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Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:00,700 --> 00:00:01,978 Announcer: Major funding 2 00:00:02,002 --> 00:00:03,045 for "The American Revolution" 3 00:00:03,069 --> 00:00:04,480 was provided by The Better Angels Society 4 00:00:04,504 --> 00:00:05,748 and its members 5 00:00:05,772 --> 00:00:06,949 Jeannie and Jonathan Lavine 6 00:00:06,973 --> 00:00:08,951 with the Crimson Lion Foundation 7 00:00:08,975 --> 00:00:10,853 and the Blavatnik Family Foundation. 8 00:00:10,877 --> 00:00:14,390 Major funding was also provided by David M. Rubenstein, 9 00:00:14,414 --> 00:00:17,526 the Robert D. and Patricia E. Kern Family Foundation, 10 00:00:17,550 --> 00:00:18,861 the Lilly Endowment, 11 00:00:18,885 --> 00:00:21,030 and by Better Angels Society members: 12 00:00:21,054 --> 00:00:23,366 Eric and Wendy Schmidt, Stephen A. Schwarzman, 13 00:00:23,390 --> 00:00:26,068 and Kenneth C. Griffin with Griffin Catalyst. 14 00:00:26,092 --> 00:00:27,837 Additional support was provided by 15 00:00:27,861 --> 00:00:29,905 The Arthur Vining Davis Foundations, 16 00:00:29,929 --> 00:00:31,540 the Pew Charitable Trusts, 17 00:00:31,564 --> 00:00:33,676 Gilbert S. Omenn and Martha A. Darling, 18 00:00:33,700 --> 00:00:35,111 the Park Foundation, 19 00:00:35,135 --> 00:00:36,846 and by Better Angels Society members: 20 00:00:36,870 --> 00:00:40,016 Gilchrist and Amy Berg, Perry and Donna Golkin, 21 00:00:40,040 --> 00:00:42,551 The Michelson Foundation, Jacqueline B. Mars, 22 00:00:42,575 --> 00:00:46,022 the Kissick Family Foundation, Diane and Hal Brierley, 23 00:00:46,046 --> 00:00:48,724 John H.N. Fisher and Jennifer Caldwell, 24 00:00:48,748 --> 00:00:50,259 John and Catherine Debs, 25 00:00:50,283 --> 00:00:52,128 The Fullerton Family Charitable Fund, 26 00:00:52,152 --> 00:00:53,963 and these additional members. 27 00:00:53,987 --> 00:00:55,398 "The American Revolution" 28 00:00:55,422 --> 00:00:57,033 was made possible with support 29 00:00:57,057 --> 00:00:59,268 from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, 30 00:00:59,292 --> 00:01:02,062 and Viewers Like You. Thank You. 31 00:01:03,129 --> 00:01:05,274 Announcer: The American Revolution caused 32 00:01:05,298 --> 00:01:07,543 an impact felt around the world. 33 00:01:07,567 --> 00:01:12,848 The fight would take ingenuity, determination, 34 00:01:12,872 --> 00:01:14,984 and hope for a new tomorrow 35 00:01:15,008 --> 00:01:17,186 to turn the tide of history 36 00:01:17,210 --> 00:01:20,447 and set the American story in motion. 37 00:01:25,018 --> 00:01:27,863 What would you like the power to do? 38 00:01:27,887 --> 00:01:29,456 Bank of America. 39 00:01:34,828 --> 00:01:37,273 Voice: The plan laid down for our education 40 00:01:37,297 --> 00:01:40,576 was entirely broken in upon by the war. 41 00:01:40,600 --> 00:01:44,647 Instead of morning lessons, we were to knit stockings; 42 00:01:44,671 --> 00:01:48,284 instead of embroidering, to make homespun garments; 43 00:01:48,308 --> 00:01:51,287 and in place of the music of the harpsichord, 44 00:01:51,311 --> 00:01:53,089 to listen to the loud, clanging trumpet 45 00:01:53,113 --> 00:01:56,092 and never-ceasing drum, 46 00:01:56,116 --> 00:01:58,427 for in every direction that we traveled... 47 00:01:58,451 --> 00:02:02,431 And heaven knows we left but little of Virginia unexplored... 48 00:02:02,455 --> 00:02:05,901 We heard naught but the din of war. 49 00:02:05,925 --> 00:02:07,570 Our late peaceful country 50 00:02:07,594 --> 00:02:11,874 now became a scene of terror and confusion. 51 00:02:11,898 --> 00:02:13,809 Betsy Ambler. 52 00:02:13,833 --> 00:02:15,778 [Men shouting] 53 00:02:15,802 --> 00:02:17,947 ♪ 54 00:02:17,971 --> 00:02:20,583 Maya Jasanoff: Our images of the American Revolution 55 00:02:20,607 --> 00:02:25,387 tend to be images of men in wigs in wood-paneled rooms, 56 00:02:25,411 --> 00:02:27,756 and that helps to reinforce an image 57 00:02:27,780 --> 00:02:32,495 of the American Revolution as just a war about ideals. 58 00:02:32,519 --> 00:02:38,734 I think that we really do a disservice to... history 59 00:02:38,758 --> 00:02:42,905 and to the experiences of the people who lived through it 60 00:02:42,929 --> 00:02:48,344 when we paper over the violence of the American Revolution 61 00:02:48,368 --> 00:02:52,348 with this set of very idealized images 62 00:02:52,372 --> 00:02:55,651 that we have of the Founding Fathers 63 00:02:55,675 --> 00:02:58,587 signing documents in Philadelphia. 64 00:02:58,611 --> 00:03:01,957 The United States came out of violence. 65 00:03:01,981 --> 00:03:04,260 ♪ 66 00:03:04,284 --> 00:03:06,128 [Sea gulls crying] 67 00:03:06,152 --> 00:03:07,930 Voice: I peeped out at the bay 68 00:03:07,954 --> 00:03:13,469 and saw something resembling a wood of pine trees trimmed. 69 00:03:13,493 --> 00:03:15,304 I declare at my noticing this 70 00:03:15,328 --> 00:03:17,806 that I could not believe my eyes, 71 00:03:17,830 --> 00:03:21,477 but judge you of my surprise when, in about 10 minutes, 72 00:03:21,501 --> 00:03:23,979 the whole bay was full of shipping 73 00:03:24,003 --> 00:03:25,948 as ever it could be. 74 00:03:25,972 --> 00:03:30,519 I do declare that I thought all London was afloat. 75 00:03:30,543 --> 00:03:32,721 Private Daniel McCurtin. 76 00:03:32,745 --> 00:03:34,256 ♪ 77 00:03:34,280 --> 00:03:38,427 Narrator: On Saturday morning, June 29, 1776, 78 00:03:38,451 --> 00:03:41,497 Colonel Henry Knox, whose artillery had convinced 79 00:03:41,521 --> 00:03:44,500 the British to flee Boston, was breakfasting 80 00:03:44,524 --> 00:03:46,802 with his wife Lucy on the second floor 81 00:03:46,826 --> 00:03:50,372 of a commandeered mansion at Number 1 Broadway 82 00:03:50,396 --> 00:03:53,509 when he, too, spotted the British ships 83 00:03:53,533 --> 00:03:55,411 that Private McCurtin had seen 84 00:03:55,435 --> 00:03:59,248 as they approached New York Harbor unopposed. 85 00:03:59,272 --> 00:04:00,783 [Bell ringing] 86 00:04:00,807 --> 00:04:02,618 Voice: My God, you can scarcely conceive 87 00:04:02,642 --> 00:04:06,322 of the distress and anxiety... The city in an uproar, 88 00:04:06,346 --> 00:04:07,957 the alarm guns firing, 89 00:04:07,981 --> 00:04:11,126 the troops repairing to their posts. [Henry Knox] 90 00:04:11,150 --> 00:04:14,530 Narrator: Martha Washington and other officers' wives, 91 00:04:14,554 --> 00:04:17,700 including Lucy Knox and her infant daughter, 92 00:04:17,724 --> 00:04:21,503 were sent away from the city for their safety. 93 00:04:21,527 --> 00:04:24,573 The Royal Navy anchored off Staten Island 94 00:04:24,597 --> 00:04:29,311 and began to disembark some 10,000 British regulars. 95 00:04:29,335 --> 00:04:31,914 Crowds of local Loyalists cheered them 96 00:04:31,938 --> 00:04:34,049 as they stepped ashore. 97 00:04:34,073 --> 00:04:36,986 Stephen Conway: The Royal Navy, as one contemporary put it, 98 00:04:37,010 --> 00:04:41,357 was the "Canvas Wings of the British State." 99 00:04:41,381 --> 00:04:46,128 It enabled the British to appear off the coastline 100 00:04:46,152 --> 00:04:48,063 almost anywhere unhindered. 101 00:04:48,087 --> 00:04:49,732 ♪ 102 00:04:49,756 --> 00:04:51,400 Voice: We expect a very bloody summer 103 00:04:51,424 --> 00:04:54,336 at New York, as it is here, I presume, 104 00:04:54,360 --> 00:04:57,539 the grand efforts of the enemy will be aimed, 105 00:04:57,563 --> 00:05:00,409 and I am sorry to say that we are not, 106 00:05:00,433 --> 00:05:04,913 either in men or arms, prepared for it. 107 00:05:04,937 --> 00:05:06,949 George Washington. 108 00:05:06,973 --> 00:05:11,678 ♪ 109 00:05:13,246 --> 00:05:15,658 ♪ 110 00:05:15,682 --> 00:05:19,628 Narrator: By the summer of 1776, the Revolution, 111 00:05:19,652 --> 00:05:23,832 which began as a quarrel over the rights of British subjects, 112 00:05:23,856 --> 00:05:27,136 had become a war for American independence, 113 00:05:27,160 --> 00:05:30,939 and as that revolution spread throughout the colonies, 114 00:05:30,963 --> 00:05:35,444 thousands of Americans, patriots and Loyalists alike, 115 00:05:35,468 --> 00:05:38,847 would be driven from their homes. 116 00:05:38,871 --> 00:05:42,151 11-year-old Betsy Ambler of Yorktown, Virginia, 117 00:05:42,175 --> 00:05:46,322 and her family had been among the earliest refugees. 118 00:05:46,346 --> 00:05:51,694 Her mother suffered from what Betsy called "a nervous malady." 119 00:05:51,718 --> 00:05:55,164 In 1775, the constant talk of war 120 00:05:55,188 --> 00:05:59,535 and Yorktown's vulnerability to an attack by water 121 00:05:59,559 --> 00:06:03,572 had so terrified her mother that her father decided 122 00:06:03,596 --> 00:06:05,441 to move the family, Betsy said, 123 00:06:05,465 --> 00:06:08,401 "and seek a safe retreat for her." 124 00:06:09,736 --> 00:06:13,048 The Amblers were more fortunate than most displaced families. 125 00:06:13,072 --> 00:06:16,618 They and their relatives owned farms and plantations 126 00:06:16,642 --> 00:06:21,223 worked by enslaved people scattered across the state. 127 00:06:21,247 --> 00:06:22,925 They settled first in a small house 128 00:06:22,949 --> 00:06:28,030 in the tiny village of New Castle in Hanover County. 129 00:06:28,054 --> 00:06:31,066 It was there that Betsy's mother gave birth 130 00:06:31,090 --> 00:06:33,235 to another daughter... Lucy. 131 00:06:33,259 --> 00:06:37,806 Since Lucy "made her appearance just after the declaration," 132 00:06:37,830 --> 00:06:40,809 Betsy recalled, their father called her 133 00:06:40,833 --> 00:06:44,413 "his only independent child." 134 00:06:44,437 --> 00:06:46,715 Now a fully committed patriot, 135 00:06:46,739 --> 00:06:49,551 Betsy's father had lost his paid position 136 00:06:49,575 --> 00:06:52,121 as Collector of Royal Customs, 137 00:06:52,145 --> 00:06:56,458 and a Royal Navy blockade would soon choke off the shipping 138 00:06:56,482 --> 00:07:01,563 on which his profits as a merchant had been made. 139 00:07:01,587 --> 00:07:03,866 Voice: The war, though it was to involve 140 00:07:03,890 --> 00:07:08,704 my immediate family in poverty and perplexity of every kind, 141 00:07:08,728 --> 00:07:11,306 was for the foundation of independence 142 00:07:11,330 --> 00:07:14,076 and prosperity for my country, 143 00:07:14,100 --> 00:07:18,614 and what sacrifice would not an American, a Virginian, 144 00:07:18,638 --> 00:07:23,919 at the earliest age, have made for so desirable an end? 145 00:07:23,943 --> 00:07:25,754 Betsy Ambler. 146 00:07:25,778 --> 00:07:33,778 ♪ 147 00:07:39,959 --> 00:07:42,704 Voice: What to do with this city puzzles me. 148 00:07:42,728 --> 00:07:46,642 It is so encircled with deep, navigable water 149 00:07:46,666 --> 00:07:51,313 that whoever commands the sea must command the town. 150 00:07:51,337 --> 00:07:53,506 General Charles Lee. 151 00:07:54,674 --> 00:07:56,785 Narrator: George Washington had assigned 152 00:07:56,809 --> 00:07:59,988 a former British officer, General Charles Lee, 153 00:08:00,012 --> 00:08:03,325 to fortify New York City and its surroundings. 154 00:08:03,349 --> 00:08:05,027 The Patriot commanders feared 155 00:08:05,051 --> 00:08:07,729 they could not hold the town for long 156 00:08:07,753 --> 00:08:09,531 but hoped to make the British pay 157 00:08:09,555 --> 00:08:13,235 the highest possible price for its capture. 158 00:08:13,259 --> 00:08:17,973 Since no one could say where or when British attacks would come, 159 00:08:17,997 --> 00:08:21,410 Washington had been forced to scatter his army 160 00:08:21,434 --> 00:08:26,148 and its 121 cannon all around the harbor. 161 00:08:26,172 --> 00:08:28,217 Rick Atkinson: New York is an archipelago. 162 00:08:28,241 --> 00:08:30,552 It's a confluence of islands. 163 00:08:30,576 --> 00:08:32,621 It's a problem. 164 00:08:32,645 --> 00:08:34,823 If you don't control 165 00:08:34,847 --> 00:08:39,061 the naval approaches in and around New York, 166 00:08:39,085 --> 00:08:42,998 you cannot properly defend New York. 167 00:08:43,022 --> 00:08:45,667 Narrator: New York was one of the best natural harbors 168 00:08:45,691 --> 00:08:48,537 on the Atlantic seaboard, and although the town 169 00:08:48,561 --> 00:08:51,139 still occupied just a single square mile 170 00:08:51,163 --> 00:08:55,410 at Manhattan's southern tip, it was the second-largest city 171 00:08:55,434 --> 00:08:58,046 in the newly created United States 172 00:08:58,070 --> 00:09:01,016 and the gateway to the Hudson River. 173 00:09:01,040 --> 00:09:03,952 If the British commander, General William Howe, 174 00:09:03,976 --> 00:09:06,889 could capture it, his forces would be free 175 00:09:06,913 --> 00:09:10,659 to ascend the river and divide rebellious New England 176 00:09:10,683 --> 00:09:13,629 from the rest of the states. 177 00:09:13,653 --> 00:09:16,465 Nathaniel Philbrick: This whole war, in many ways, 178 00:09:16,489 --> 00:09:18,667 is a water campaign. 179 00:09:18,691 --> 00:09:20,369 It's who controls the coast, 180 00:09:20,393 --> 00:09:24,406 but it's also who controls the rivers and the lakes. 181 00:09:24,430 --> 00:09:26,441 This is where the fighting would be, 182 00:09:26,465 --> 00:09:28,810 wherever water provided you with a way 183 00:09:28,834 --> 00:09:31,280 to get into the interior of the country. 184 00:09:31,304 --> 00:09:33,181 [Splash] 185 00:09:33,205 --> 00:09:35,250 Narrator: Both the British and the Americans 186 00:09:35,274 --> 00:09:38,120 had considered New York and the farming communities 187 00:09:38,144 --> 00:09:41,823 that bordered it to be Loyalist strongholds. 188 00:09:41,847 --> 00:09:44,693 For weeks, Patriots had prowled the streets, 189 00:09:44,717 --> 00:09:46,929 roughing up Loyalists. 190 00:09:46,953 --> 00:09:50,365 Thousands fled with what belongings they could carry. 191 00:09:50,389 --> 00:09:54,069 Hundreds more were arrested. 192 00:09:54,093 --> 00:09:57,673 Several dozen were hauled away to Simsbury, Connecticut, 193 00:09:57,697 --> 00:10:00,509 and imprisoned in an abandoned copper mine 194 00:10:00,533 --> 00:10:02,911 70 feet below the Earth 195 00:10:02,935 --> 00:10:06,481 that the Patriots called the Catacomb of Loyalty. 196 00:10:06,505 --> 00:10:08,050 [Gavel bangs] 197 00:10:08,074 --> 00:10:11,453 A Committee for Detecting and Defeating Conspiracies, 198 00:10:11,477 --> 00:10:13,689 chaired by the attorney John Jay, 199 00:10:13,713 --> 00:10:16,592 held daily inquisitions. 200 00:10:16,616 --> 00:10:20,228 40 men, including the Mayor of New York City, 201 00:10:20,252 --> 00:10:24,866 were jailed for plotting to assassinate George Washington. 202 00:10:24,890 --> 00:10:27,936 A member of Washington's own personal guard 203 00:10:27,960 --> 00:10:30,672 was found to be involved and hanged 204 00:10:30,696 --> 00:10:33,308 while 4 brigades of troops looked on. 205 00:10:33,332 --> 00:10:35,143 [Sandbag thumps, rope creaks] 206 00:10:35,167 --> 00:10:38,847 The city had been home to 25,000 people. 207 00:10:38,871 --> 00:10:41,650 By the summer of 1776, 208 00:10:41,674 --> 00:10:44,753 just 5,000 of them would remain, 209 00:10:44,777 --> 00:10:46,922 and those Loyalists left behind 210 00:10:46,946 --> 00:10:50,959 had learned to keep their opinions to themselves. 211 00:10:50,983 --> 00:10:54,029 Voice: To see the vast number of houses shut up, 212 00:10:54,053 --> 00:10:57,499 one would think the city almost evacuated. 213 00:10:57,523 --> 00:10:59,868 Troops are daily coming in. 214 00:10:59,892 --> 00:11:02,871 They break open the houses they find shut up 215 00:11:02,895 --> 00:11:04,806 to quarter themselves. 216 00:11:04,830 --> 00:11:07,976 Necessity knows no law. [Unidentified Loyalist] 217 00:11:08,000 --> 00:11:11,680 Narrator: Continental soldiers and militiamen from 10 states 218 00:11:11,704 --> 00:11:13,982 continued to stream into town. 219 00:11:14,006 --> 00:11:16,985 Eventually, there would be more than 20,000 of them 220 00:11:17,009 --> 00:11:19,788 in and around New York. 221 00:11:19,812 --> 00:11:22,524 They moved into abandoned houses, 222 00:11:22,548 --> 00:11:25,661 tore up parquet floors for firewood, 223 00:11:25,685 --> 00:11:28,497 and hurled refuse from the windows. 224 00:11:28,521 --> 00:11:32,567 Despite a 10 P.M. curfew, troops flocked to a warren 225 00:11:32,591 --> 00:11:38,106 of West Side brothels built on land owned by Trinity Church. 226 00:11:38,130 --> 00:11:41,877 Customers called it the Holy Ground. 227 00:11:41,901 --> 00:11:43,512 ♪ 228 00:11:43,536 --> 00:11:47,683 On the afternoon of July 12th, 2 British warships 229 00:11:47,707 --> 00:11:50,052 slipped their anchors off Staten Island, 230 00:11:50,076 --> 00:11:53,055 moved into the harbor past the tip of Manhattan, 231 00:11:53,079 --> 00:11:56,091 and began sailing up the Hudson. 