Pitz, Henry C. The Brandywine Tradition. Maryland Records: Colonial, Revolutionary, Colonial and Church, from Original Sources, Vol. Accounts not paid by Philip Barratt and Isaac Carty, n.d. 4. The records show dates of meetings, names of members in attendance, and matters under consideration such as appointments to committees, committee reports, petitions of local inhabitants, appointments of military officers, drafting of rules and regulations for the military, and complaints against certain officers. Pension Receipts 1821-1822 (2 folders), RG 1315.006 Revolutionary War Veterans Accounts with the United States Government, 1776-1787. It was the worst defeat suffered by the American Army during the Revolutionary War. Scharf, Thomas J. Wayne, 1806). An act of Congress established the First Delaware Regiment on December 9, 1775, and the ranks quickly grew to over 725 men. These records contain the following subjects: Accounts, Committee of Correspondence, Committee of Inspection and Observation, Committee of Safety (Pennsylvania), Continental Congress, Correspondence, Council of Safety, General Assembly, Loyalists, Military Records, Miscellaneous Records, and Privateer Records. Delaware pensioners, . A Distinguished Son of Chester County, Bulletins of the Chester County Historical Society, 1902-03. St. Michaels, Md. Photostat. MacNeill, Henry T., and Aime Junkers MacNeill. Delaware. On 8 September, the British marched through Newark enroute to Philadelphia. (6), In June 1776, Congress ordered that a flying camp be established in the middle colonies to protect the middle and southern colonies from attack. Matters of business include Delawares separation from the British Crown and a call for a constitutional convention, an order for the arrest of Thomas Robinson, the making of a new state seal, provisions for the defense of the state, calls for days of fasting or thanksgiving, raising and payment of troops, punishments for treason, appointment of delegates to the Continental Congress, legislation against impressment, the Declaration of Independence, a report on the disaffection of Sussex County residents, money for the clothing of troops, currency issues, rations for the families of soldiers, the state schooner Delaware, the procurement of arms, Frances place in peace negotiations, adjustment of depreciation scales, relief for the widows and children of Delaware troops, and a tombstone for Colonel John Haslets gravesite. Box 2 contains correspondence from 1775-1782. New York: American Heritage Publishing Company, 1958. 20. 32. A letter from Allen McLane concerning the attachment of his company to the Delaware Regiment, and correspondence from Arthur Lee at the height of the Lee/Deane controversy in 1779 may also be found. Another folder of photostats contains correspondence of government and military officials to Rodney in his role as militia general and as President of Delaware State, a letter regarding the recovery of some public records taken during the British occupation of Wilmington, letters of Rodney to the president of Congress, and correspondence of Caesar and Thomas Rodney. Black & white print. An index to the journal and order book found among the Kirkwood papers. Passages from the Remembrancer of Christopher Marshall. . Kent County, (transcripts, photostats, originals), 1776, 4. (Wilmington: James and Webb, 1875). 1775. Hancock, Harold B. Petitions, accounts and resolutions may be found, as well as communications and correspondence from the President and the Vice President of the Assembly and state officials. Wilmington: Historical Society of Delaware, 1940. State Regulations John Dickinson: A Great Worthy of the Revolution. London: Crowell-Collier Press, 1970. Hastings-on-Hudson, N.Y.: N.p., 1966. 1777). Bulletin III (April 1928): 15-22. R-75: Thomas Rodney Journal, 1786-1797. Although primarily Revolutionary War pensions, this series includes a few War of 1812 pensions. . 6. 1. 