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De Omnibus Dubitandum - Lux Veritas

Monday, August 29, 2022

American Thermopylae 1776

Patrick K. O'Donnell
Battle of Long Island, 1858 Alonzo Chappel/Public Domain

Two hundred and forty-six years ago, this week, a few hundred Maryland soldiers bravely charged thousands of British soldiers and Hessian mercenaries to allow their brothers-in-arms to escape total annihilation.

This elite unit of Marylanders, known as “Washington’s Immortals” or the “Bayonets of the Revolution” for their Thermopylae-like charge against a British stronghold, bought with their blood “an hour, more precious to American liberty than any other in its history.”

These “Gentlemen of Honour, Family, and Fortune[’s]” selfless sacrifice allowed General Washington, his top commanders, and much of the fledgling American army to retreat and to fight again another day at a point when the entire Revolution, begun only a little more than a month earlier, might have become a mere footnote in British history.  Most of the men who made the charge would never return home to Maryland: most would die that day or die on British prison ships, little more than floating concentration camps in New York Harbor. .............To Read More.......


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