232 00:11:56,115 --> 00:11:57,426 [Cannonfire] 233 00:11:57,450 --> 00:11:59,161 Voice: The cannon from the city 234 00:11:59,185 --> 00:12:02,998 did but very little execution, as not more than half the number 235 00:12:03,022 --> 00:12:06,535 of the men belonging to them were present. 236 00:12:06,559 --> 00:12:08,804 The others were at their cups, 237 00:12:08,828 --> 00:12:11,306 and at their usual place of abode 238 00:12:11,330 --> 00:12:13,642 on the Holy Ground. 239 00:12:13,666 --> 00:12:16,945 Lieutenant Isaac Banks. 240 00:12:16,969 --> 00:12:18,914 Narrator: Later that same evening, 241 00:12:18,938 --> 00:12:22,851 a still-larger British fleet, more than 100 vessels, 242 00:12:22,875 --> 00:12:25,387 began streaming through the narrows 243 00:12:25,411 --> 00:12:27,923 and into New York Harbor. 244 00:12:27,947 --> 00:12:30,192 Its commander was General William Howe's 245 00:12:30,216 --> 00:12:33,895 elder brother Vice Admiral Richard Howe. 246 00:12:33,919 --> 00:12:37,265 Both had once expressed sympathy for the colonists, 247 00:12:37,289 --> 00:12:40,669 and both had been empowered to negotiate with rebel leaders 248 00:12:40,693 --> 00:12:45,474 and issue pardons in hopes of avoiding further bloodshed, 249 00:12:45,498 --> 00:12:48,477 but while the Admiral was crossing the Atlantic, 250 00:12:48,501 --> 00:12:51,379 Congress had declared American independence. 251 00:12:51,403 --> 00:12:52,914 [Men shouting] 252 00:12:52,938 --> 00:12:55,150 Voice: We learned the deplorable situation 253 00:12:55,174 --> 00:12:57,753 of His Majesty's faithful subjects, 254 00:12:57,777 --> 00:12:59,454 that they were hunted after and shot at 255 00:12:59,478 --> 00:13:02,090 in the woods and swamps to which they had fled 256 00:13:02,114 --> 00:13:04,659 to avoid the savage fury of the rebels. 257 00:13:04,683 --> 00:13:07,829 We also heard that the Congress had now announced the colonies 258 00:13:07,853 --> 00:13:09,998 to be independent states. 259 00:13:10,022 --> 00:13:15,704 That proclaims the villainy and madness of these deluded people. [Ambrose Serle] 260 00:13:15,728 --> 00:13:18,340 ♪ 261 00:13:18,364 --> 00:13:21,243 Voice: To my dear Betsey, my wife... 262 00:13:21,267 --> 00:13:25,213 It is hard to be quite happy when one full half, at least, 263 00:13:25,237 --> 00:13:28,784 of both body and soul is left at home, 264 00:13:28,808 --> 00:13:31,753 but, believe it, I am not more mortal here 265 00:13:31,777 --> 00:13:33,688 in the neighborhood of the British cannon 266 00:13:33,712 --> 00:13:38,059 than I should be was I happy in your peaceful, loving arms. 267 00:13:38,083 --> 00:13:42,731 Till my God calls me, I am immortal. 268 00:13:42,755 --> 00:13:45,333 Philip Vickers Fithian. 269 00:13:45,357 --> 00:13:48,737 Narrator: Philip Vickers Fithian of Cohansey, New Jersey, 270 00:13:48,761 --> 00:13:53,375 was a newly married 28-year-old Presbyterian clergyman, 271 00:13:53,399 --> 00:13:57,279 recently appointed chaplain of a militia brigade. 272 00:13:57,303 --> 00:13:58,480 He was a graduate 273 00:13:58,504 --> 00:14:01,216 of the College of New Jersey at Princeton, 274 00:14:01,240 --> 00:14:03,251 where his classmates had included 275 00:14:03,275 --> 00:14:06,888 Aaron Burr and James Madison. 276 00:14:06,912 --> 00:14:09,624 After college, he spent a year as a tutor 277 00:14:09,648 --> 00:14:11,660 on a Virginia plantation, 278 00:14:11,684 --> 00:14:15,964 where, seeing the inhuman cruelty of slavery up close, 279 00:14:15,988 --> 00:14:18,867 he introduced the owner's children to the work 280 00:14:18,891 --> 00:14:23,305 of the enslaved poet Phillis Wheatley. 281 00:14:23,329 --> 00:14:26,942 In New York, Fithian found himself sleeping on the floor 282 00:14:26,966 --> 00:14:30,011 of a Loyalist's abandoned home, 283 00:14:30,035 --> 00:14:32,781 conducting prayer meetings twice a day 284 00:14:32,805 --> 00:14:35,517 and afterwards visiting the hospitals 285 00:14:35,541 --> 00:14:38,353 filled with men dying from dysentery. 286 00:14:38,377 --> 00:14:40,021 Amen. Amen. 287 00:14:40,045 --> 00:14:41,423 Voice: Here I must daily visit 288 00:14:41,447 --> 00:14:44,426 among many in a contagious disorder, 289 00:14:44,450 --> 00:14:47,529 but I am not discouraged nor dispirited. 290 00:14:47,553 --> 00:14:50,065 I am willing to hazard and suffer equally 291 00:14:50,089 --> 00:14:53,101 with my countrymen since I have a firm conviction 292 00:14:53,125 --> 00:14:56,404 that I am in my duty. [Fithian] 293 00:14:56,428 --> 00:14:58,373 Friederike Baer: When we really take a look 294 00:14:58,397 --> 00:15:00,508 at what these regiments were like, 295 00:15:00,532 --> 00:15:03,912 we see a lot of individuals who are not carrying arms... 296 00:15:03,936 --> 00:15:06,448 Including women, including children, 297 00:15:06,472 --> 00:15:10,352 including servants, medical personnel, chaplains... 298 00:15:10,376 --> 00:15:12,187 And there are all kinds of individuals there 299 00:15:12,211 --> 00:15:15,023 that are essential parts of these armies 300 00:15:15,047 --> 00:15:17,058 that are doing essential labor, 301 00:15:17,082 --> 00:15:19,895 without whom, I think, the army couldn't operate. 302 00:15:19,919 --> 00:15:22,330 Voice: August 1st... 303 00:15:22,354 --> 00:15:24,566 There is a report pretty well confirmed 304 00:15:24,590 --> 00:15:27,736 that near 40 sail of the enemy came in this afternoon 305 00:15:27,760 --> 00:15:29,905 and are joining the fleet. 306 00:15:29,929 --> 00:15:32,874 We are all uncertain. [Fithian] 307 00:15:32,898 --> 00:15:35,243 Narrator: The ships that came in that day 308 00:15:35,267 --> 00:15:38,480 were straggling in from a failed British expedition 309 00:15:38,504 --> 00:15:41,116 in South Carolina. 310 00:15:41,140 --> 00:15:43,585 The Royal governors of the southern colonies, 311 00:15:43,609 --> 00:15:47,355 who had all been driven to ships anchored off their coasts, 312 00:15:47,379 --> 00:15:49,591 continued to insist that the rebellion 313 00:15:49,615 --> 00:15:53,728 had been stirred up by only a tiny minority of radicals, 314 00:15:53,752 --> 00:15:57,532 that the overwhelmingly loyal populace of their colonies 315 00:15:57,556 --> 00:16:00,869 would take up arms in support of the Crown, 316 00:16:00,893 --> 00:16:03,395 provided help was sent. 317 00:16:04,730 --> 00:16:09,077 In June, British warships had converged on Charleston Harbor, 318 00:16:09,101 --> 00:16:11,579 where their 262 guns 319 00:16:11,603 --> 00:16:15,884 opened fire on a rebel fort on Sullivan's Island. 320 00:16:15,908 --> 00:16:18,019 [Cannonfire] 321 00:16:18,043 --> 00:16:21,656 More than 7,000 cannonballs were fired. 322 00:16:21,680 --> 00:16:23,325 Most that hit their target 323 00:16:23,349 --> 00:16:28,029 were absorbed by the fort's sturdy palmetto walls. 324 00:16:28,053 --> 00:16:31,499 Within the fort, Patriot Colonel William Moultrie 325 00:16:31,523 --> 00:16:34,302 ordered his men to "distress [the enemy] 326 00:16:34,326 --> 00:16:38,373 in every shape to the utmost of your powers." 327 00:16:38,397 --> 00:16:40,175 They did. 328 00:16:40,199 --> 00:16:45,380 They had just 31 guns, but they proved deadly accurate, 329 00:16:45,404 --> 00:16:48,049 toppling masts, riddling hulls, 330 00:16:48,073 --> 00:16:51,419 blowing sailors and sea captains apart. 331 00:16:51,443 --> 00:16:55,557 The British flagship alone was hit 70 times, 332 00:16:55,581 --> 00:17:00,595 and 111 crewmen were killed or maimed. 333 00:17:00,619 --> 00:17:04,532 By evening, the battered fleet pulled away. 334 00:17:04,556 --> 00:17:07,402 "We never had such a drubbing in our lives," 335 00:17:07,426 --> 00:17:10,205 one British sailor remembered. 336 00:17:10,229 --> 00:17:13,942 It took 3 weeks to repair the damage to their ships 337 00:17:13,966 --> 00:17:16,277 before they made their way back north 338 00:17:16,301 --> 00:17:20,181 to join the forces threatening New York. 339 00:17:20,205 --> 00:17:22,584 The British would not attempt to recapture 340 00:17:22,608 --> 00:17:26,821 a southern colony again for 2 1/2 years. 341 00:17:26,845 --> 00:17:30,992 ♪ 342 00:17:31,016 --> 00:17:33,528 [Insects chirping] 343 00:17:33,552 --> 00:17:35,230 Voice: It seems to be the intention 344 00:17:35,254 --> 00:17:38,366 of the White people to destroy us as a people, 345 00:17:38,390 --> 00:17:41,936 but I have a great many young fellows that would support me, 346 00:17:41,960 --> 00:17:44,839 and we are determined to have our land. 347 00:17:44,863 --> 00:17:46,574 Tsi'yu-gunsini. 348 00:17:46,598 --> 00:17:47,809 ♪ 349 00:17:47,833 --> 00:17:51,679 Narrator: In the summer of 1776, Cherokee warriors 350 00:17:51,703 --> 00:17:56,117 led by Tsi'yu-gunsini, "Dragging Canoe" in English, 351 00:17:56,141 --> 00:17:58,720 began attacking frontier settlements 352 00:17:58,744 --> 00:18:00,555 west of the Appalachians 353 00:18:00,579 --> 00:18:06,227 on land now claimed by Virginia and the Carolinas. 354 00:18:06,251 --> 00:18:09,497 The Royal Proclamation of 1763 355 00:18:09,521 --> 00:18:12,634 had expressly barred colonists from purchasing 356 00:18:12,658 --> 00:18:16,838 or moving onto Indian lands west of the Appalachians, 357 00:18:16,862 --> 00:18:20,608 but British officials had been powerless to enforce it 358 00:18:20,632 --> 00:18:23,111 or to keep some Native Americans, 359 00:18:23,135 --> 00:18:25,747 including Dragging Canoe's own father, 360 00:18:25,771 --> 00:18:30,542 from leasing or selling land to settlers and speculators. 361 00:18:31,810 --> 00:18:33,922 Kathleen DuVal: We think of the Revolution 362 00:18:33,946 --> 00:18:36,357 as a war against empire, 363 00:18:36,381 --> 00:18:40,028 but it very quickly becomes a war for empire. 364 00:18:40,052 --> 00:18:42,430 One war aim of the American Revolution 365 00:18:42,454 --> 00:18:46,468 is to take the Ohio Valley and the South. 366 00:18:46,492 --> 00:18:49,604 That's what Americans wanted. 367 00:18:49,628 --> 00:18:53,274 The British government had kept them from taking Native lands, 368 00:18:53,298 --> 00:18:56,244 so for the Shawnees and the Delawares, 369 00:18:56,268 --> 00:18:59,347 Cherokees, and many other people, 370 00:18:59,371 --> 00:19:01,516 the American Revolution was a war 371 00:19:01,540 --> 00:19:03,551 to protect these places against an enemy 372 00:19:03,575 --> 00:19:06,921 they already knew quite well. 373 00:19:06,945 --> 00:19:08,523 Voice: Our Shawnee nation, 374 00:19:08,547 --> 00:19:12,660 from being a great people, are now reduced to a handful. 375 00:19:12,684 --> 00:19:17,065 The red people, who were once masters of the whole country, 376 00:19:17,089 --> 00:19:20,235 hardly possess ground enough to stand on. 377 00:19:20,259 --> 00:19:22,403 The lands where but lately we hunted 378 00:19:22,427 --> 00:19:24,272 are now thickly inhabited 379 00:19:24,296 --> 00:19:27,008 and covered with forts and armed men, 380 00:19:27,032 --> 00:19:29,377 and wherever a fort appears, 381 00:19:29,401 --> 00:19:33,748 there will soon be towns and settlements. [Shawnee Delegate] 382 00:19:33,772 --> 00:19:35,717 DuVal: In May 1776, 383 00:19:35,741 --> 00:19:38,753 a delegation of Shawnees, Delawares, Anishinaabe, 384 00:19:38,777 --> 00:19:42,590 and Haudenosaunee came to the Cherokee town of Chote. 385 00:19:42,614 --> 00:19:46,528 They said, "Enough is enough. 386 00:19:46,552 --> 00:19:48,630 "We've had year after year 387 00:19:48,654 --> 00:19:52,167 "of illegal settlement coming onto our lands. 388 00:19:52,191 --> 00:19:54,502 "Now a war has come 389 00:19:54,526 --> 00:19:59,307 "that has divided those settlers from their government. 390 00:19:59,331 --> 00:20:02,343 This is the time to strike." 391 00:20:02,367 --> 00:20:04,412 Voice: It is better to die like men 392 00:20:04,436 --> 00:20:06,948 than to diminish away by inches. 393 00:20:06,972 --> 00:20:09,417 The Cherokees have a hatchet. 394 00:20:09,441 --> 00:20:13,712 Take it up and use it immediately. [Shawnee Delegate] 395 00:20:15,280 --> 00:20:18,026 Narrator: British agents still in Indian country, 396 00:20:18,050 --> 00:20:21,129 who had armed the Cherokees to fight the rebels, 397 00:20:21,153 --> 00:20:23,398 now urged them to be patient 398 00:20:23,422 --> 00:20:26,701 and wait until British troops could join them. 399 00:20:26,725 --> 00:20:29,637 Dragging Canoe would not listen to the British 400 00:20:29,661 --> 00:20:32,440 or to the elders of his father's generation, 401 00:20:32,464 --> 00:20:35,276 who had urged diplomacy. 402 00:20:35,300 --> 00:20:38,313 He rallied the young men and went to war. 403 00:20:38,337 --> 00:20:40,315 [Flames crackling] 404 00:20:40,339 --> 00:20:43,117 They killed and scalped settlers in the Carolina 405 00:20:43,141 --> 00:20:46,988 and Virginia backcountry, burned their cabins and crops, 406 00:20:47,012 --> 00:20:49,991 and drove off their livestock. 407 00:20:50,015 --> 00:20:51,826 Colin Calloway: The result is, 408 00:20:51,850 --> 00:20:55,029 as the older chiefs feared it would be, 409 00:20:55,053 --> 00:20:57,332 that those American colonies 410 00:20:57,356 --> 00:21:02,003 immediately send armies into Cherokee country. 411 00:21:02,027 --> 00:21:04,906 Some of the American leaders actually say in as many words, 412 00:21:04,930 --> 00:21:07,942 "This is just what we were waiting for. 413 00:21:07,966 --> 00:21:10,678 "Now we have justification 414 00:21:10,702 --> 00:21:14,582 "for launching a full-scale assault on the Cherokees 415 00:21:14,606 --> 00:21:18,052 and to drive them out and take their land." 416 00:21:18,076 --> 00:21:19,420 ♪ 417 00:21:19,444 --> 00:21:20,788 Voice: Nothing will reduce 418 00:21:20,812 --> 00:21:23,291 those wretches so soon as pushing the war 419 00:21:23,315 --> 00:21:25,994 into the heart of their country, 420 00:21:26,018 --> 00:21:27,829 but I would not stop there. 421 00:21:27,853 --> 00:21:29,931 I would never cease pursuing them 422 00:21:29,955 --> 00:21:34,302 while one of them remained on this side of the Mississippi. 423 00:21:34,326 --> 00:21:36,070 Thomas Jefferson. 424 00:21:36,094 --> 00:21:37,672 ♪ 425 00:21:37,696 --> 00:21:41,542 DuVal: There are thousands of militiamen in South Carolina, 426 00:21:41,566 --> 00:21:44,512 North Carolina, Virginia, Georgia 427 00:21:44,536 --> 00:21:47,582 ready to join the Revolution, ready to fight Britain, 428 00:21:47,606 --> 00:21:48,883 but the British aren't there. 429 00:21:48,907 --> 00:21:50,485 There are no British there to fight. 430 00:21:50,509 --> 00:21:53,545 Who's there to fight? The Cherokees. 431 00:21:54,579 --> 00:21:56,624 Narrator: Some 6,000 militiamen 432 00:21:56,648 --> 00:21:59,127 stormed through Cherokee country. 433 00:21:59,151 --> 00:22:01,596 They destroyed 36 towns, 434 00:22:01,620 --> 00:22:05,066 including Dragging Canoe's own village. 435 00:22:05,090 --> 00:22:09,003 Philip Deloria: This is meant to be instructive to other tribes. 436 00:22:09,027 --> 00:22:10,705 "If you think you're gonna keep a British alliance, 437 00:22:10,729 --> 00:22:12,173 "guess what we're gonna do? 438 00:22:12,197 --> 00:22:13,675 "We're gonna come and burn everything. 439 00:22:13,699 --> 00:22:15,276 "We're gonna destroy your fields. 440 00:22:15,300 --> 00:22:16,678 "We're gonna destroy your corn. 441 00:22:16,702 --> 00:22:19,013 "We're gonna destroy all your stored-up food. 442 00:22:19,037 --> 00:22:21,983 "We're gonna wage total war on those people. 443 00:22:22,007 --> 00:22:25,987 Let's teach all Native people a lesson about what's coming." 444 00:22:26,011 --> 00:22:27,388 ♪ 445 00:22:27,412 --> 00:22:30,458 Narrator: In the end, older Cherokee leaders 446 00:22:30,482 --> 00:22:33,995 would sue for peace and be forced to cede 447 00:22:34,019 --> 00:22:36,864 another 5 million acres. 448 00:22:36,888 --> 00:22:40,702 Maggie Blackhawk: The colonists wanted to possess that land 449 00:22:40,726 --> 00:22:43,371 exclusively, and it's a vision 450 00:22:43,395 --> 00:22:47,942 that is Western, as contrasted to Native people, 451 00:22:47,966 --> 00:22:53,081 who had a more spiritual or more engaged relationship to land. 452 00:22:53,105 --> 00:22:54,916 Narrator: Unlike his elders, 453 00:22:54,940 --> 00:22:57,819 Dragging Canoe would not surrender. 454 00:22:57,843 --> 00:23:00,121 With hundreds of men and their families, 455 00:23:00,145 --> 00:23:02,357 he managed to escape westward 456 00:23:02,381 --> 00:23:04,659 to settle along the Chickamauga Creek 457 00:23:04,683 --> 00:23:09,130 in what is now Tennessee, where he remained defiant. 