1777. Subjects of legislation include money bills, acts pertaining to the militia, punishment of treason, raising troops, punishment for desertion, the export of provisions overseas, pardon for those swearing allegiance to the state, the quartering of soldiers, ratification and amending of the Articles of Confederation, recovery of public debts, prevention of fraud within the quartermaster and commissary departments, suspending the use of Continental bills of credit as legal tender, protection of trade on the Delaware river and bay, and determining depreciation of pay. Confronted by Whig militia on at least three different occasions, the loyalists eventually dispersed. Many of these letters relating to the Revolution may also be found in George Herbert Rydens The Letters of Caesar Rodney, 1756-1784 (see bibliography section). Entries show date of entry, account heading, payee or payer, reason for disbursement, or receipts, amount of receipt or disbursement, and daily balances. : Picton Press, 1998. Delaware State Code Caesar Rodney Ride, event poster 1976. Livingston recruited men from Chambly, Quebec as early as September 1775 1976, RG 8005.046 Department of Public InstructionMotion Pictures Collection. Brandywine Conservancy commemorates its preservation of key Brandywine Battlefield site on anniversary of the Revolutionary War battle. About U.S., Revolutionary War Rolls, 1775-1783 This database is a collection of records kept by the National Archives listing men who fought for the colonies in the American Revolutionary War. 28. . Richard Derring petition re: debts (photocopy), 1787, Revolutionary War Records, Privateer Records, 1778-1782 (4 folders, 1 oversized box), 1. Whiteley, William G. The Revolutionary Soldiers of Delaware. Wilmington: Public Archives Commission of Delaware, 1911. (1), The Stamp Act was repealed in 1766, and the Townshend Acts in 1770, except for the tax on tea. Relations Between the Continental Congress and the Delaware Legislature 1776-1789. Typescript, 1941. Photostat. Elkton: N.p., 1940. You may want to start by searching for a person's Military Service Records and Pension and Bounty Land records. (1934). United States Revolutionary War Rolls, 1775-1783 FamilySearch RecordsImagesFamily TreeGenealogiesCatalogBooksWiki Cite This Collection "United States Revolutionary War Rolls, 1775-1783." Database with images. The 15th Massachusetts Regiment was raised on September 16, 1776, under Colonel Timothy Bigelow at Boston, Massachusetts, as part of Massachusetts contribution to the Resolve of 88 Regiments. Biographical Sketches of the Generals of the Continental Army of the Revolution. 25. Delaware Troops in the Revolution. RG 9200R08.000 Caesar Rodney Papers, 1773-1782 (1 box). VHS, 19 minutes. Newark: University of Delaware Press, 1976. 1775-1783 (7 boxes), Proceedings of the Freemen . Although the conditions in Wilmington were better than at Valley Forge, Anderson "had the skin taken of his hands by the Frost." . N.p., 1927. Contains references to the Revolution, and poetic and prose descriptions of events at Trenton and Princeton in 1776-1777. Division of Historical and Cultural Affairs. Correspondence includes missives from Delawares Council of Safety, military correspondence, a list of loyalist prisoners taken by Haslets regiment at Mamaroneck, New York, reports on the course of the war from officers to various Delaware officials, and communications between Delaware leaders. Main, Jackson Turner. The 1st Delaware Regiment is a 501(c)3 nonprofit living history group. Monmouth Beach, N.J.: Philip Freneau Press, 1972. Box 2 contains a draft copy of the volumes comprising Francis T. Tiltons Dr. Claims settlements include disbursements for prisoners of war, Commissary Department, transportation, Hospital Department, Quartermasters Department, and depreciation of pay. A Pageant of 1776. 1950. Vindication of Col. David Hall (photostat), 1790, 41. . Burnham, Smith. Alexander Wylly (Georgia) to Samuel White, Speaker of the House, Massachusetts (photocopy), 1765, 2. The personal accounts date mostly from the 1800s. As the imperial crisis continued, the Whig opposition to Parliaments policies pushed forward in the colonies. . Most of the Continental Army was disbanded after the Treaty of Paris ended the Revolutionary War in 1783. Archibald Robertson journal extracts (transcripts), 1777, 15. 2. Before the Revolution: Yankee Doodle Comes to Delaware. 1858. Delaware Archives, 3 vols. Photostat. Philadelphia: G. W. Jacobs and Company, 1900. Preparations for peace were a topic of discussion, as were soldiers pay and reimbursement for the medical services of Dr. James Tilton. Miscellaneous items related to the Delaware Regiment and Delaware militia units. ex display range cookers; somerset county, pa magistrate reports; market segmentation disadvantages; saroj khan daughter death; two in the thoughts one in the prayers meme Thomas Rodney to Caesar Rodney (transcripts, photostats, originals), 1776, 6. List of Continental officers who died in service/invalid pension applicants, 1777-1793, 3. Washington, D.C.: Library of Congress, 1972. Letters from a Farmer in Pennsylvania. . Motor Travel, May 1925, June 1925. 