vekt
652 gr
Høyde
235 mm
Bredde
152 mm
Dybde
28 mm
Aldersnivå
UU, UP, P, 05, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet

Forfatter

Biographical note

William M. Dwyer is an author, teacher, and veteran journalist who has written for the Trenton Times, New York Times, Commonweal, Christian Science Monitor, and New Jersey Monthly.