458 00:23:09,154 --> 00:23:13,668 "I could not hear their talks of peace," Dragging Canoe said. 459 00:23:13,692 --> 00:23:18,897 "My thoughts and my heart are for war." 460 00:23:20,198 --> 00:23:22,410 ♪ 461 00:23:22,434 --> 00:23:24,679 Imperial powers were advancing 462 00:23:24,703 --> 00:23:28,750 all across North America in 1776... 463 00:23:28,774 --> 00:23:31,819 Russia along the Alaska coast, 464 00:23:31,843 --> 00:23:35,156 Spain in what became San Francisco Bay, 465 00:23:35,180 --> 00:23:37,658 the Lakota in the Black Hills, 466 00:23:37,682 --> 00:23:41,529 and the Comanches on the Southern Plains. 467 00:23:41,553 --> 00:23:45,433 On August 12th off Staten Island in New York, 468 00:23:45,457 --> 00:23:48,736 Britain, the world's greatest naval power, 469 00:23:48,760 --> 00:23:52,006 landed 107 more ships. 470 00:23:52,030 --> 00:23:57,912 Aboard them were 8,600 hired Hessian troops. 471 00:23:57,936 --> 00:24:00,548 Everything about the German soldiers 472 00:24:00,572 --> 00:24:03,184 was intended to intimidate... 473 00:24:03,208 --> 00:24:04,852 Their tightly fitted uniforms 474 00:24:04,876 --> 00:24:08,089 that made the wearers seem bigger than they were, 475 00:24:08,113 --> 00:24:12,059 the whiskers many grew when most men were clean-shaven, 476 00:24:12,083 --> 00:24:15,530 the helmets worn by their grenadiers and fusiliers 477 00:24:15,554 --> 00:24:17,999 that added a foot to their height, 478 00:24:18,023 --> 00:24:21,769 and the reputation for ferocity so widespread 479 00:24:21,793 --> 00:24:24,739 that some Americans believed them cannibals 480 00:24:24,763 --> 00:24:28,609 with a special taste for babies. 481 00:24:28,633 --> 00:24:31,345 Baer: I think it is an effective propaganda tool. 482 00:24:31,369 --> 00:24:34,415 "They will plunder our homes. They will burn our village. 483 00:24:34,439 --> 00:24:36,050 They will rape our women." 484 00:24:36,074 --> 00:24:39,754 These kind of portrayals really show up frequently, 485 00:24:39,778 --> 00:24:42,890 especially in the spring of '76 486 00:24:42,914 --> 00:24:46,160 before the first Germans even set foot on American soil. 487 00:24:46,184 --> 00:24:47,795 [Sea gulls crying] 488 00:24:47,819 --> 00:24:49,997 Voice: Peace will not be restored in America 489 00:24:50,021 --> 00:24:52,800 until the rebel army is defeated. 490 00:24:52,824 --> 00:24:55,670 Should the enemy offer battle in the open field, 491 00:24:55,694 --> 00:24:58,172 we must not decline it. 492 00:24:58,196 --> 00:25:00,232 General William Howe. 493 00:25:01,433 --> 00:25:03,878 Narrator: General William Howe and his brother Richard 494 00:25:03,902 --> 00:25:06,047 were in joint command of the largest 495 00:25:06,071 --> 00:25:09,951 seaborne assault force Britain had ever assembled... 496 00:25:09,975 --> 00:25:14,689 24,000 soldiers, including the 8,600 Hessians, 497 00:25:14,713 --> 00:25:20,895 and 400 ships manned by some 10,000 sailors and marines. 498 00:25:20,919 --> 00:25:22,330 ♪ 499 00:25:22,354 --> 00:25:27,702 At dawn on August 22nd, 4,000 British and Hessian troops 500 00:25:27,726 --> 00:25:31,405 crossed the narrows and came ashore at Gravesend 501 00:25:31,429 --> 00:25:34,308 on the southeastern edge of Long Island, 502 00:25:34,332 --> 00:25:38,012 boatloads of assault troops. 503 00:25:38,036 --> 00:25:39,714 Voice: The enemy have now landed 504 00:25:39,738 --> 00:25:41,415 on Long Island. 505 00:25:41,439 --> 00:25:44,785 The hour is fast approaching on which the honor and success 506 00:25:44,809 --> 00:25:50,491 of this army and the safety of our bleeding country depend. 507 00:25:50,515 --> 00:25:52,260 George Washington. 508 00:25:52,284 --> 00:25:54,462 ♪ 509 00:25:54,486 --> 00:25:57,131 Narrator: More troops continued to land. 510 00:25:57,155 --> 00:26:01,869 Soon, more than 20,000 British, Hessian, and Loyalist soldiers 511 00:26:01,893 --> 00:26:05,506 occupied a tent city that sprawled for 8 miles 512 00:26:05,530 --> 00:26:08,409 just beyond the beach. 513 00:26:08,433 --> 00:26:11,913 General Washington reminded his men of the dismissive things 514 00:26:11,937 --> 00:26:14,615 British officers had said of them. 515 00:26:14,639 --> 00:26:17,885 Now they would have a chance to prove them wrong, 516 00:26:17,909 --> 00:26:21,956 provided they remained cool but determined. 517 00:26:21,980 --> 00:26:24,859 Voice: Remember that you are free men 518 00:26:24,883 --> 00:26:27,695 fighting for the blessings of liberty, 519 00:26:27,719 --> 00:26:30,331 that slavery will be your portion 520 00:26:30,355 --> 00:26:32,333 and that of your posterity 521 00:26:32,357 --> 00:26:35,236 if you do not acquit yourselves like men. [Washington] 522 00:26:35,260 --> 00:26:37,104 ♪ 523 00:26:37,128 --> 00:26:40,274 Narrator: Washington knew an attack was coming somewhere, 524 00:26:40,298 --> 00:26:43,411 but he worried that the British landing on Long Island 525 00:26:43,435 --> 00:26:49,016 was merely a diversion, and so he divided his army. 526 00:26:49,040 --> 00:26:53,120 Most would stay in Manhattan, while some 8,000 men, 527 00:26:53,144 --> 00:26:55,856 many of them ill-trained militia, 528 00:26:55,880 --> 00:26:57,925 were posted on Long Island, 529 00:26:57,949 --> 00:27:00,561 where Washington's most trusted general, 530 00:27:00,585 --> 00:27:02,763 Nathanael Greene of Rhode Island, 531 00:27:02,787 --> 00:27:05,066 had strengthened the series of forts 532 00:27:05,090 --> 00:27:09,737 and earthworks that ran from Red Hook to Wallabout Bay. 533 00:27:09,761 --> 00:27:12,139 Most of the defenses were concentrated 534 00:27:12,163 --> 00:27:15,242 near the lofty cliffs closest to Manhattan 535 00:27:15,266 --> 00:27:18,179 called Brooklyn Heights after the tiny village 536 00:27:18,203 --> 00:27:22,583 of Brooklyn that stood just behind them. 537 00:27:22,607 --> 00:27:24,819 Washington and his generals believed 538 00:27:24,843 --> 00:27:27,722 that if the British were to seize that high ground, 539 00:27:27,746 --> 00:27:29,924 their guns would command the city, 540 00:27:29,948 --> 00:27:32,627 much as rebel guns had commanded Boston 541 00:27:32,651 --> 00:27:36,030 and its harbor earlier that year, 542 00:27:36,054 --> 00:27:40,134 but Nathanael Greene had fallen ill and was soon replaced 543 00:27:40,158 --> 00:27:43,671 by Major General Israel Putnam of Connecticut, 544 00:27:43,695 --> 00:27:46,273 whose fighting spirit was not matched 545 00:27:46,297 --> 00:27:50,778 by strategic sense or knowledge of the terrain. 546 00:27:50,802 --> 00:27:53,881 Between the Brooklyn Heights fortifications 547 00:27:53,905 --> 00:27:57,918 and the British encampment ran a rugged, forested ridge 548 00:27:57,942 --> 00:28:00,688 called the Gowanus Heights. 549 00:28:00,712 --> 00:28:03,724 4 passes cut in or around it... 550 00:28:03,748 --> 00:28:09,063 Gowanus, Flatbush, Bedford, and Jamaica. 551 00:28:09,087 --> 00:28:13,401 With Washington's approval, Putnam ordered 3,000 of his men 552 00:28:13,425 --> 00:28:18,706 to dig in and hold the ridge and 3 of the passes. 553 00:28:18,730 --> 00:28:25,379 Unaccountably, the Jamaica Pass remained virtually unguarded. 554 00:28:25,403 --> 00:28:29,383 Washington makes a number of serious tactical mistakes 555 00:28:29,407 --> 00:28:31,986 when he's commander of the American military 556 00:28:32,010 --> 00:28:35,022 and none more serious than at Long Island. 557 00:28:35,046 --> 00:28:36,657 He'd been a surveyor. 558 00:28:36,681 --> 00:28:39,960 He should have known the value 559 00:28:39,984 --> 00:28:43,264 of completely understanding 560 00:28:43,288 --> 00:28:45,232 the ground that you're trying to defend. 561 00:28:45,256 --> 00:28:48,069 He doesn't. He doesn't go and explore 562 00:28:48,093 --> 00:28:49,970 the ground toward Jamaica, 563 00:28:49,994 --> 00:28:53,040 which is the far end of this glacial feature, 564 00:28:53,064 --> 00:28:54,909 and doesn't recognize 565 00:28:54,933 --> 00:28:58,979 that he can be outflanked by the British. 566 00:28:59,003 --> 00:29:01,082 Narrator: The Battle of Long Island began 567 00:29:01,106 --> 00:29:06,220 in the early-morning hours of August 27, 1776, 568 00:29:06,244 --> 00:29:10,257 and it started with a skirmish over watermelons. 569 00:29:10,281 --> 00:29:12,093 ♪ 570 00:29:12,117 --> 00:29:16,597 Around midnight, Pennsylvania pickets at the Red Lion Inn 571 00:29:16,621 --> 00:29:19,366 on the far right of the American lines 572 00:29:19,390 --> 00:29:24,505 had dimly glimpsed two shadowy figures in a melon patch. 573 00:29:24,529 --> 00:29:26,273 They were British foragers 574 00:29:26,297 --> 00:29:29,610 out in front of a large force of redcoats 575 00:29:29,634 --> 00:29:30,945 and hoping for a treat 576 00:29:30,969 --> 00:29:33,147 before they were sent against the enemy. 577 00:29:33,171 --> 00:29:34,782 [Gunfire] 578 00:29:34,806 --> 00:29:37,384 The Pennsylvanians opened fire. 579 00:29:37,408 --> 00:29:40,888 A few minutes later, a British musket volley from the woods 580 00:29:40,912 --> 00:29:44,725 sent the Americans running back to camp. 581 00:29:44,749 --> 00:29:47,161 With the British attack underway, 582 00:29:47,185 --> 00:29:51,432 General William Alexander was ordered to organize a force 583 00:29:51,456 --> 00:29:54,101 to try and stop it. 584 00:29:54,125 --> 00:29:57,071 Alexander and 1,600 men 585 00:29:57,095 --> 00:29:59,907 took up positions south of a salt marsh 586 00:29:59,931 --> 00:30:03,010 and mill pond next to Gowanus Creek 587 00:30:03,034 --> 00:30:07,181 as 5,000 British troops advanced toward them. 588 00:30:07,205 --> 00:30:11,252 With no trees or stone walls for cover, 589 00:30:11,276 --> 00:30:16,090 American and British forces stood in line, European style, 590 00:30:16,114 --> 00:30:20,194 and fired musket volleys and artillery at one another. 591 00:30:20,218 --> 00:30:23,564 "Both the balls and shells flew very fast," 592 00:30:23,588 --> 00:30:26,033 a Maryland soldier remembered, 593 00:30:26,057 --> 00:30:29,336 "now and then taking off a head." 594 00:30:29,360 --> 00:30:31,539 ♪ 595 00:30:31,563 --> 00:30:34,742 Meanwhile, in the center of the American lines, 596 00:30:34,766 --> 00:30:37,411 British cannonfire ripped through the trees 597 00:30:37,435 --> 00:30:40,381 above the ridgeline, where several hundred troops 598 00:30:40,405 --> 00:30:43,350 under New Hampshire General John Sullivan 599 00:30:43,374 --> 00:30:47,054 guarded the Flatbush and Bedford passes. 600 00:30:47,078 --> 00:30:49,290 Hessian and Highland regiments 601 00:30:49,314 --> 00:30:52,059 advanced toward them with fixed bayonets, 602 00:30:52,083 --> 00:30:56,831 retreating several times under furious American fire. 603 00:30:56,855 --> 00:30:59,667 Watching from a fort on Cobble Hill, 604 00:30:59,691 --> 00:31:02,002 Washington was pleased with the way 605 00:31:02,026 --> 00:31:04,405 the fighting was going so far. 606 00:31:04,429 --> 00:31:07,074 Both fronts seemed to be holding, 607 00:31:07,098 --> 00:31:11,612 but he also sent for reinforcements from Manhattan. 608 00:31:11,636 --> 00:31:13,314 [Fife playing] 609 00:31:13,338 --> 00:31:15,082 Voice: Our sergeant major informed us 610 00:31:15,106 --> 00:31:17,885 that the regiment was ordered to Long Island. 611 00:31:17,909 --> 00:31:20,120 It gave me a rather disagreeable feeling, 612 00:31:20,144 --> 00:31:21,522 as I was pretty well-assured 613 00:31:21,546 --> 00:31:23,591 I should have to sniff a little gunpowder. 614 00:31:23,615 --> 00:31:25,259 [Gunfire] 615 00:31:25,283 --> 00:31:27,795 The horrors of battle then presented themselves to my mind 616 00:31:27,819 --> 00:31:29,930 in all their hideousness. 617 00:31:29,954 --> 00:31:33,133 "I must come to it now," thought I. 618 00:31:33,157 --> 00:31:35,269 Joseph Plumb Martin. 619 00:31:35,293 --> 00:31:37,338 Narrator: Private Joseph Plumb Martin 620 00:31:37,362 --> 00:31:41,876 of the Connecticut militia was just 15 years old that summer, 621 00:31:41,900 --> 00:31:45,112 1 of 7 children of a small-town minister 622 00:31:45,136 --> 00:31:48,616 so quarrelsome, he could not hold on to a congregation. 623 00:31:48,640 --> 00:31:53,754 Martin had wanted to enlist since Lexington and Concord. 624 00:31:53,778 --> 00:31:57,691 On July 6, 1776, he remembered, 625 00:31:57,715 --> 00:31:59,460 he'd taken "up the pen, 626 00:31:59,484 --> 00:32:02,463 "loaded it with the fatal charge [of ink], 627 00:32:02,487 --> 00:32:04,565 "[and] wrote my name. 628 00:32:04,589 --> 00:32:10,671 [N]ow I was a soldier in name at least, if not in practice." 629 00:32:10,695 --> 00:32:14,475 Before the boats carrying Martin and his fellow soldiers 630 00:32:14,499 --> 00:32:16,911 could cross the East River to Brooklyn, 631 00:32:16,935 --> 00:32:20,781 the tide of battle had begun to turn. 632 00:32:20,805 --> 00:32:24,285 The British attacks on the American right and center, 633 00:32:24,309 --> 00:32:27,054 which Washington's army seemed to have thwarted, 634 00:32:27,078 --> 00:32:30,190 had turned out to be mere demonstrations 635 00:32:30,214 --> 00:32:33,928 meant to occupy troops who might otherwise have defended 636 00:32:33,952 --> 00:32:36,664 against the main British assault. 637 00:32:36,688 --> 00:32:40,601 That would soon begin on the American left. 638 00:32:40,625 --> 00:32:45,663 The British had slipped through the undefended Jamaica Pass. 639 00:32:46,764 --> 00:32:50,210 12 hours earlier, leaving their campfires burning 640 00:32:50,234 --> 00:32:53,547 to confuse the Patriots, General Henry Clinton 641 00:32:53,571 --> 00:32:58,252 had led some 10,000 British and German soldiers north 642 00:32:58,276 --> 00:33:03,290 along a dirt road grandly called the King's Highway. 643 00:33:03,314 --> 00:33:08,629 They moved in silence, guided by 3 Loyalist volunteers. 644 00:33:08,653 --> 00:33:09,964 ♪ 645 00:33:09,988 --> 00:33:11,598 Atkinson: This is Clinton's idea. 646 00:33:11,622 --> 00:33:14,768 He's persuaded Howe that this is the right way to do it. 647 00:33:14,792 --> 00:33:16,303 "Don't attack frontally. 648 00:33:16,327 --> 00:33:18,739 "You don't want another Bunker Hill. 649 00:33:18,763 --> 00:33:20,307 Go around them," 650 00:33:20,331 --> 00:33:23,277 so he leads... It's a better part of 10,000 men 651 00:33:23,301 --> 00:33:26,780 in the dark of night very quietly, 652 00:33:26,804 --> 00:33:28,615 as quiet as 10,000 men 653 00:33:28,639 --> 00:33:33,020 pulling artillery guns with horses can be. 654 00:33:33,044 --> 00:33:35,456 Narrator: The plan worked perfectly. 655 00:33:35,480 --> 00:33:39,059 The British column, nearly 2 miles long, 656 00:33:39,083 --> 00:33:40,594 made it through the pass 657 00:33:40,618 --> 00:33:42,463 and reached the village of Bedford, 658 00:33:42,487 --> 00:33:45,399 well behind American lines and just 2 miles 659 00:33:45,423 --> 00:33:50,037 from the main fortifications on and around Brooklyn Heights. 660 00:33:50,061 --> 00:33:51,939 [2 cannon shots] 661 00:33:51,963 --> 00:33:55,976 General Clinton ordered 2 guns fired in quick succession, 662 00:33:56,000 --> 00:33:58,012 the signal for British troops 663 00:33:58,036 --> 00:34:00,748 besieging the American right and center 664 00:34:00,772 --> 00:34:03,217 to move forward simultaneously, 665 00:34:03,241 --> 00:34:06,920 trapping John Sullivan's men in between. 666 00:34:06,944 --> 00:34:10,858 Sullivan ordered his gunners to turn their field pieces around 667 00:34:10,882 --> 00:34:15,929 to fire at the enemy, now rushing at them from behind, 668 00:34:15,953 --> 00:34:18,499 but as they struggled to do so, 669 00:34:18,523 --> 00:34:21,168 Hessian grenadiers and Highland Scots 670 00:34:21,192 --> 00:34:24,171 swarmed up and over the Gowanus Heights, 671 00:34:24,195 --> 00:34:27,808 firing and bayoneting as they came. 672 00:34:27,832 --> 00:34:30,177 It was a rout. 673 00:34:30,201 --> 00:34:33,347 Voice: Blood, carnage, fire. 674 00:34:33,371 --> 00:34:36,650 Many, many, we fear, are lost. 675 00:34:36,674 --> 00:34:40,587 Such a dreadful din my ears never before heard. 676 00:34:40,611 --> 00:34:42,856 Philip Fithian. 677 00:34:42,880 --> 00:34:44,425 [Gunfire] 678 00:34:44,449 --> 00:34:47,361 Atkinson: Muskets are mostly inaccurate beyond 80 yards 679 00:34:47,385 --> 00:34:49,797 and hopeless beyond 120 yards, 680 00:34:49,821 --> 00:34:52,666 so a lot of the killing is done with a bayonet, 681 00:34:52,690 --> 00:34:55,903 and the bayonet is a nasty way to kill. 682 00:34:55,927 --> 00:34:58,038 It's a nasty way to die. 683 00:34:58,062 --> 00:35:00,574 This is really eyeball to eyeball, 684 00:35:00,598 --> 00:35:02,009 nose to nose. 685 00:35:02,033 --> 00:35:04,378 It's very intimate, 686 00:35:04,402 --> 00:35:08,615 and that kind of intimacy is horrifying. 687 00:35:08,639 --> 00:35:11,351 Narrator: Hundreds of Americans surrendered, 688 00:35:11,375 --> 00:35:14,388 including General Sullivan. 