9. Delawares veterans were ordered home toward the end of 1782. 11. 17. These files, also on microfilm, contain records created or acted upon by the General Assembly of Delaware. Harry Schenawolf, in his Revolutionary War Journal article "Battle of Mamaroneck . The rolls may also list deserters and killed, ill, or discharged soldiers. David Finney papers, re: Loyalists, 1777-1778, 7. Andr, the British officer engaged in negotiations with Benedict Arnold, had been captured by American militiamen and hung as a spy. Fiore, Jordan D. Days of History: 200 Years Ago, Revolutionary Era. 1775-1782. Coochs Bridge, Del. Dr. James Tilton was a physician and patriot who served with Haslets regiment and then as a surgeon to the Continental Army. . RG 1325.226 Delaware Public ArchivesMotion Picture Collection. To the Delaware Pilots, copy. The only possible escape route was to cross under heavy fire, a marshy area about eighty yards wide called Gowanus Creek. 18. . Letters To and From Caesar Rodney, 1756-1784. Box 1 contains correspondence through 1774. Delaware troops were present here as well. Joseph Reed wrote Dickinson, concerned over an error in Dickinsons Vindication. General Howes proclamation (transcript), 1777, 17. 2. Peery, Lynn. . Hancock, Harold B. . When a soldier became too old or disabled he would request his pension. In June 1776, an attack on Whigs in Kent County was narrowly averted. Morris, Irving. General RodneyJohn Dagworthy correspondence, 1777, 20. Swedish Contributions to American Freedom, 1776-1783, vol. The Delaware Blues, as the regiment was sometimes known, some 750 soldiers, took part in the campaign for New York in the summer of 1776. American Revolutionary War. R-36: John C. Powell, John Dickinson, Penman of the Revolution (Ph.D. thesis, University of Iowa, 1938). . Dickens, Charles W., ed. 22. Details. Many of these articles were part of a series featured in the Wilmington Morning News, Looking Back 200 Years, which ran in 1975 and 1976. Volume 1. (9), More men was not long in coming. Declaration of Independence, mounted reproduction on wood. These files contain the minutes of the Council of Safety from the years 1775-1776. As a number of loyalists left Delaware at this time, much of their property was seized. 8. Despite measures to control currency depreciation, the national extent of the problem did not allow for easy solutions. On Saturday, June 1, at 10:30 a.m. historian Charles (Chuck) Fithian will present a program at the Delaware Public Archives about this legendary military unit. Ross, Howard DeHaven. Jones, Elias. Atlas of the American Revolution. Philadelphia: American Philosophical Society, 1976. Battle of Cowpens, Conflict between Cols. The First Two Years of War (1776-1778): On January 17, 1776, six months before the Declaration of Independence, Robert Kirkwood (at age twenty) was commissioned a First Lieutenant in Col. John Haslet's Regiment of Light Infantry (fore-runner of the Delaware Continental Regiment). R-26.1R-26.4: John Dickinson material in the R. R. Logan Collection at the Historical Society of Pennsylvania. A rough chronological order is followed. He was instrumental in improving care for the sick and wounded by redesigning the military hospitals used by the Americans. Coughlan, Margaret N. Creating Independence, 1763-1789: Background Reading for Children. Buchanan, Roberdeau. Rioting between Whigs and Tories postponed October 1777 elections in Sussex County. Position of the Army at Brandewyne. 1777 (10). It was organized in the spring at Baltimore, Maryland (three companies) and Annapolis, Maryland (six companies) under the command of Colonel William Smallwood consisting of eight companies and one light infantry company from the northern . (Valley Forge Historical Society, 1949). Dickinson was a member of Congress, a militia colonel, and President of Delaware and of Pennsylvania during the Revolution. Additional information appears on supplies delivered, clothing purchased, quartermasters certificates taken up in taxes, and accounts of monies received from the Delaware State. . RG 1115.0 Votes and Proceedings of the House of Assembly 1776-1783. #25: Index of papers found in the New York Historical Society, re: Delaware, 4.