689 00:35:14,412 --> 00:35:18,192 "Their fear of the Hessian troops was indescribable," 690 00:35:18,216 --> 00:35:21,762 the German commander General Heister remembered. 691 00:35:21,786 --> 00:35:23,330 Voice: When they caught 692 00:35:23,354 --> 00:35:24,998 only a glimpse of us, they surrendered immediately 693 00:35:25,022 --> 00:35:27,534 and begged on their knees for their lives. 694 00:35:27,558 --> 00:35:29,369 I am surprised that the British troops 695 00:35:29,393 --> 00:35:31,772 have achieved so little against these people. [Heister] 696 00:35:31,796 --> 00:35:33,674 ♪ 697 00:35:33,698 --> 00:35:36,143 Voice: We soon landed at Brooklyn. 698 00:35:36,167 --> 00:35:38,645 We now began to meet the wounded men, 699 00:35:38,669 --> 00:35:41,315 another sight I was unacquainted with, 700 00:35:41,339 --> 00:35:44,284 some with broken arms, some with broken legs, 701 00:35:44,308 --> 00:35:47,821 and some with broken heads. [Martin] 702 00:35:47,845 --> 00:35:50,290 Narrator: The fighting Joseph Plumb Martin 703 00:35:50,314 --> 00:35:52,626 was about to witness would prove 704 00:35:52,650 --> 00:35:55,462 the last and bloodiest of the day. 705 00:35:55,486 --> 00:35:57,798 [Gunfire and shouting] 706 00:35:57,822 --> 00:36:00,367 ♪ 707 00:36:00,391 --> 00:36:04,371 3 British columns were now converging on General Alexander 708 00:36:04,395 --> 00:36:07,174 and his men on the American right. 709 00:36:07,198 --> 00:36:09,510 He did his best to rally them, 710 00:36:09,534 --> 00:36:13,147 but the number of attackers steadily grew. 711 00:36:13,171 --> 00:36:15,516 Alexander fell back, 712 00:36:15,540 --> 00:36:18,785 and finally, rather than see his command destroyed, 713 00:36:18,809 --> 00:36:22,456 he urged his men to retreat to the village of Brooklyn 714 00:36:22,480 --> 00:36:27,427 across the tidal marshes that flanked Gowanus Creek. 715 00:36:27,451 --> 00:36:30,430 Voice: Such as could swim got across. 716 00:36:30,454 --> 00:36:33,467 Those that could not swim sunk. 717 00:36:33,491 --> 00:36:36,170 The British were pouring the canister and grapeshot 718 00:36:36,194 --> 00:36:39,339 upon the Americans like a shower of hail. 719 00:36:39,363 --> 00:36:41,909 Many of them were killed in the pond 720 00:36:41,933 --> 00:36:44,912 and more were drowned. [Martin] 721 00:36:44,936 --> 00:36:47,648 Narrator: To provide cover for his desperate men 722 00:36:47,672 --> 00:36:50,817 and to occupy the British troops firing at them 723 00:36:50,841 --> 00:36:54,354 from inside and around an old stone house, 724 00:36:54,378 --> 00:36:58,358 Alexander led some 400 soldiers from Maryland 725 00:36:58,382 --> 00:37:02,629 into the enemy guns again and again. 726 00:37:02,653 --> 00:37:05,999 Fewer than a dozen of them made it safely back 727 00:37:06,023 --> 00:37:08,468 to the American lines. 728 00:37:08,492 --> 00:37:12,439 Alexander himself was forced to surrender. 729 00:37:12,463 --> 00:37:15,943 "The slaughter was horrible," a Hessian chaplain wrote. 730 00:37:15,967 --> 00:37:18,812 "I went over the battlefield among the dead, 731 00:37:18,836 --> 00:37:23,483 who mostly had been hacked and shot all to pieces." 732 00:37:23,507 --> 00:37:26,520 At least 200 Americans had been killed, 733 00:37:26,544 --> 00:37:29,780 and perhaps a thousand more were captured. 734 00:37:31,115 --> 00:37:37,030 Washington watched this final carnage through his spyglass. 735 00:37:37,054 --> 00:37:40,234 By noon, it was all over. 736 00:37:40,258 --> 00:37:42,436 The British believed they had won 737 00:37:42,460 --> 00:37:46,030 what one general called a "cheap and complete victory." 738 00:37:47,365 --> 00:37:49,643 Atkinson: Washington's heartbroken because 739 00:37:49,667 --> 00:37:53,981 he recognizes instantly what a catastrophe this has been. 740 00:37:54,005 --> 00:37:58,018 The only saving grace is that enough of them pull back 741 00:37:58,042 --> 00:38:02,022 to form sort of an inner defense around Brooklyn 742 00:38:02,046 --> 00:38:04,658 that gives the British pause. 743 00:38:04,682 --> 00:38:06,960 They pull back within those defenses. 744 00:38:06,984 --> 00:38:09,730 Now they've got their backs to the East River. 745 00:38:09,754 --> 00:38:13,734 Things are about as dire as they could possibly be. 746 00:38:13,758 --> 00:38:16,870 Narrator: Washington and the bulk of his battered army, 747 00:38:16,894 --> 00:38:20,674 crowded now inside the defenses on Brooklyn Heights, 748 00:38:20,698 --> 00:38:23,577 expected that at any moment, the British would mount 749 00:38:23,601 --> 00:38:28,115 an all-out assault aimed at destroying them. 750 00:38:28,139 --> 00:38:30,417 General William Howe's officers 751 00:38:30,441 --> 00:38:33,086 urged him to finish what he had begun, 752 00:38:33,110 --> 00:38:37,491 but instead of ordering an assault, Howe stood down. 753 00:38:37,515 --> 00:38:40,560 He knew his brother Richard's fleet was about to enter 754 00:38:40,584 --> 00:38:45,399 the East River and prevent the rebels from escaping by water. 755 00:38:45,423 --> 00:38:48,068 The Americans were astonished. 756 00:38:48,092 --> 00:38:51,905 "General Howe is either our friend or no general," 757 00:38:51,929 --> 00:38:53,640 Israel Putnam said. 758 00:38:53,664 --> 00:38:57,144 "He had our whole army in his power." 759 00:38:57,168 --> 00:38:58,545 [Thunder, raining] 760 00:38:58,569 --> 00:39:01,348 Meanwhile, a storm blew in 761 00:39:01,372 --> 00:39:05,085 and continued off and on for the next 2 days. 762 00:39:05,109 --> 00:39:10,023 It kept Admiral Howe's fleet from entering the East River. 763 00:39:10,047 --> 00:39:13,460 By the middle of the second day, Washington decided 764 00:39:13,484 --> 00:39:18,031 to try to withdraw his army to Manhattan. 765 00:39:18,055 --> 00:39:21,268 Washington sends out orders that every boat, 766 00:39:21,292 --> 00:39:23,503 every fishing smack, every canoe, 767 00:39:23,527 --> 00:39:25,806 everything that floats that can be found 768 00:39:25,830 --> 00:39:30,043 be brought very secretly and very quietly to the landing, 769 00:39:30,067 --> 00:39:32,579 very close to where Brooklyn Bridge now is 770 00:39:32,603 --> 00:39:35,415 on the Brooklyn side. 771 00:39:35,439 --> 00:39:38,085 Narrator: To man his mismatched flotilla, 772 00:39:38,109 --> 00:39:39,920 he would call on 2 regiments 773 00:39:39,944 --> 00:39:42,889 of seasoned mariners and fishermen, 774 00:39:42,913 --> 00:39:45,559 Black and White and Native American, 775 00:39:45,583 --> 00:39:48,662 from Massachusetts coastal towns. 776 00:39:48,686 --> 00:39:51,164 Colonel John Glover of Marblehead 777 00:39:51,188 --> 00:39:53,934 led one of the regiments. 778 00:39:53,958 --> 00:39:57,104 As darkness fell, Washington ordered his men 779 00:39:57,128 --> 00:40:00,340 to begin moving silently down from the Heights 780 00:40:00,364 --> 00:40:04,244 to the ferry landing regiment by regiment. 781 00:40:04,268 --> 00:40:06,179 Voice: I seized my musket 782 00:40:06,203 --> 00:40:07,914 and fell into the ranks. 783 00:40:07,938 --> 00:40:11,785 We were strictly enjoined not to speak or even cough. 784 00:40:11,809 --> 00:40:15,389 All orders were communicated in whispers. 785 00:40:15,413 --> 00:40:17,591 Joseph Plumb Martin. 786 00:40:17,615 --> 00:40:19,126 ♪ 787 00:40:19,150 --> 00:40:22,729 Atkinson: A providential breeze comes up that allows them 788 00:40:22,753 --> 00:40:25,732 to raise sails and get across the East River, 789 00:40:25,756 --> 00:40:29,269 and then an even more providential fog rolls in, 790 00:40:29,293 --> 00:40:31,938 and it obscures what's happening. 791 00:40:31,962 --> 00:40:33,507 ♪ 792 00:40:33,531 --> 00:40:35,008 Narrator: All through the night, 793 00:40:35,032 --> 00:40:37,878 John Glover and his men from Marblehead 794 00:40:37,902 --> 00:40:42,416 sailed or rowed or paddled back and forth undetected, 795 00:40:42,440 --> 00:40:47,788 ferrying more than 9,000 men as well as horses, artillery, 796 00:40:47,812 --> 00:40:52,082 and baggage wagons to safety in Manhattan. 797 00:40:53,317 --> 00:40:55,462 Atkinson: When dawn breaks, 798 00:40:55,486 --> 00:40:59,466 the British realize everyone's gone. 799 00:40:59,490 --> 00:41:01,635 They see the last of the boats 800 00:41:01,659 --> 00:41:04,604 disappearing across the river in the traces of fog. 801 00:41:04,628 --> 00:41:06,006 [Cannonfire] 802 00:41:06,030 --> 00:41:08,141 And they fire a few shots pointlessly 803 00:41:08,165 --> 00:41:12,045 at this retreating gaggle, including Washington 804 00:41:12,069 --> 00:41:14,548 in one of the last boats, 805 00:41:14,572 --> 00:41:17,884 and the Americans escape to Manhattan Island 806 00:41:17,908 --> 00:41:20,120 and get away to fight another day. 807 00:41:20,144 --> 00:41:21,721 ♪ 808 00:41:21,745 --> 00:41:23,290 Narrator: The Battle of Long Island 809 00:41:23,314 --> 00:41:26,993 was the largest battle of the American Revolution. 810 00:41:27,017 --> 00:41:30,530 It had been a devastating defeat for George Washington 811 00:41:30,554 --> 00:41:33,366 and the Patriot cause, 812 00:41:33,390 --> 00:41:36,736 but his army was still alive. 813 00:41:36,760 --> 00:41:39,306 ♪ 814 00:41:39,330 --> 00:41:41,308 [Birds chirping] 815 00:41:41,332 --> 00:41:43,677 Voice: Braintree, Massachusetts... 816 00:41:43,701 --> 00:41:45,779 The best accounts we can collect from New York 817 00:41:45,803 --> 00:41:48,748 assure us that our men fought valiantly. 818 00:41:48,772 --> 00:41:51,651 We are no ways dispirited here. 819 00:41:51,675 --> 00:41:55,555 If our men are all drawn off and we should be attacked, 820 00:41:55,579 --> 00:41:59,659 you would find a race of Amazons in America. 821 00:41:59,683 --> 00:42:02,028 Abigail Adams. 822 00:42:02,052 --> 00:42:03,964 ♪ 823 00:42:03,988 --> 00:42:07,767 Narrator: Every army engaged on either side in the Revolution 824 00:42:07,791 --> 00:42:11,638 would be accompanied by a moving village of civilians... 825 00:42:11,662 --> 00:42:14,708 Men, women, and children. 826 00:42:14,732 --> 00:42:17,611 Most of the women were soldiers' wives 827 00:42:17,635 --> 00:42:20,747 who cared for the wounded and washed and cooked 828 00:42:20,771 --> 00:42:23,383 and mended for the troops. 829 00:42:23,407 --> 00:42:27,687 Some sold provisions, including rum. 830 00:42:27,711 --> 00:42:29,789 George Washington often resented 831 00:42:29,813 --> 00:42:32,025 feeding all the women and children, 832 00:42:32,049 --> 00:42:34,461 but he also understood, he said, 833 00:42:34,485 --> 00:42:36,963 that he had somehow to provide for them 834 00:42:36,987 --> 00:42:40,700 "or lose by Desertion... Perhaps to the Enemy... 835 00:42:40,724 --> 00:42:44,738 Some of the oldest and best Soldiers in the Service." 836 00:42:44,762 --> 00:42:47,574 Women acted as spies, 837 00:42:47,598 --> 00:42:50,110 and a handful disguised themselves 838 00:42:50,134 --> 00:42:54,748 and fought as men until they were found out, 839 00:42:54,772 --> 00:42:58,385 but most made their contributions to the war effort 840 00:42:58,409 --> 00:43:01,388 away from the battlefield. 841 00:43:01,412 --> 00:43:03,890 Voice: Preston, Connecticut... 842 00:43:03,914 --> 00:43:06,960 Dear husband, I hope that I shall have the pleasure 843 00:43:06,984 --> 00:43:09,329 of your company at home this winter. 844 00:43:09,353 --> 00:43:12,399 The anxieties of the mind cannot be accounted for, 845 00:43:12,423 --> 00:43:15,869 especially when ties of flesh and blood bind them. 846 00:43:15,893 --> 00:43:18,471 My only comfort now is at present 847 00:43:18,495 --> 00:43:22,709 in the dear, little pledges of our love... our children. 848 00:43:22,733 --> 00:43:25,679 When I see them, I see my dear 849 00:43:25,703 --> 00:43:29,382 when so glorious a cause calls him from my arms. 850 00:43:29,406 --> 00:43:32,852 My country, o my country. 851 00:43:32,876 --> 00:43:37,123 Your affectionate wife till death, Lois. 852 00:43:37,147 --> 00:43:38,825 ♪ 853 00:43:38,849 --> 00:43:42,095 Narrator: With sons and husbands and fathers away, 854 00:43:42,119 --> 00:43:45,131 some women turned their homes into boarding houses 855 00:43:45,155 --> 00:43:47,233 to pay the bills. 856 00:43:47,257 --> 00:43:51,771 On farms, women already caring for children and households 857 00:43:51,795 --> 00:43:55,508 now slaughtered hogs, cut and stacked firewood, 858 00:43:55,532 --> 00:43:58,802 harvested wheat, and brought it to market. 859 00:44:00,070 --> 00:44:01,915 Voice: The men say we have no business 860 00:44:01,939 --> 00:44:05,919 with political matters, it is not in our sphere, 861 00:44:05,943 --> 00:44:08,021 but I won't have it thought that we are capable 862 00:44:08,045 --> 00:44:10,223 of nothing more than minding the dairy, 863 00:44:10,247 --> 00:44:14,294 visiting the poultry house, and all such domestic concerns. 864 00:44:14,318 --> 00:44:17,230 Our thoughts can soar aloft. 865 00:44:17,254 --> 00:44:22,402 We can form conceptions of things of higher nature. 866 00:44:22,426 --> 00:44:25,038 Eliza Wilkinson. 867 00:44:25,062 --> 00:44:29,700 ♪ 868 00:44:32,069 --> 00:44:34,547 Voice: Can you be surprised that the Negroes 869 00:44:34,571 --> 00:44:36,883 should endeavor to recover their freedom 870 00:44:36,907 --> 00:44:39,919 when they daily hear at the tables of their masters 871 00:44:39,943 --> 00:44:42,322 how much the Americans are applauded 872 00:44:42,346 --> 00:44:45,725 for the stand they are making for theirs? [John Purrier] 873 00:44:45,749 --> 00:44:48,461 [Rhiannon Giddens singing "Dean Cadalan Samhach"] 874 00:44:48,485 --> 00:44:50,830 ♪ 875 00:44:50,854 --> 00:44:53,733 Jane Kamensky: The liberty talk that proliferates 876 00:44:53,757 --> 00:44:56,069 through British America 877 00:44:56,093 --> 00:45:00,573 originates in coffee houses and across dining tables. 878 00:45:00,597 --> 00:45:05,011 It surfaces in letters and in pamphlets. 879 00:45:05,035 --> 00:45:08,214 Those pamphlets are excerpted in newspapers 880 00:45:08,238 --> 00:45:11,117 and travel up and down the coast. 881 00:45:11,141 --> 00:45:14,954 Even letters, like newspapers, are read aloud, 882 00:45:14,978 --> 00:45:17,991 so we know that the language of liberty 883 00:45:18,015 --> 00:45:24,130 is contagious and is leaky, leaky in that 884 00:45:24,154 --> 00:45:27,634 there are planter-class people in Jamaica saying, 885 00:45:27,658 --> 00:45:29,069 "You know, this stuff is kind of hot, 886 00:45:29,093 --> 00:45:31,805 "so watch it when you're talking 887 00:45:31,829 --> 00:45:34,507 "because you know all those Black and Brown people 888 00:45:34,531 --> 00:45:37,677 "who are standing, serving around the edges of your room, 889 00:45:37,701 --> 00:45:39,279 they have ears." 890 00:45:39,303 --> 00:45:42,115 [Giddens continues singing "Dean Cadalan Samhach"] 891 00:45:42,139 --> 00:45:44,017 Voice: The signal was to be given first 892 00:45:44,041 --> 00:45:47,887 by discharging a gun at Batchelors Hall Plantation. 893 00:45:47,911 --> 00:45:50,690 They were then to rise in general rebellion 894 00:45:50,714 --> 00:45:52,792 and attack the several estates, 895 00:45:52,816 --> 00:45:55,729 and put to death all the White people they could. 896 00:45:55,753 --> 00:45:57,664 Sam. 897 00:45:57,688 --> 00:45:59,532 ♪ 898 00:45:59,556 --> 00:46:04,838 Narrator: That same summer of 1776 in Northwestern Jamaica, 899 00:46:04,862 --> 00:46:07,307 enslaved men, women, and children 900 00:46:07,331 --> 00:46:10,477 living on 47 different plantations 901 00:46:10,501 --> 00:46:14,481 secretly conspired to overthrow their enslavers, 902 00:46:14,505 --> 00:46:18,051 hoping their rebellion would spread across the whole island 903 00:46:18,075 --> 00:46:21,421 and unite the people of African descent living there, 904 00:46:21,445 --> 00:46:26,126 including Igbos, Creoles, and Coromantees. 905 00:46:26,150 --> 00:46:29,562 The planned revolt was an unintended consequence 906 00:46:29,586 --> 00:46:32,065 of the American Revolution. 907 00:46:32,089 --> 00:46:34,567 The American ban on trade with the British 908 00:46:34,591 --> 00:46:40,073 had denied enslaved Jamaicans the food they needed to survive. 909 00:46:40,097 --> 00:46:43,676 Then London ordered almost half the soldiers 910 00:46:43,700 --> 00:46:46,846 who policed the island to sail northward 911 00:46:46,870 --> 00:46:50,483 to strengthen General Howe's forces in New York. 912 00:46:50,507 --> 00:46:53,753 Their departure was supposed to be the signal 913 00:46:53,777 --> 00:46:57,190 for enslaved people to rise up, 914 00:46:57,214 --> 00:47:00,460 but before the plot could get underway, 915 00:47:00,484 --> 00:47:04,697 a child was discovered emptying his overseer's pistol 916 00:47:04,721 --> 00:47:09,202 and was made to reveal what he knew of the conspiracy. 917 00:47:09,226 --> 00:47:13,006 The Royal governor declared martial law. 918 00:47:13,030 --> 00:47:15,708 The revolt was crushed. 919 00:47:15,732 --> 00:47:19,345 135 people were put on trial. 920 00:47:19,369 --> 00:47:21,614 17 were executed. 921 00:47:21,638 --> 00:47:26,186 11 were beaten, and 45 were torn from their families 922 00:47:26,210 --> 00:47:28,988 and deported to other islands... 923 00:47:29,012 --> 00:47:32,158 [Giddens singing "Angola"] 924 00:47:32,182 --> 00:47:34,227 Narrator: but that summer and fall, 925 00:47:34,251 --> 00:47:36,896 there were other sporadic uprisings 926 00:47:36,920 --> 00:47:40,466 or rumors of uprisings among enslaved workers 927 00:47:40,490 --> 00:47:42,402 on other British islands... 928 00:47:42,426 --> 00:47:47,140 Saint Kitts, Montserrat, Antigua, Barbados... 929 00:47:47,164 --> 00:47:52,345 All of them striking fear in American slaveholders. 930 00:47:52,369 --> 00:47:55,281 Vincent Brown: Slave rebellions were usually unsuccessful, 931 00:47:55,305 --> 00:47:58,852 so you wonder, why would you fight? 932 00:47:58,876 --> 00:48:02,922 Slavery was so incredibly horrifying. 933 00:48:02,946 --> 00:48:05,391 It was a regime of terror, right, 934 00:48:05,415 --> 00:48:09,028 that was very, very difficult to withstand. 935 00:48:09,052 --> 00:48:13,099 People can abuse, rape, torture, 936 00:48:13,123 --> 00:48:17,470 murder enslaved persons without consequences, 937 00:48:17,494 --> 00:48:20,073 so if you just imagine that situation 938 00:48:20,097 --> 00:48:22,876 and that kind of desperation, it becomes clearer 939 00:48:22,900 --> 00:48:27,413 why, when given an opportunity, you would fight against that. 940 00:48:27,437 --> 00:48:30,383 ♪ 941 00:48:30,407 --> 00:48:33,586 [Birds chirping] 942 00:48:33,610 --> 00:48:37,023 Narrator: On September 11, 1776, 943 00:48:37,047 --> 00:48:39,893 3 delegates of the Continental Congress... 944 00:48:39,917 --> 00:48:42,128 John Adams of Massachusetts, 945 00:48:42,152 --> 00:48:44,564 Edward Rutledge of South Carolina, 946 00:48:44,588 --> 00:48:47,433 and Benjamin Franklin of Pennsylvania... 947 00:48:47,457 --> 00:48:50,937 Made their way to a Loyalist's house on Staten Island 948 00:48:50,961 --> 00:48:53,439 for a meeting with Admiral Howe, 949 00:48:53,463 --> 00:48:55,975 who was hoping to persuade the Congress 950 00:48:55,999 --> 00:48:58,278 to negotiate a peace. 951 00:48:58,302 --> 00:48:59,545 ♪ 952 00:48:59,569 --> 00:49:02,515 Howe did what he could to reassure the delegates 953 00:49:02,539 --> 00:49:06,185 that all could still be forgiven if only the Americans 954 00:49:06,209 --> 00:49:09,222 would abandon independence. 955 00:49:09,246 --> 00:49:12,558 "If America should fall," he told the delegates, 956 00:49:12,582 --> 00:49:17,263 "[I] should feel and lament it like the loss of a brother." 957 00:49:17,287 --> 00:49:20,300 "[W]e will do our utmost," Franklin answered, 958 00:49:20,324 --> 00:49:23,970 "to save Your Lordship that mortification." 959 00:49:23,994 --> 00:49:27,173 "They met. They talked. They parted," 960 00:49:27,197 --> 00:49:29,475 Admiral Howe's secretary said, 961 00:49:29,499 --> 00:49:33,780 "and now nothing remains but to fight it out." 962 00:49:33,804 --> 00:49:35,748 There was no going back. 963 00:49:35,772 --> 00:49:41,078 Howe apologized to his visitors for wasting their time. 964 00:49:42,312 --> 00:49:43,890 Christopher Brown: The British government 965 00:49:43,914 --> 00:49:46,859 throughout the first few years of the war 966 00:49:46,883 --> 00:49:49,395 really thought that a show of force 967 00:49:49,419 --> 00:49:53,566 would bring the majority of Americans to their senses 968 00:49:53,590 --> 00:49:57,170 and that the instigators, the provocateurs, 969 00:49:57,194 --> 00:50:00,673 the ones who were responsible for the uprising 970 00:50:00,697 --> 00:50:04,110 would be captured, killed, 971 00:50:04,134 --> 00:50:06,779 or their neighbors would just say, "Enough. 972 00:50:06,803 --> 00:50:12,652 We don't actually want to go to war with our own nation." 973 00:50:12,676 --> 00:50:14,253 ♪ 974 00:50:14,277 --> 00:50:16,122 Voice: On our side, 975 00:50:16,146 --> 00:50:17,824 the war should be defensive. 976 00:50:17,848 --> 00:50:21,394 We should on all occasions avoid a general action 977 00:50:21,418 --> 00:50:24,597 or put anything to the risk unless compelled 978 00:50:24,621 --> 00:50:29,102 by a necessity into which we ought never to be drawn. 979 00:50:29,126 --> 00:50:32,038 George Washington. 980 00:50:32,062 --> 00:50:33,706 Narrator: Back in New York City, 981 00:50:33,730 --> 00:50:37,377 Washington again expected another British attack 982 00:50:37,401 --> 00:50:41,581 and again didn't know where or when it was likely to come, 983 00:50:41,605 --> 00:50:46,085 so again he divided what was left of his forces. 984 00:50:46,109 --> 00:50:49,856 Leaving behind General Putnam and some 3,500 men 985 00:50:49,880 --> 00:50:51,624 to hold the city itself, 986 00:50:51,648 --> 00:50:55,061 General Washington led most of his troops north 987 00:50:55,085 --> 00:50:57,463 toward the tiny village of Harlem. 988 00:50:57,487 --> 00:51:00,366 Militiamen were posted along the East River 989 00:51:00,390 --> 00:51:02,602 opposite Long Island. 990 00:51:02,626 --> 00:51:05,238 Joseph Plumb Martin found himself 991 00:51:05,262 --> 00:51:09,275 with 500 Connecticut troops at Kips Bay. 992 00:51:09,299 --> 00:51:12,645 At the same time, 5 British frigates 993 00:51:12,669 --> 00:51:16,749 sailed up the river and anchored on the opposite shore. 994 00:51:16,773 --> 00:51:20,987 At 11:00 in the morning on September 15th, 995 00:51:21,011 --> 00:51:22,588 they opened fire. 996 00:51:22,612 --> 00:51:25,425 [Cannonfire] 997 00:51:25,449 --> 00:51:26,859 Voice: I thought my head would go 998 00:51:26,883 --> 00:51:28,361 with the sound. 999 00:51:28,385 --> 00:51:30,496 I made a frog's leap for the ditch 1000 00:51:30,520 --> 00:51:32,799 and lay as still as I possibly could 1001 00:51:32,823 --> 00:51:36,803 and began to consider which part of my carcass was to go first. 1002 00:51:36,827 --> 00:51:39,906 We kept the lines till they were almost leveled upon us, 1003 00:51:39,930 --> 00:51:43,309 when our officers gave the order to leave. [Martin] 1004 00:51:43,333 --> 00:51:46,145 Narrator: As Martin and his comrades ran, 1005 00:51:46,169 --> 00:51:50,650 4,000 enemy troops began coming ashore at Kips Bay, 1006 00:51:50,674 --> 00:51:53,386 among them Hessians who bayoneted 1007 00:51:53,410 --> 00:51:57,657 several wounded Americans and mutilated the dead. 1008 00:51:57,681 --> 00:52:00,326 Voice: Our people were all militia, 1009 00:52:00,350 --> 00:52:02,762 and the demons of fear and disorder seemed to take 1010 00:52:02,786 --> 00:52:05,631 full possession of all and everything that day. [Martin] 1011 00:52:05,655 --> 00:52:07,300 [Gunfire] 1012 00:52:07,324 --> 00:52:09,135 Narrator: Then General Washington 1013 00:52:09,159 --> 00:52:11,571 seemed to appear out of nowhere, 1014 00:52:11,595 --> 00:52:15,575 ordering his stampeding men to form a defensive line. 1015 00:52:15,599 --> 00:52:19,812 "Take the walls," he bellowed. "Take the cornfield." 1016 00:52:19,836 --> 00:52:21,380 They kept running. 1017 00:52:21,404 --> 00:52:25,585 "Are these the men with which I am to defend America?" 1018 00:52:25,609 --> 00:52:30,323 Washington was known for being aloof, terse, stoical, 1019 00:52:30,347 --> 00:52:32,992 but, "Those who have seen him strongly moved," 1020 00:52:33,016 --> 00:52:34,560 a friend remembered, 1021 00:52:34,584 --> 00:52:38,598 could "bear witness that his wrath was terrible." 1022 00:52:38,622 --> 00:52:42,235 He seemed stunned and urged his horse forward 1023 00:52:42,259 --> 00:52:44,470 toward the oncoming Hessians. 1024 00:52:44,494 --> 00:52:46,672 An aide snatched his horse's bridle 1025 00:52:46,696 --> 00:52:50,710 and led his commander out of harm's way. 1026 00:52:50,734 --> 00:52:53,479 Colonel John Glover and his regiment 1027 00:52:53,503 --> 00:52:56,716 from Marblehead, Massachusetts, which had just made 1028 00:52:56,740 --> 00:52:59,919 Washington's escape from Long Island possible, 1029 00:52:59,943 --> 00:53:03,956 rushed up and were able to slow the British advance... 1030 00:53:03,980 --> 00:53:06,292 [Gunfire] 1031 00:53:06,316 --> 00:53:08,995 but many Patriots did not stop running 1032 00:53:09,019 --> 00:53:10,630 until they reached the safety 1033 00:53:10,654 --> 00:53:13,432 of strongly fortified American positions 1034 00:53:13,456 --> 00:53:16,836 on the plateau known as Harlem Heights. 1035 00:53:16,860 --> 00:53:20,439 The British were slow to follow the fleeing rebels. 1036 00:53:20,463 --> 00:53:23,876 General Howe wanted to wait until thousands more troops 1037 00:53:23,900 --> 00:53:26,846 were ashore on Manhattan Island. 1038 00:53:26,870 --> 00:53:30,750 The delay gave General Putnam time to lead his men north 1039 00:53:30,774 --> 00:53:35,288 out of New York City to join Washington in Harlem. 1040 00:53:35,312 --> 00:53:39,425 The British entered the abandoned city in triumph. 1041 00:53:39,449 --> 00:53:41,060 Voice: The King's forces 1042 00:53:41,084 --> 00:53:44,363 took possession of the place, incredible as it may seem, 1043 00:53:44,387 --> 00:53:46,666 without the loss of a man. 1044 00:53:46,690 --> 00:53:49,602 A woman pulled down the rebel standard upon the fort 1045 00:53:49,626 --> 00:53:52,104 and, after trampling it underfoot 1046 00:53:52,128 --> 00:53:54,273 with the most contemptuous indignation, 1047 00:53:54,297 --> 00:53:57,843 hoisted up in its stead His Majesty's flag. 1048 00:53:57,867 --> 00:54:02,372 Ambrose Searle, Secretary to Admiral Howe. 1049 00:54:03,673 --> 00:54:06,352 Jasanoff: New York City becomes the great British stronghold 1050 00:54:06,376 --> 00:54:08,387 of the American Revolution. 1051 00:54:08,411 --> 00:54:10,623 Once the Continental Army is driven out, 1052 00:54:10,647 --> 00:54:12,558 the Patriots don't want to stick around, 1053 00:54:12,582 --> 00:54:13,926 and they tend to go, too. 1054 00:54:13,950 --> 00:54:17,063 Meanwhile, the Loyalists come into the city. 1055 00:54:17,087 --> 00:54:21,534 People stream in from the countryside to take shelter, 1056 00:54:21,558 --> 00:54:25,871 and the city becomes this kind of garrison town. 1057 00:54:25,895 --> 00:54:29,075 Narrator: Hundreds of Loyalists would formally reaffirm 1058 00:54:29,099 --> 00:54:32,812 their allegiance to George III by signing a document 1059 00:54:32,836 --> 00:54:37,183 they called their Declaration of Dependence. 1060 00:54:37,207 --> 00:54:38,818 Over the coming weeks, 1061 00:54:38,842 --> 00:54:41,587 more Loyalists poured into the city, 1062 00:54:41,611 --> 00:54:45,458 now eager to take up arms in the King's cause. 1063 00:54:45,482 --> 00:54:47,026 [Fifes and drums playing] 1064 00:54:47,050 --> 00:54:48,594 Voice: It is the cause of truth 1065 00:54:48,618 --> 00:54:52,732 against falsehood, of loyalty against rebellion, 1066 00:54:52,756 --> 00:54:56,002 of legal government against usurpation. 1067 00:54:56,026 --> 00:55:00,940 In short, it is the cause of human happiness. 1068 00:55:00,964 --> 00:55:03,542 Charles Inglis. 1069 00:55:03,566 --> 00:55:05,978 Narrator: Over the course of the war, 1070 00:55:06,002 --> 00:55:09,715 as many as 50,000 Americans volunteered to serve 1071 00:55:09,739 --> 00:55:12,084 in Loyalist militia companies 1072 00:55:12,108 --> 00:55:16,022 or in provincial units attached to the British Army... 1073 00:55:16,046 --> 00:55:20,493 The King's American Regiment, the Queen's American Rangers, 1074 00:55:20,517 --> 00:55:23,996 the Prince of Wales' American Volunteers, 1075 00:55:24,020 --> 00:55:28,100 the Royal Highland Emigrants, and the British Legion. 1076 00:55:28,124 --> 00:55:32,605 Everyone knew someone who fought for the other side. 1077 00:55:32,629 --> 00:55:35,608 Even Benjamin Franklin's son William, 1078 00:55:35,632 --> 00:55:38,577 the deposed Royal Governor of New Jersey, 1079 00:55:38,601 --> 00:55:44,050 remained faithful to his king and was imprisoned for it. 1080 00:55:44,074 --> 00:55:45,751 [Distant cannonfire] 1081 00:55:45,775 --> 00:55:47,586 Voice: Had I been left to the dictates 1082 00:55:47,610 --> 00:55:49,488 of my own judgment, 1083 00:55:49,512 --> 00:55:52,425 New York should have been lain in ashes. 1084 00:55:52,449 --> 00:55:54,293 To this end, I applied to Congress 1085 00:55:54,317 --> 00:55:57,596 but was absolutely forbid. 1086 00:55:57,620 --> 00:56:01,133 Providence... or some good, honest fellow... 1087 00:56:01,157 --> 00:56:02,568 Has done more for us 1088 00:56:02,592 --> 00:56:05,905 than we were disposed to do for ourselves. 1089 00:56:05,929 --> 00:56:08,174 George Washington. 1090 00:56:08,198 --> 00:56:10,443 [Flames crackling] 1091 00:56:10,467 --> 00:56:13,913 Voice: September 21, 1776. 1092 00:56:13,937 --> 00:56:16,382 We are a good deal alarmed at a fire 1093 00:56:16,406 --> 00:56:18,517 that must have spread amazingly, 1094 00:56:18,541 --> 00:56:21,287 for though we are 6 1/2 miles from the town, 1095 00:56:21,311 --> 00:56:26,192 we could see a pin on the ground by the light of the blaze. 1096 00:56:26,216 --> 00:56:27,960 Loftus Cliffe. 1097 00:56:27,984 --> 00:56:30,963 Narrator: New York City was on fire. 1098 00:56:30,987 --> 00:56:34,767 The next morning, Irish-born Lieutenant Loftus Cliffe, 1099 00:56:34,791 --> 00:56:37,737 who had already survived 3 battles, 1100 00:56:37,761 --> 00:56:42,675 went for a walk through the still-smoldering streets. 1101 00:56:42,699 --> 00:56:44,710 Voice: I cannot paint the misery 1102 00:56:44,734 --> 00:56:49,382 of a very pretty town near as large as Cork now reduced. 1103 00:56:49,406 --> 00:56:51,717 Two churches, the governor's house, 1104 00:56:51,741 --> 00:56:54,387 and several other fine buildings are in ruins, 1105 00:56:54,411 --> 00:56:57,490 being set afire in different places at once 1106 00:56:57,514 --> 00:56:59,959 in the dead of last night. 1107 00:56:59,983 --> 00:57:03,262 Their design was to destroy the town. 1108 00:57:03,286 --> 00:57:07,090 O Washington, what have you to answer for? [Cliffe] 1109 00:57:08,224 --> 00:57:11,203 Narrator: The origins of the fire remained a mystery, 1110 00:57:11,227 --> 00:57:15,241 but General Howe was convinced it had been set by rebels, 1111 00:57:15,265 --> 00:57:18,511 and the next day when soldiers brought before him 1112 00:57:18,535 --> 00:57:22,281 an American spy captured behind British lines, 1113 00:57:22,305 --> 00:57:24,650 he showed no mercy. 1114 00:57:24,674 --> 00:57:27,386 Howe ordered Captain Nathan Hale, 1115 00:57:27,410 --> 00:57:29,789 a member of an elite espionage unit 1116 00:57:29,813 --> 00:57:32,525 organized by George Washington, 1117 00:57:32,549 --> 00:57:35,828 to be hanged the following morning. 1118 00:57:35,852 --> 00:57:39,265 As he went to the gallows, a British officer remembered, 1119 00:57:39,289 --> 00:57:43,969 Hale "behaved with great composure and resolution." 1120 00:57:43,993 --> 00:57:47,072 Above his body, British soldiers hung a sign 1121 00:57:47,096 --> 00:57:50,943 labeled, "George Washington," the man they all blamed 1122 00:57:50,967 --> 00:57:54,246 for setting fire to New York City. 1123 00:57:54,270 --> 00:57:56,849 ♪ 1124 00:57:56,873 --> 00:57:59,785 Alan Taylor: A lot is riding on George Washington's performance 1125 00:57:59,809 --> 00:58:02,021 not only in the battlefield, 1126 00:58:02,045 --> 00:58:04,490 but in his relationship with Congress 1127 00:58:04,514 --> 00:58:06,459 and his relationship with the states, 1128 00:58:06,483 --> 00:58:09,295 his relationship with his soldiers. 1129 00:58:09,319 --> 00:58:10,796 George Washington understands 1130 00:58:10,820 --> 00:58:12,465 that his role is not just military. 1131 00:58:12,489 --> 00:58:14,567 It's also political. 1132 00:58:14,591 --> 00:58:17,603 He has to project dignity. 1133 00:58:17,627 --> 00:58:21,540 He has to project authority. 1134 00:58:21,564 --> 00:58:23,509 He has to also do this 1135 00:58:23,533 --> 00:58:27,213 while projecting deference to Congress. 1136 00:58:27,237 --> 00:58:29,281 He cannot become a dictator. 1137 00:58:29,305 --> 00:58:31,717 ♪ 1138 00:58:31,741 --> 00:58:34,954 Voice: We have been sent into life at a time 1139 00:58:34,978 --> 00:58:37,323 when the greatest lawgivers of antiquity 1140 00:58:37,347 --> 00:58:40,259 would have wished to have lived, 1141 00:58:40,283 --> 00:58:42,695 when, before the present epocha, 1142 00:58:42,719 --> 00:58:45,164 had 3 millions of people full power 1143 00:58:45,188 --> 00:58:48,667 and a fair opportunity to form and establish 1144 00:58:48,691 --> 00:58:51,370 the wisest and happiest government 1145 00:58:51,394 --> 00:58:54,006 that human wisdom can contrive. 1146 00:58:54,030 --> 00:58:55,674 [Gavel bangs] 1147 00:58:55,698 --> 00:58:57,176 John Adams. 1148 00:58:57,200 --> 00:58:58,878 ♪ 1149 00:58:58,902 --> 00:59:01,380 Narrator: As Washington and Howe faced off 1150 00:59:01,404 --> 00:59:03,582 against one another in New York, 1151 00:59:03,606 --> 00:59:06,185 in Philadelphia, the Continental Congress 1152 00:59:06,209 --> 00:59:10,122 had been laboring to adopt Articles of Confederation, 1153 00:59:10,146 --> 00:59:13,859 meant to formally bind all 13 states together 1154 00:59:13,883 --> 00:59:17,730 while also guaranteeing the independence of each, 1155 00:59:17,754 --> 00:59:20,065 a first tentative step 1156 00:59:20,089 --> 00:59:23,936 toward a permanent government for the new United States. 1157 00:59:23,960 --> 00:59:25,371 ♪ 1158 00:59:25,395 --> 00:59:27,840 Taylor: When we think about our American Revolution, 1159 00:59:27,864 --> 00:59:30,209 we, of course, think about independence from Britain, 1160 00:59:30,233 --> 00:59:32,278 and that's a big deal, 1161 00:59:32,302 --> 00:59:33,712 but we also need to think about 1162 00:59:33,736 --> 00:59:36,415 this is the formation of republican government, 1163 00:59:36,439 --> 00:59:40,553 and it's also the formation of our union of our states, 1164 00:59:40,577 --> 00:59:43,255 and all 3 of those were enormous gambles. 1165 00:59:43,279 --> 00:59:44,757 They were unprecedented. 1166 00:59:44,781 --> 00:59:47,493 There had never been the foundation of a republic 1167 00:59:47,517 --> 00:59:48,727 out of a revolution... 1168 00:59:48,751 --> 00:59:50,229 [Gavel bangs] 1169 00:59:50,253 --> 00:59:51,564 and these 13 colonies 1170 00:59:51,588 --> 00:59:53,966 had had bitter rivalries with one another, 1171 00:59:53,990 --> 00:59:56,569 and so forming a union out of these states 1172 00:59:56,593 --> 00:59:58,003 was gonna be as difficult 1173 00:59:58,027 --> 00:59:59,772 as achieving independence from Britain. 1174 00:59:59,796 --> 01:00:01,307 [Gavel banging rapidly] 1175 01:00:01,331 --> 01:00:04,410 Narrator: Congress debated draft articles for weeks 1176 01:00:04,434 --> 01:00:07,413 on the first floor of the Pennsylvania State House, 1177 01:00:07,437 --> 01:00:11,650 where they had just declared independence in July. 1178 01:00:11,674 --> 01:00:14,720 They were held up over a host of issues, 1179 01:00:14,744 --> 01:00:18,223 including apportionment, boundary disputes, 1180 01:00:18,247 --> 01:00:23,796 taxation, and autonomy of the individual states. 1181 01:00:23,820 --> 01:00:26,599 Congress was a disputatious assembly 1182 01:00:26,623 --> 01:00:29,702 and not necessarily an efficient assembly 1183 01:00:29,726 --> 01:00:30,869 through these years. 1184 01:00:30,893 --> 01:00:32,104 Yes, they are running a war. 1185 01:00:32,128 --> 01:00:33,939 Yes, they are founding a nation, 1186 01:00:33,963 --> 01:00:36,275 but there's also a tremendous amount of infighting. 1187 01:00:36,299 --> 01:00:38,377 There's a tremendous amount of inertia. 1188 01:00:38,401 --> 01:00:41,146 There are more committees than anyone could count, 1189 01:00:41,170 --> 01:00:43,148 and there were secret committees. 1190 01:00:43,172 --> 01:00:45,451 For example, the first person sent to France 1191 01:00:45,475 --> 01:00:47,953 to solicit aid from the French for the Revolution 1192 01:00:47,977 --> 01:00:50,823 is sent without the knowledge of the rest of Congress. 1193 01:00:50,847 --> 01:00:53,926 As John Jay will later say to George Washington, 1194 01:00:53,950 --> 01:00:56,362 "There is as much intrigue in Congress 1195 01:00:56,386 --> 01:00:58,130 "as there is at the Vatican, 1196 01:00:58,154 --> 01:01:01,166 and as little secrecy as there is in a boarding school." 1197 01:01:01,190 --> 01:01:03,135 ♪ 1198 01:01:03,159 --> 01:01:06,405 Narrator: Meanwhile, upstairs in the same building, 1199 01:01:06,429 --> 01:01:10,309 the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania held a convention of its own 1200 01:01:10,333 --> 01:01:13,379 to establish its government. 1201 01:01:13,403 --> 01:01:16,982 Similar meetings were being held in other states. 1202 01:01:17,006 --> 01:01:20,085 All of the new constitutions would guarantee 1203 01:01:20,109 --> 01:01:22,488 freedom of the press, fair trials, 1204 01:01:22,512 --> 01:01:26,959 and due process under law and made sure power rested 1205 01:01:26,983 --> 01:01:30,763 not with autocratic governors, but with legislators 1206 01:01:30,787 --> 01:01:33,932 elected by propertied men. 1207 01:01:33,956 --> 01:01:37,002 Pennsylvania took things a step further. 1208 01:01:37,026 --> 01:01:40,739 They created the most egalitarian constitution 1209 01:01:40,763 --> 01:01:44,410 in the new United States with a Bill of Rights 1210 01:01:44,434 --> 01:01:46,478 and a one-house legislature 1211 01:01:46,502 --> 01:01:51,250 elected by taxpaying workingmen as well as property owners, 1212 01:01:51,274 --> 01:01:55,621 all of which worried many of the delegates downstairs. 1213 01:01:55,645 --> 01:01:58,157 William Hogeland: Pennsylvania had a radical constitution 1214 01:01:58,181 --> 01:02:02,194 where almost any White, free man could vote and stand for office, 1215 01:02:02,218 --> 01:02:05,931 which had never happened before pretty much anywhere. 1216 01:02:05,955 --> 01:02:08,400 People were committed to using the revolution to make it 1217 01:02:08,424 --> 01:02:11,103 a real social revolution, a real economic revolution, 1218 01:02:11,127 --> 01:02:17,042 and get free, working people... Men, White men... 1219 01:02:17,066 --> 01:02:20,979 A say in government, which was a radical idea at the time. 1220 01:02:21,003 --> 01:02:24,683 John Adams wasn't for that. Samuel Adams wasn't for that. 1221 01:02:24,707 --> 01:02:27,319 Richard Henry Lee wasn't for that. 1222 01:02:27,343 --> 01:02:29,755 When John Adams read that constitution, 1223 01:02:29,779 --> 01:02:33,659 his response was, quote, "Good God!" 1224 01:02:33,683 --> 01:02:35,561 ♪ 1225 01:02:35,585 --> 01:02:37,763 Voice: In the new code of laws, 1226 01:02:37,787 --> 01:02:40,399 I desire you would remember the ladies 1227 01:02:40,423 --> 01:02:42,868 and be more generous and favorable to them 1228 01:02:42,892 --> 01:02:45,337 than your ancestors. 1229 01:02:45,361 --> 01:02:49,942 Do not put such unlimited power into the hands of the husbands. 1230 01:02:49,966 --> 01:02:53,946 Remember, all men would be tyrants if they could. 1231 01:02:53,970 --> 01:02:58,784 If particular care and attention is not paid to the ladies, 1232 01:02:58,808 --> 01:03:01,754 we are determined to foment a rebellion 1233 01:03:01,778 --> 01:03:04,456 and will not hold ourselves bound by any laws 1234 01:03:04,480 --> 01:03:08,460 in which we have no voice or representation. 1235 01:03:08,484 --> 01:03:11,330 Abigail Adams. 1236 01:03:11,354 --> 01:03:14,433 Voice: There will be no end of it. 1237 01:03:14,457 --> 01:03:16,435 New claims will arise. 1238 01:03:16,459 --> 01:03:18,337 Women will demand a vote. 1239 01:03:18,361 --> 01:03:20,372 Lads from 12 to 21 1240 01:03:20,396 --> 01:03:23,308 will think their rights not enough attended to, 1241 01:03:23,332 --> 01:03:25,577 and every man who has not a farthing 1242 01:03:25,601 --> 01:03:30,249 will demand an equal voice with any other in all acts of state. 1243 01:03:30,273 --> 01:03:33,786 It tends to confound and destroy all distinctions 1244 01:03:33,810 --> 01:03:38,824 and prostrate all ranks to one common level. 1245 01:03:38,848 --> 01:03:41,593 John Adams. 1246 01:03:41,617 --> 01:03:43,729 Hogeland: It's a misconception to think of the founders 1247 01:03:43,753 --> 01:03:45,397 as being pro-democracy, 1248 01:03:45,421 --> 01:03:47,132 but I think it's also a misconception to think 1249 01:03:47,156 --> 01:03:49,835 that their failure to be democratic 1250 01:03:49,859 --> 01:03:52,271 is some sort of flaw or error 1251 01:03:52,295 --> 01:03:55,007 or something they just kind of missed. 1252 01:03:55,031 --> 01:03:58,510 They were very adamantly opposed to democracy. 1253 01:03:58,534 --> 01:04:00,946 Democracy came to America, 1254 01:04:00,970 --> 01:04:03,348 with all of the problems that came with it, 1255 01:04:03,372 --> 01:04:07,753 not as a direct purpose of the American Revolution, really, 1256 01:04:07,777 --> 01:04:10,479 but as an unintended consequence. 1257 01:04:11,747 --> 01:04:13,592 Narrator: By the time Pennsylvania 1258 01:04:13,616 --> 01:04:16,028 had ratified its constitution, 1259 01:04:16,052 --> 01:04:18,964 the debates over the Articles of Confederation 1260 01:04:18,988 --> 01:04:22,367 downstairs in Congress had become so heated, 1261 01:04:22,391 --> 01:04:25,337 the prospect of compromise seemed so remote 1262 01:04:25,361 --> 01:04:29,541 that the delegates agreed to table the subject. 1263 01:04:29,565 --> 01:04:32,845 Frustrated and worried about his sick wife, 1264 01:04:32,869 --> 01:04:36,248 Thomas Jefferson returned home to Virginia, 1265 01:04:36,272 --> 01:04:40,352 the place he still called "my country." 1266 01:04:40,376 --> 01:04:42,387 [Birds chirping] 1267 01:04:42,411 --> 01:04:45,290 ♪ 1268 01:04:45,314 --> 01:04:47,593 Voice: Camp near Kingsbridge... 1269 01:04:47,617 --> 01:04:51,597 Amidst all the distress and ruins of this dreadful war, 1270 01:04:51,621 --> 01:04:54,066 I am yet alive and yours. 1271 01:04:54,090 --> 01:04:58,003 Our enemies pursue us close from place to place. 1272 01:04:58,027 --> 01:05:01,807 I pray God daily that you, my dear wife, 1273 01:05:01,831 --> 01:05:04,476 forever may you be happy. 1274 01:05:04,500 --> 01:05:06,778 Philip. 1275 01:05:06,802 --> 01:05:10,716 Narrator: Days after writing to his wife, Chaplain Fithian 1276 01:05:10,740 --> 01:05:14,486 fell victim to dysentery, the disease that had killed 1277 01:05:14,510 --> 01:05:19,391 so many of the men whose last moments he'd filled with prayer. 1278 01:05:19,415 --> 01:05:22,728 He was carried to a hospital tent. 1279 01:05:22,752 --> 01:05:25,297 There was nothing anyone could do. 1280 01:05:25,321 --> 01:05:27,499 ♪ 1281 01:05:27,523 --> 01:05:28,967 Voice: October 8th... 1282 01:05:28,991 --> 01:05:30,602 This morning about 10:00, 1283 01:05:30,626 --> 01:05:35,073 Mr. Fithian closed his eyes upon the things of time 1284 01:05:35,097 --> 01:05:38,610 and is gone to a spiritual world. 1285 01:05:38,634 --> 01:05:40,846 Andrew Hunter. 1286 01:05:40,870 --> 01:05:43,649 ♪ 1287 01:05:43,673 --> 01:05:45,751 [Bells tolling] 1288 01:05:45,775 --> 01:05:48,520 Narrator: News of the American defeat on Long Island 1289 01:05:48,544 --> 01:05:53,458 at the end of August did not reach London till October 10th. 1290 01:05:53,482 --> 01:05:56,728 It was greeted with what one courtier called 1291 01:05:56,752 --> 01:05:59,431 "an extravagance of joy." 1292 01:05:59,455 --> 01:06:03,235 The King promised General Howe a knighthood. 1293 01:06:03,259 --> 01:06:06,271 Now that the Americans had seen how futile it was 1294 01:06:06,295 --> 01:06:08,440 to defy British regulars, 1295 01:06:08,464 --> 01:06:12,844 they would surely come to their senses and sue for peace. 1296 01:06:12,868 --> 01:06:16,415 Not all Englishmen shared that view. 1297 01:06:16,439 --> 01:06:17,849 ♪ 1298 01:06:17,873 --> 01:06:19,351 Voice: London. 1299 01:06:19,375 --> 01:06:22,187 To the printer of the "Public Advertiser"... 1300 01:06:22,211 --> 01:06:25,424 Sir, I find that the late action at Long Island 1301 01:06:25,448 --> 01:06:28,627 has made a considerable impression upon the Public; 1302 01:06:28,651 --> 01:06:31,363 the Friends of Ministry thinking everything gained, 1303 01:06:31,387 --> 01:06:35,100 the Friends of America everything lost. 1304 01:06:35,124 --> 01:06:37,970 Because the last action was in our favor, 1305 01:06:37,994 --> 01:06:40,372 we think we are to succeed in the next, 1306 01:06:40,396 --> 01:06:43,608 but liberty takes a great deal of killing, 1307 01:06:43,632 --> 01:06:46,278 and the courage of freemen is the same thing 1308 01:06:46,302 --> 01:06:49,214 on both sides of the Atlantic. 1309 01:06:49,238 --> 01:06:53,919 The Americans are daily improving in Arms and in Hatred. 1310 01:06:53,943 --> 01:06:57,856 We see only the Beginning of Sorrows;... 1311 01:06:57,880 --> 01:07:00,058 Benefit to neither... 1312 01:07:00,082 --> 01:07:03,019 Misery to both. [The Public Advertiser] 1313 01:07:08,858 --> 01:07:11,336 Voice: Ticonderoga appears to be 1314 01:07:11,360 --> 01:07:14,406 the last part of the world that God made, 1315 01:07:14,430 --> 01:07:15,941 and I have some ground to believe 1316 01:07:15,965 --> 01:07:17,943 it was finished in the dark, 1317 01:07:17,967 --> 01:07:19,311 that it was never intended 1318 01:07:19,335 --> 01:07:22,247 that man should live in it is clear, 1319 01:07:22,271 --> 01:07:25,150 for the people who have attempted to make any stay 1320 01:07:25,174 --> 01:07:27,753 have, for the most part, perished 1321 01:07:27,777 --> 01:07:30,689 by pestilence or the sword. 1322 01:07:30,713 --> 01:07:32,715 General Anthony Wayne. 1323 01:07:33,949 --> 01:07:36,795 Narrator: By the fall of 1776, 1324 01:07:36,819 --> 01:07:41,166 only half of the 11,000 Americans who manned Ticonderoga 1325 01:07:41,190 --> 01:07:44,002 and Crown Point on Lake Champlain 1326 01:07:44,026 --> 01:07:45,937 were fit for duty. 1327 01:07:45,961 --> 01:07:48,240 The smallpox threat was lifting, 1328 01:07:48,264 --> 01:07:51,743 but thousands still suffered from other diseases. 1329 01:07:51,767 --> 01:07:55,113 Morale was further weakened by antagonism 1330 01:07:55,137 --> 01:07:58,683 among men from the supposedly United States. 1331 01:07:58,707 --> 01:08:02,554 New Englanders brawled with Pennsylvanians so often 1332 01:08:02,578 --> 01:08:05,357 that they had been sent to the opposite shore 1333 01:08:05,381 --> 01:08:08,093 to set up a separate fortification 1334 01:08:08,117 --> 01:08:11,687 on a hilltop called Mount Independence. 1335 01:08:12,955 --> 01:08:18,236 After the American retreat from Quebec City in early 1776, 1336 01:08:18,260 --> 01:08:22,507 a British drive down the Hudson seemed inevitable. 1337 01:08:22,531 --> 01:08:25,410 Before British General Guy Carleton's army 1338 01:08:25,434 --> 01:08:28,980 could even reach the Hudson, he had to sail south 1339 01:08:29,004 --> 01:08:34,086 and seize the two American forts at Crown Point and Ticonderoga, 1340 01:08:34,110 --> 01:08:38,090 and before he could do that, he had to put together a fleet 1341 01:08:38,114 --> 01:08:40,759 at the lake's northern end. 1342 01:08:40,783 --> 01:08:43,495 That had taken months. 1343 01:08:43,519 --> 01:08:47,499 Calloway: This water route is a corridor. 1344 01:08:47,523 --> 01:08:50,302 It's been called the Warpath of Nations, 1345 01:08:50,326 --> 01:08:54,406 where Indian warriors from Canada had raided 1346 01:08:54,430 --> 01:08:57,509 down the Champlain Valley, down the Hudson River, 1347 01:08:57,533 --> 01:09:02,571 and so this was... This was like an open door. 1348 01:09:03,539 --> 01:09:06,518 Narrator: The Americans had just 4 ships 1349 01:09:06,542 --> 01:09:09,454 with which to oppose the British fleet. 1350 01:09:09,478 --> 01:09:11,790 Many more were needed. 1351 01:09:11,814 --> 01:09:13,792 Ticonderoga's commander, 1352 01:09:13,816 --> 01:09:16,795 a former British major named Horatio Gates, 1353 01:09:16,819 --> 01:09:22,200 appointed his most enterprising officer to get the job done. 1354 01:09:22,224 --> 01:09:24,803 Benedict Arnold was still limping 1355 01:09:24,827 --> 01:09:27,405 from the wound he'd received at Quebec 1356 01:09:27,429 --> 01:09:29,774 and was still angry at having been accused 1357 01:09:29,798 --> 01:09:34,079 of stealing supplies during the retreat from Montreal. 1358 01:09:34,103 --> 01:09:37,315 Gates had dismissed Arnold's detractors. 1359 01:09:37,339 --> 01:09:40,318 "Men of little merit are ever jealous 1360 01:09:40,342 --> 01:09:43,288 of those who have a great deal." 1361 01:09:43,312 --> 01:09:45,490 Voice: The enemy will soon have 1362 01:09:45,514 --> 01:09:47,792 a considerable naval force. 1363 01:09:47,816 --> 01:09:51,096 I make no doubt of their soon paying us a visit. 1364 01:09:51,120 --> 01:09:54,366 I beg that at least 100 good seamen 1365 01:09:54,390 --> 01:09:56,868 may be sent to me as soon as possible. 1366 01:09:56,892 --> 01:09:58,894 Benedict Arnold. 1367 01:09:59,995 --> 01:10:02,374 Narrator: Arnold transformed the tiny settlement 1368 01:10:02,398 --> 01:10:05,844 of Skenesborough, 20 miles below Ticonderoga, 1369 01:10:05,868 --> 01:10:08,780 into a bustling shipyard. 1370 01:10:08,804 --> 01:10:12,217 He had hoped for a fleet of at least 30 vessels 1371 01:10:12,241 --> 01:10:15,344 but had to settle for just 15. 1372 01:10:17,112 --> 01:10:18,590 Voice: I intend to come up as high 1373 01:10:18,614 --> 01:10:21,593 as Isle Valcour, where is a good harbor 1374 01:10:21,617 --> 01:10:23,795 and where we shall have the advantage 1375 01:10:23,819 --> 01:10:27,022 of attacking the enemy in the open lake. [Arnold] 1376 01:10:28,224 --> 01:10:31,136 Narrator: When the British flotilla finally started south 1377 01:10:31,160 --> 01:10:33,772 on Lake Champlain, Carleton commanded 1378 01:10:33,796 --> 01:10:37,342 nearly twice as many vessels as Arnold did, 1379 01:10:37,366 --> 01:10:40,178 armed with more than twice as many guns, 1380 01:10:40,202 --> 01:10:43,281 manned by 700 seasoned crewmen, 1381 01:10:43,305 --> 01:10:46,918 and carrying 10,000 British and German troops 1382 01:10:46,942 --> 01:10:50,388 and 400 Native allies. 1383 01:10:50,412 --> 01:10:53,425 Arnold and his fleet were waiting for them 1384 01:10:53,449 --> 01:10:56,728 in a cove hidden behind Valcour Island. 1385 01:10:56,752 --> 01:10:58,263 [Cannonfire] 1386 01:10:58,287 --> 01:11:00,899 As Carleton's fleet slid past, 1387 01:11:00,923 --> 01:11:06,137 4 American ships moved out onto the lake to engage the British, 1388 01:11:06,161 --> 01:11:08,473 Arnold personally directing the guns 1389 01:11:08,497 --> 01:11:10,976 of his flagship... The "Congress." 1390 01:11:11,000 --> 01:11:13,345 [Gunfire] 1391 01:11:13,369 --> 01:11:17,349 By evening, the fleets had fought to a standoff. 1392 01:11:17,373 --> 01:11:19,851 The Americans had lost 2 vessels 1393 01:11:19,875 --> 01:11:23,955 but succeeded in blowing up a British gunboat. 1394 01:11:23,979 --> 01:11:27,158 As darkness fell, Carleton ordered his fleet 1395 01:11:27,182 --> 01:11:29,094 to keep the Americans trapped 1396 01:11:29,118 --> 01:11:32,530 so that he could destroy them the following day... 1397 01:11:32,554 --> 01:11:33,932 ♪ 1398 01:11:33,956 --> 01:11:37,769 But at 7:00, while fog covered the lake 1399 01:11:37,793 --> 01:11:41,439 and Carleton and his officers were dining below deck, 1400 01:11:41,463 --> 01:11:45,577 Arnold formed his battered ships into a single line 1401 01:11:45,601 --> 01:11:48,280 and then ordered them with muffled oars 1402 01:11:48,304 --> 01:11:50,282 and in complete silence 1403 01:11:50,306 --> 01:11:53,218 to glide slowly past the British squadron. 1404 01:11:53,242 --> 01:11:55,654 ♪ 1405 01:11:55,678 --> 01:11:58,056 When Carleton finally caught up with them, 1406 01:11:58,080 --> 01:12:02,294 they began a running battle that went on for 2 days. 1407 01:12:02,318 --> 01:12:05,497 British firepower took a steady toll. 1408 01:12:05,521 --> 01:12:08,566 Arnold eventually ordered his flagship 1409 01:12:08,590 --> 01:12:12,404 and 4 other vessels run aground in Button Mould Bay 1410 01:12:12,428 --> 01:12:14,906 and set on fire. 1411 01:12:14,930 --> 01:12:19,477 He and his men escaped into the forest. 1412 01:12:19,501 --> 01:12:21,613 When they reached Crown Point, 1413 01:12:21,637 --> 01:12:24,316 Arnold realized the fortifications there 1414 01:12:24,340 --> 01:12:27,619 could not withstand a serious British attack 1415 01:12:27,643 --> 01:12:30,955 and ordered them burned to the ground. 1416 01:12:30,979 --> 01:12:32,624 [Flames crackling] 1417 01:12:32,648 --> 01:12:35,427 "At 4:00 [in the] morning, I reached [Ticonderoga]," 1418 01:12:35,451 --> 01:12:39,564 Arnold recalled, "exceedingly fatigued and unwell, 1419 01:12:39,588 --> 01:12:45,704 having been without sleep or refreshment for near 3 days." 1420 01:12:45,728 --> 01:12:47,205 Voice: It has pleased Providence 1421 01:12:47,229 --> 01:12:49,040 to preserve General Arnold. 1422 01:12:49,064 --> 01:12:52,344 Few men ever met with so many hairbreadth escapes 1423 01:12:52,368 --> 01:12:55,046 in so short a space of time. 1424 01:12:55,070 --> 01:12:57,406 Horatio Gates. 1425 01:12:58,707 --> 01:13:02,053 Philbrick: The battle was not a victory for the Americans, 1426 01:13:02,077 --> 01:13:06,958 but it is one of the great slugfests of naval warfare, 1427 01:13:06,982 --> 01:13:09,494 and it happens on a lake. 1428 01:13:09,518 --> 01:13:12,263 It convinced the British that it was gonna be 1429 01:13:12,287 --> 01:13:17,502 much more difficult to take Ticonderoga than they thought. 1430 01:13:17,526 --> 01:13:19,971 Narrator: The American force at Ticonderoga 1431 01:13:19,995 --> 01:13:21,973 had grown to 15,000, 1432 01:13:21,997 --> 01:13:25,477 and its fortifications had been strengthened. 1433 01:13:25,501 --> 01:13:28,113 Carleton now believed a long siege 1434 01:13:28,137 --> 01:13:30,315 would be needed to take it. 1435 01:13:30,339 --> 01:13:32,984 Then it began to snow. 1436 01:13:33,008 --> 01:13:34,586 Once the lake froze, 1437 01:13:34,610 --> 01:13:37,288 provisioning his forces would be difficult, 1438 01:13:37,312 --> 01:13:40,392 and a retreat would be impossible. 1439 01:13:40,416 --> 01:13:43,561 Carleton turned around and withdrew, 1440 01:13:43,585 --> 01:13:46,164 eventually going into winter quarters 1441 01:13:46,188 --> 01:13:49,200 at Quebec City far to the north. 1442 01:13:49,224 --> 01:13:51,870 The British began to plan a second, 1443 01:13:51,894 --> 01:13:56,064 more significant invasion for the next spring. 1444 01:13:58,100 --> 01:14:00,044 [Digging] 1445 01:14:00,068 --> 01:14:01,713 [Man grunts] 1446 01:14:01,737 --> 01:14:03,581 Voice: The rebels have taken positions 1447 01:14:03,605 --> 01:14:06,151 upon amazing, strong hills and works they have 1448 01:14:06,175 --> 01:14:08,520 all the way to Kingsbridge. 1449 01:14:08,544 --> 01:14:11,589 Their soldiers would rather work than fight. 1450 01:14:11,613 --> 01:14:14,392 Ours would rather fight than work, 1451 01:14:14,416 --> 01:14:16,361 but General Howe was determined 1452 01:14:16,385 --> 01:14:19,464 to not run our heads against their works. 1453 01:14:19,488 --> 01:14:21,866 Loftus Cliffe. 1454 01:14:21,890 --> 01:14:24,135 Narrator: For the better part of a month, 1455 01:14:24,159 --> 01:14:26,037 Washington's and Howe's armies 1456 01:14:26,061 --> 01:14:29,174 warily faced one another at Harlem Heights, 1457 01:14:29,198 --> 01:14:32,310 "as quiet," an American lieutenant recalled, 1458 01:14:32,334 --> 01:14:36,448 "as if they were a thousand miles apart." 1459 01:14:36,472 --> 01:14:39,517 With little to do, soldiers on both sides 1460 01:14:39,541 --> 01:14:42,187 went into the surrounding countryside, 1461 01:14:42,211 --> 01:14:45,890 where they plundered homes, terrified civilians, 1462 01:14:45,914 --> 01:14:51,729 and then burned their houses to cover up their crimes. 1463 01:14:51,753 --> 01:14:54,466 Baer: Plunder is more or less an accepted part of warfare 1464 01:14:54,490 --> 01:14:56,267 in the 18th century. 1465 01:14:56,291 --> 01:14:58,570 The British, the Hessian, 1466 01:14:58,594 --> 01:15:00,705 and the American generals all worry about that. 1467 01:15:00,729 --> 01:15:02,340 Washington worries about that. 1468 01:15:02,364 --> 01:15:03,675 His men plunder, and he's like, 1469 01:15:03,699 --> 01:15:05,376 "Can you stop? Please don't do this. 1470 01:15:05,400 --> 01:15:07,979 You're alienating the people." 1471 01:15:08,003 --> 01:15:11,349 Narrator: "Militiamen," Washington complained to Congress, 1472 01:15:11,373 --> 01:15:14,385 "were undisciplined, disobedient, 1473 01:15:14,409 --> 01:15:17,188 "liable to run instead of fight, 1474 01:15:17,212 --> 01:15:20,291 'hurtful' to the cause." 1475 01:15:20,315 --> 01:15:21,693 To make matters worse, 1476 01:15:21,717 --> 01:15:24,963 the 12-month enlistments in the Continental Army, 1477 01:15:24,987 --> 01:15:27,732 begun in Boston the previous winter, 1478 01:15:27,756 --> 01:15:30,602 would soon be running out. 1479 01:15:30,626 --> 01:15:33,438 At the end of the year, Washington would again 1480 01:15:33,462 --> 01:15:37,075 have to raise and train a whole new army. 1481 01:15:37,099 --> 01:15:41,346 He understood that appeals to patriotism alone 1482 01:15:41,370 --> 01:15:43,481 would no longer work. 1483 01:15:43,505 --> 01:15:44,949 [Shouting] 1484 01:15:44,973 --> 01:15:46,551 Voice: When men are irritated 1485 01:15:46,575 --> 01:15:48,186 and the passions inflamed, 1486 01:15:48,210 --> 01:15:51,689 they fly hastily and cheerfully to arms, 1487 01:15:51,713 --> 01:15:54,559 but after the first emotions are over, 1488 01:15:54,583 --> 01:15:56,728 to expect that they are influenced 1489 01:15:56,752 --> 01:15:59,631 by any other principle than those of interest 1490 01:15:59,655 --> 01:16:05,928 is to look for what never did and, I fear, never will happen. [Washington] 1491 01:16:07,162 --> 01:16:11,543 Narrator: Congress agreed to authorize 88 new battalions. 1492 01:16:11,567 --> 01:16:13,945 The number each state was to provide 1493 01:16:13,969 --> 01:16:17,181 depended on their free populations. 1494 01:16:17,205 --> 01:16:22,611 The states would never come close to meeting those goals. 1495 01:16:23,712 --> 01:16:25,256 Voice: The policy of Congress has been 1496 01:16:25,280 --> 01:16:28,192 the most absurd and ridiculous imaginable, 1497 01:16:28,216 --> 01:16:31,696 pouring in militiamen who come and go every month. 1498 01:16:31,720 --> 01:16:34,632 People coming from home with all the tender feelings 1499 01:16:34,656 --> 01:16:37,802 of domestic life are not sufficiently fortified 1500 01:16:37,826 --> 01:16:42,307 with natural courage to stand the shocking scenes of war, 1501 01:16:42,331 --> 01:16:44,475 to march over dead men, 1502 01:16:44,499 --> 01:16:48,046 to hear without concern the groanings of the wounded. 1503 01:16:48,070 --> 01:16:50,915 I say few men can stand such scenes 1504 01:16:50,939 --> 01:16:55,787 unless steeled by habit or fortified by military pride. 1505 01:16:55,811 --> 01:16:58,256 Nathanael Greene. 1506 01:16:58,280 --> 01:17:03,861 ♪ 1507 01:17:03,885 --> 01:17:08,099 Narrator: On October 11th, 150 vessels threaded their way 1508 01:17:08,123 --> 01:17:11,736 up the East River and into Long Island Sound 1509 01:17:11,760 --> 01:17:15,206 with 4,000 British and Hessian troops. 1510 01:17:15,230 --> 01:17:18,576 Their objective was to get behind Washington's forces 1511 01:17:18,600 --> 01:17:20,745 in Northern Manhattan. 1512 01:17:20,769 --> 01:17:24,282 To avoid that, Washington began a full-scale retreat, 1513 01:17:24,306 --> 01:17:27,051 following the west bank of the Bronx River 1514 01:17:27,075 --> 01:17:29,921 for 18 miles north toward the seat 1515 01:17:29,945 --> 01:17:33,257 of Westchester County... White Plains. 1516 01:17:33,281 --> 01:17:35,159 [Cannonfire] 1517 01:17:35,183 --> 01:17:38,997 By the time the British forces got there on October 28th, 1518 01:17:39,021 --> 01:17:43,201 the American line stretched for 3 miles through the village, 1519 01:17:43,225 --> 01:17:44,802 anchored on the right 1520 01:17:44,826 --> 01:17:47,572 by the lightly defended Chatterton Hill. 1521 01:17:47,596 --> 01:17:48,973 [Gunfire] 1522 01:17:48,997 --> 01:17:52,176 General Howe sent 2 columns up the slope. 1523 01:17:52,200 --> 01:17:55,613 Patriot militiamen predictably scattered, 1524 01:17:55,637 --> 01:17:58,116 but the Continentals held. 1525 01:17:58,140 --> 01:18:00,952 As the British approached, a Connecticut colonel 1526 01:18:00,976 --> 01:18:03,921 told his men, "Fire at their legs. 1527 01:18:03,945 --> 01:18:06,691 "One man wounded is better than a dead one, 1528 01:18:06,715 --> 01:18:09,627 "for it takes two more to carry him off, 1529 01:18:09,651 --> 01:18:12,230 and there is 3 gone," 1530 01:18:12,254 --> 01:18:16,401 but British artillery took a fearful toll. 1531 01:18:16,425 --> 01:18:18,136 Voice: A cannonball cut down 1532 01:18:18,160 --> 01:18:22,006 Lieutenant Young's Platoon, which was next to that of mine. 1533 01:18:22,030 --> 01:18:26,277 The ball first took the head of Smith... a stout, heavy man... 1534 01:18:26,301 --> 01:18:28,046 And dashed it open. 1535 01:18:28,070 --> 01:18:30,615 Then it took off Chilson's arm. 1536 01:18:30,639 --> 01:18:33,451 It then took Taylor across the bowels. 1537 01:18:33,475 --> 01:18:36,287 What a sight that was to see. 1538 01:18:36,311 --> 01:18:39,223 There was men with their legs and arms 1539 01:18:39,247 --> 01:18:42,794 and guns and packs all in a heap. 1540 01:18:42,818 --> 01:18:46,364 Private Elijah Bostwick. 1541 01:18:46,388 --> 01:18:48,066 Narrator: At day's end, 1542 01:18:48,090 --> 01:18:51,169 Washington retreated east of White Plains. 1543 01:18:51,193 --> 01:18:57,542 Again General Howe made only a halfhearted effort to follow. 1544 01:18:57,566 --> 01:19:00,344 Baer: The British essentially let Washington escape 1545 01:19:00,368 --> 01:19:02,080 once again. 1546 01:19:02,104 --> 01:19:08,052 Opportunities to just end this war right now are being wasted. 1547 01:19:08,076 --> 01:19:11,155 Voice: Is it through incapacity or by design 1548 01:19:11,179 --> 01:19:13,891 of our commander that so many great opportunities 1549 01:19:13,915 --> 01:19:15,893 are let slip? 1550 01:19:15,917 --> 01:19:18,696 I am inclined to adopt the latter. 1551 01:19:18,720 --> 01:19:21,332 Captain William Bamford. 1552 01:19:21,356 --> 01:19:22,934 ♪ 1553 01:19:22,958 --> 01:19:26,170 Conway: There are moments when General Howe in particular 1554 01:19:26,194 --> 01:19:28,940 seems to hold back from delivering 1555 01:19:28,964 --> 01:19:31,442 the final knockout blow. 1556 01:19:31,466 --> 01:19:34,045 There's that feeling, 1557 01:19:34,069 --> 01:19:36,948 the very torn and conflicted feeling, 1558 01:19:36,972 --> 01:19:39,984 about whether the Americans are truly enemies 1559 01:19:40,008 --> 01:19:44,021 or misguided subjects who need to be encouraged 1560 01:19:44,045 --> 01:19:46,324 to come back into the fold. 1561 01:19:46,348 --> 01:19:47,792 [Horse neighs] 1562 01:19:47,816 --> 01:19:50,194 Narrator: As Howe headed back towards Manhattan, 1563 01:19:50,218 --> 01:19:54,165 Washington crossed the Hudson and headed south. 1564 01:19:54,189 --> 01:19:56,868 He thought it most likely that Howe planned 1565 01:19:56,892 --> 01:20:00,004 to race across New Jersey and capture Philadelphia 1566 01:20:00,028 --> 01:20:02,673 before winter set in. 1567 01:20:02,697 --> 01:20:06,177 He had again misjudged his adversary. 1568 01:20:06,201 --> 01:20:09,614 Howe actually wanted to take 2 forts 1569 01:20:09,638 --> 01:20:11,983 on opposite sides of the Hudson 1570 01:20:12,007 --> 01:20:14,986 that blocked British ships from going upriver... 1571 01:20:15,010 --> 01:20:17,121 Fort Lee in New Jersey 1572 01:20:17,145 --> 01:20:19,690 and Fort Washington on Manhattan Island, 1573 01:20:19,714 --> 01:20:25,930 a crude, star-shaped earthwork 265 feet above the river. 1574 01:20:25,954 --> 01:20:28,466 Fort Washington would come first. 1575 01:20:28,490 --> 01:20:29,901 [Cannonfire] 1576 01:20:29,925 --> 01:20:31,736 British guns pounded the fort 1577 01:20:31,760 --> 01:20:36,007 and the long line of trenches and redoubts that surrounded it. 1578 01:20:36,031 --> 01:20:39,277 The British troops who attacked from the south and east 1579 01:20:39,301 --> 01:20:42,847 had comparatively little trouble driving the defenders 1580 01:20:42,871 --> 01:20:45,383 back behind the fort's walls, 1581 01:20:45,407 --> 01:20:48,052 but Hessian troops under the command 1582 01:20:48,076 --> 01:20:50,688 of General Wilhelm von Knyphausen 1583 01:20:50,712 --> 01:20:54,759 coming at them from the north had a much tougher task, 1584 01:20:54,783 --> 01:20:56,894 climbing a rocky hillside 1585 01:20:56,918 --> 01:21:00,298 covered by the tangled branches of felled trees 1586 01:21:00,322 --> 01:21:03,501 and so steep that they had to grab at bushes 1587 01:21:03,525 --> 01:21:05,403 to pull themselves up, 1588 01:21:05,427 --> 01:21:09,340 all under steady fire from above. 1589 01:21:09,364 --> 01:21:10,575 Voice: Before us, 1590 01:21:10,599 --> 01:21:12,243 beside, and upon one another, 1591 01:21:12,267 --> 01:21:15,313 we saw our unfortunate comrades shattered, 1592 01:21:15,337 --> 01:21:18,082 dead on the Earth in their own blood. 1593 01:21:18,106 --> 01:21:20,985 Even the air seemed filled with fear. 1594 01:21:21,009 --> 01:21:24,822 Lieutenant Johann Friedrich von Bardeleben. 1595 01:21:24,846 --> 01:21:26,424 Narrator: Margaret Corbin, 1596 01:21:26,448 --> 01:21:28,593 a Pennsylvania artilleryman's wife, 1597 01:21:28,617 --> 01:21:32,263 was standing near her husband when he was mortally wounded. 1598 01:21:32,287 --> 01:21:35,933 She stepped in and kept up such deadly fire 1599 01:21:35,957 --> 01:21:40,037 that her position became a target for Hessian guns. 1600 01:21:40,061 --> 01:21:43,241 Grapeshot eventually hit her jaw and breast 1601 01:21:43,265 --> 01:21:46,344 and rendered her left arm useless. 1602 01:21:46,368 --> 01:21:49,947 3 years later, she would become the first woman 1603 01:21:49,971 --> 01:21:53,317 to receive a lifetime disability pension 1604 01:21:53,341 --> 01:21:58,389 but at half the rate wounded men received. 1605 01:21:58,413 --> 01:22:02,460 American muskets eventually clogged from overuse. 1606 01:22:02,484 --> 01:22:07,365 The defenders fell back and were forced to surrender, 1607 01:22:07,389 --> 01:22:11,168 nearly 3,000 men. 1608 01:22:11,192 --> 01:22:14,038 The British renamed Fort Washington 1609 01:22:14,062 --> 01:22:19,310 Fort Knyphausen after the victorious German general. 1610 01:22:19,334 --> 01:22:22,680 As the battered captives made their 12-mile march south 1611 01:22:22,704 --> 01:22:26,117 to New York City, British soldiers and Loyalists 1612 01:22:26,141 --> 01:22:30,321 lined the road, jeering and cursing. 1613 01:22:30,345 --> 01:22:33,324 Officers were often paroled 1614 01:22:33,348 --> 01:22:36,193 after pledging not to take up arms again, 1615 01:22:36,217 --> 01:22:39,664 but enlisted men were given no such option. 1616 01:22:39,688 --> 01:22:43,301 Instead, they were prodded into makeshift prisons 1617 01:22:43,325 --> 01:22:47,138 already overcrowded with hundreds of prisoners 1618 01:22:47,162 --> 01:22:51,475 taken at Quebec, Long Island, and Kips Bay. 1619 01:22:51,499 --> 01:22:53,144 ♪ 1620 01:22:53,168 --> 01:22:54,545 There were no blankets, 1621 01:22:54,569 --> 01:22:58,316 little firewood, and sometimes no food. 1622 01:22:58,340 --> 01:23:03,854 Rats scuttled over the muddy straw that covered the floors. 1623 01:23:03,878 --> 01:23:05,690 Voice: The men's appearance in general 1624 01:23:05,714 --> 01:23:10,061 resembled dead corpses more than living men. 1625 01:23:10,085 --> 01:23:13,564 Indeed, great numbers had already arrived 1626 01:23:13,588 --> 01:23:15,833 at their long home, 1627 01:23:15,857 --> 01:23:20,771 and the remainder appeared far advanced on the same journey. 1628 01:23:20,795 --> 01:23:23,774 Captain Jabez Fitch. 1629 01:23:23,798 --> 01:23:26,777 Narrator: Thousands of American prisoners would die 1630 01:23:26,801 --> 01:23:29,680 by the end of 1776. 1631 01:23:29,704 --> 01:23:33,751 By then, the British had begun packing the prisoners 1632 01:23:33,775 --> 01:23:38,289 into disused transport ships anchored in the East River. 1633 01:23:38,313 --> 01:23:43,527 Conditions there would prove worse than those on land. 1634 01:23:43,551 --> 01:23:46,831 Atkinson: They die of exposure. They die of malnutrition. 1635 01:23:46,855 --> 01:23:48,599 They die of disease... 1636 01:23:48,623 --> 01:23:53,270 Smallpox, typhus, typhoid, dysentery. 1637 01:23:53,294 --> 01:23:57,074 We have our own prison ships near Albany, 1638 01:23:57,098 --> 01:23:59,910 where British soldiers and Loyalists 1639 01:23:59,934 --> 01:24:02,980 are kept in very awful conditions. 1640 01:24:03,004 --> 01:24:05,416 It's a deplorable part 1641 01:24:05,440 --> 01:24:08,552 of the story of the American Revolution. 1642 01:24:08,576 --> 01:24:12,614 ♪ 1643 01:24:16,518 --> 01:24:20,498 Narrator: Early on November 20, 1776, 1644 01:24:20,522 --> 01:24:23,434 some 5,000 British and Hessian troops 1645 01:24:23,458 --> 01:24:26,303 crossed the Hudson and began struggling 1646 01:24:26,327 --> 01:24:29,840 up the slippery, 440-foot rock face 1647 01:24:29,864 --> 01:24:32,676 of the New Jersey Palisades, 1648 01:24:32,700 --> 01:24:37,681 so steep the Patriots had not believed anyone could climb it. 1649 01:24:37,705 --> 01:24:42,086 The British commander was General Charles Cornwallis, 1650 01:24:42,110 --> 01:24:45,089 who then ordered his men to start marching south 1651 01:24:45,113 --> 01:24:48,526 toward Fort Lee, 6 miles away. 1652 01:24:48,550 --> 01:24:52,596 General Nathanael Greene had already begun to evacuate it 1653 01:24:52,620 --> 01:24:55,733 when the enemy took Fort Washington. 1654 01:24:55,757 --> 01:25:00,004 Now he ordered everyone remaining to leave immediately. 1655 01:25:00,028 --> 01:25:01,772 ♪ 1656 01:25:01,796 --> 01:25:04,508 Voice: The rebels fled like scared rabbits. 1657 01:25:04,532 --> 01:25:07,111 Not a rascal of them could be seen. 1658 01:25:07,135 --> 01:25:09,213 They have left some poor pork, 1659 01:25:09,237 --> 01:25:11,615 a few greasy proclamations, 1660 01:25:11,639 --> 01:25:15,286 and some of that scoundrel "Common Sense" man's letters, 1661 01:25:15,310 --> 01:25:17,621 which we can read at our leisure. [British officer] 1662 01:25:17,645 --> 01:25:18,956 ♪ 1663 01:25:18,980 --> 01:25:22,593 Narrator: By evening, Greene and most of his 2,000 men 1664 01:25:22,617 --> 01:25:25,496 managed to link up with Washington's force 1665 01:25:25,520 --> 01:25:29,200 at New Bridge on the Hackensack River. 1666 01:25:29,224 --> 01:25:31,302 Voice: They marched 2 abreast, 1667 01:25:31,326 --> 01:25:34,638 looked ragged, some without a shoe to their feet 1668 01:25:34,662 --> 01:25:37,575 and most of them wrapped in their blankets. 1669 01:25:37,599 --> 01:25:40,544 The next evening, the British encamped 1670 01:25:40,568 --> 01:25:43,314 on the other side of the Hackensack. 1671 01:25:43,338 --> 01:25:46,684 We could see their fires about 100 yards apart 1672 01:25:46,708 --> 01:25:49,653 gleaming brilliantly in the gloom of the night, 1673 01:25:49,677 --> 01:25:53,791 extending for more than a mile along the river. 1674 01:25:53,815 --> 01:25:55,850 Reverend Theodore Roneyn. 1675 01:25:56,951 --> 01:25:59,663 Narrator: As his army retreated across the state, 1676 01:25:59,687 --> 01:26:03,300 followed by Cornwallis with a far larger force, 1677 01:26:03,324 --> 01:26:07,538 Washington hoped somehow, somewhere to offer battle, 1678 01:26:07,562 --> 01:26:11,208 but Cornwallis had orders from General Howe 1679 01:26:11,232 --> 01:26:14,111 to avoid confrontation. 1680 01:26:14,135 --> 01:26:15,746 From Howe's vantage point, 1681 01:26:15,770 --> 01:26:18,716 there was no need for another major battle. 1682 01:26:18,740 --> 01:26:21,452 The rebel army was shrinking daily. 1683 01:26:21,476 --> 01:26:24,588 What one officer called "the devil of desertion" 1684 01:26:24,612 --> 01:26:27,358 had infected Washington's ranks. 1685 01:26:27,382 --> 01:26:31,729 Men were simply drifting away into the countryside. 1686 01:26:31,753 --> 01:26:34,365 When Washington called upon the states 1687 01:26:34,389 --> 01:26:39,436 for 5,000 more troops, he was met mostly by silence. 1688 01:26:39,460 --> 01:26:42,239 His aide-de-camp Joseph Reed 1689 01:26:42,263 --> 01:26:46,310 expressed the General's continued frustrations. 1690 01:26:46,334 --> 01:26:48,746 Voice: When I look round and see how few 1691 01:26:48,770 --> 01:26:52,082 of the numbers who talked so largely of death and honor 1692 01:26:52,106 --> 01:26:55,853 are around me, I am lost in wonder. 1693 01:26:55,877 --> 01:26:59,123 Your noisy Sons of Liberty are, I find, 1694 01:26:59,147 --> 01:27:01,659 the quietest in the field. [Joseph Reed] 1695 01:27:01,683 --> 01:27:03,794 ♪ 1696 01:27:03,818 --> 01:27:07,631 Narrator: To compound things, Washington's second in command... 1697 01:27:07,655 --> 01:27:10,534 General Charles Lee, who had been stationed 1698 01:27:10,558 --> 01:27:13,604 in Westchester County with a sizable force... 1699 01:27:13,628 --> 01:27:16,040 Responded to Washington's repeated requests 1700 01:27:16,064 --> 01:27:20,344 to hurry to his aid with one excuse after another. 1701 01:27:20,368 --> 01:27:22,913 Lee was scornful of Washington, 1702 01:27:22,937 --> 01:27:26,050 hoped someday to replace him as commander in chief, 1703 01:27:26,074 --> 01:27:31,555 and saw himself as not subject to Washington's orders. 1704 01:27:31,579 --> 01:27:35,759 On November 30th, the British issued a proclamation 1705 01:27:35,783 --> 01:27:39,296 aimed at restoring their rule in New Jersey. 1706 01:27:39,320 --> 01:27:40,831 Anyone willing to swear 1707 01:27:40,855 --> 01:27:43,634 "peaceable obedience to His Majesty" 1708 01:27:43,658 --> 01:27:48,572 within 60 days would receive "a free and General Pardon." 1709 01:27:48,596 --> 01:27:51,475 More than 3,000 New Jersey residents 1710 01:27:51,499 --> 01:27:53,844 took them up on the offer, 1711 01:27:53,868 --> 01:27:56,914 and hundreds answered the call for Loyalists 1712 01:27:56,938 --> 01:28:00,084 to fight alongside the British regulars. 1713 01:28:00,108 --> 01:28:04,588 New Jersey's Patriot government fled, 1714 01:28:04,612 --> 01:28:07,891 but while General Howe was offering pardons, 1715 01:28:07,915 --> 01:28:12,363 his soldiers were demanding provisions from civilians. 1716 01:28:12,387 --> 01:28:14,498 [Pounding on door] 1717 01:28:14,522 --> 01:28:17,301 Edward Lengel: The people who were really at the sharp end 1718 01:28:17,325 --> 01:28:20,871 of the sword were the civilians, 1719 01:28:20,895 --> 01:28:23,907 and if you think from the point of view of somebody, 1720 01:28:23,931 --> 01:28:28,145 say, a mother of a family... Who's on her farm, 1721 01:28:28,169 --> 01:28:32,016 you know that the very little that you have to survive 1722 01:28:32,040 --> 01:28:34,518 can be destroyed in an instant. 1723 01:28:34,542 --> 01:28:36,453 [Glass shattering] 1724 01:28:36,477 --> 01:28:38,055 Voice: Tories lead the relentless foreigners 1725 01:28:38,079 --> 01:28:41,925 to the houses of their neighbors and strip poor women 1726 01:28:41,949 --> 01:28:45,696 and children of everything they have to eat or wear, 1727 01:28:45,720 --> 01:28:48,499 and after plundering them in this sort, 1728 01:28:48,523 --> 01:28:51,302 the brutes often ravish the mothers and daughters 1729 01:28:51,326 --> 01:28:56,073 and compel the fathers and sons to behold their brutality. 1730 01:28:56,097 --> 01:28:58,433 Nathanael Greene. 1731 01:28:59,767 --> 01:29:03,380 Conway: As an army is advancing and occupying new territories, 1732 01:29:03,404 --> 01:29:05,816 dreadful things happen. 1733 01:29:05,840 --> 01:29:11,355 We see lots of instances of rape and sexual assault of women. 1734 01:29:11,379 --> 01:29:16,026 Sadly, this is not unusual in all wars. 1735 01:29:16,050 --> 01:29:19,396 Narrator: Mary Campbell of Hunterdon County, New Jersey, 1736 01:29:19,420 --> 01:29:24,034 told a judge what British troops had done to her. 1737 01:29:24,058 --> 01:29:25,536 Voice: Mary Campbell, 1738 01:29:25,560 --> 01:29:27,104 wife of Daniel Campbell, 1739 01:29:27,128 --> 01:29:30,708 sayeth that sometime in December, a number of soldiers 1740 01:29:30,732 --> 01:29:33,310 belonging to the King of Great Britain's army 1741 01:29:33,334 --> 01:29:36,480 came to the house of her father. 1742 01:29:36,504 --> 01:29:38,682 Two of them seized hold of her arms 1743 01:29:38,706 --> 01:29:40,918 and dragged her out of the house to an old shop 1744 01:29:40,942 --> 01:29:44,655 near the dwelling house, broke open the door, 1745 01:29:44,679 --> 01:29:47,958 and pulled her in against all her cries and entreaties 1746 01:29:47,982 --> 01:29:51,362 and swore if she did not hold her tongue, 1747 01:29:51,386 --> 01:29:54,598 they would run her through with a bayonet. 1748 01:29:54,622 --> 01:29:57,334 3 of said soldiers successively had knowledge 1749 01:29:57,358 --> 01:29:59,937 of the body of this deponent, 1750 01:29:59,961 --> 01:30:03,140 she being 5 months and upwards advanced 1751 01:30:03,164 --> 01:30:06,243 in her pregnancy at that time. 1752 01:30:06,267 --> 01:30:09,713 Her mark, Mary M. Campbell. 1753 01:30:09,737 --> 01:30:11,882 ♪ 1754 01:30:11,906 --> 01:30:15,119 Narrator: At Pennington, 16 women fled into the woods 1755 01:30:15,143 --> 01:30:17,221 to escape British soldiers, 1756 01:30:17,245 --> 01:30:21,792 only to be dragged back and repeatedly assaulted. 1757 01:30:21,816 --> 01:30:25,329 Such behavior, one British officer admitted, 1758 01:30:25,353 --> 01:30:27,965 was "calculated to lose you friends 1759 01:30:27,989 --> 01:30:30,434 and gain you enemies." 1760 01:30:30,458 --> 01:30:35,472 It did, and people soon began taking revenge. 1761 01:30:35,496 --> 01:30:38,575 New Jersey militiamen took up arms again 1762 01:30:38,599 --> 01:30:42,079 less out of devotion to the revolutionary cause 1763 01:30:42,103 --> 01:30:44,715 than out of anger at what was being done 1764 01:30:44,739 --> 01:30:48,118 to them and their families. [Gunshot] 1765 01:30:48,142 --> 01:30:49,686 Voice: It is now 1766 01:30:49,710 --> 01:30:52,823 very unsafe for us to travel in New Jersey. 1767 01:30:52,847 --> 01:30:57,127 The peasants meet our men alone or in small unarmed groups. 1768 01:30:57,151 --> 01:31:00,631 They have their rifles hidden in the bushes 1769 01:31:00,655 --> 01:31:02,666 or ditches and the like. 1770 01:31:02,690 --> 01:31:06,437 When they see one or several men belonging to our army, 1771 01:31:06,461 --> 01:31:08,906 they shoot them in the head, 1772 01:31:08,930 --> 01:31:14,945 then quickly hide their rifles and pretend they know nothing. 1773 01:31:14,969 --> 01:31:18,382 Captain Friedrich von Munchhausen. 1774 01:31:18,406 --> 01:31:21,642 ♪ 1775 01:31:22,410 --> 01:31:24,121 ♪ 1776 01:31:24,145 --> 01:31:27,191 Voice: No lads ever show greater activity 1777 01:31:27,215 --> 01:31:30,060 in retreating than we have. 1778 01:31:30,084 --> 01:31:32,963 Our soldiers are the best fellows in the world 1779 01:31:32,987 --> 01:31:34,832 at this business. 1780 01:31:34,856 --> 01:31:38,869 Lieutenant Colonel Samuel Webb. 1781 01:31:38,893 --> 01:31:42,172 Narrator: Hackensack, Acquackanonk, 1782 01:31:42,196 --> 01:31:44,775 Newark, Spanktown, 1783 01:31:44,799 --> 01:31:48,979 New Brunswick, Princeton, Trenton. 1784 01:31:49,003 --> 01:31:55,319 In 12 days, the Americans fell back some 70 miles. 1785 01:31:55,343 --> 01:31:59,490 On December 2nd, Washington began to take his army 1786 01:31:59,514 --> 01:32:03,794 across the Delaware River into Pennsylvania. 1787 01:32:03,818 --> 01:32:07,931 The news continued to be bad for the Patriot cause. 1788 01:32:07,955 --> 01:32:11,568 General Henry Clinton landed 7,000 British 1789 01:32:11,592 --> 01:32:14,738 and Hessian regulars at Newport, Rhode Island, 1790 01:32:14,762 --> 01:32:17,074 without firing a shot. 1791 01:32:17,098 --> 01:32:20,277 Like New York City and New Jersey, 1792 01:32:20,301 --> 01:32:23,947 Rhode Island seemed likely lost. 1793 01:32:23,971 --> 01:32:28,085 British forces were now just 60 miles from Philadelphia, 1794 01:32:28,109 --> 01:32:30,787 and the roads leading out of the city 1795 01:32:30,811 --> 01:32:33,524 were choked with frightened refugees. 1796 01:32:33,548 --> 01:32:37,961 Congress denied what it called the "false and malicious" rumors 1797 01:32:37,985 --> 01:32:40,864 that it was planning to leave town 1798 01:32:40,888 --> 01:32:44,735 and then fled to Baltimore. 1799 01:32:44,759 --> 01:32:47,437 General Charles Lee had finally given in 1800 01:32:47,461 --> 01:32:49,339 to Washington's entreaties 1801 01:32:49,363 --> 01:32:53,911 and had been slowly leading his force across New Jersey. 1802 01:32:53,935 --> 01:32:56,613 On the evening of December 12th, 1803 01:32:56,637 --> 01:32:58,849 he slipped away from his encampment 1804 01:32:58,873 --> 01:33:02,452 to an isolated tavern in Basking Ridge. 1805 01:33:02,476 --> 01:33:06,023 A Loyalist tipped off the British. 1806 01:33:06,047 --> 01:33:08,892 Dragoons surrounded the building and seized 1807 01:33:08,916 --> 01:33:12,129 the Continental Army's second in command. 1808 01:33:12,153 --> 01:33:15,566 One Hessian captain was exultant... 1809 01:33:15,590 --> 01:33:18,569 "We have captured... the only rebel general 1810 01:33:18,593 --> 01:33:22,306 whom we had cause to fear"... 1811 01:33:22,330 --> 01:33:27,477 But then General Howe abruptly called off his campaign. 1812 01:33:27,501 --> 01:33:29,580 Winter was coming. 1813 01:33:29,604 --> 01:33:31,882 The Continental Congress was on the run. 1814 01:33:31,906 --> 01:33:34,952 There would be plenty of time the following year, 1815 01:33:34,976 --> 01:33:39,556 he was certain, to destroy what was left of Washington's army 1816 01:33:39,580 --> 01:33:42,960 and permanently end the rebellion. 1817 01:33:42,984 --> 01:33:45,228 ♪ 1818 01:33:45,252 --> 01:33:49,032 While Howe and most of his army withdrew to New York, 1819 01:33:49,056 --> 01:33:52,603 he left behind a chain of 17 garrisons 1820 01:33:52,627 --> 01:33:56,440 stretching from the Hudson to the Delaware. 1821 01:33:56,464 --> 01:33:59,376 Atkinson: Things can hardly look darker than they look 1822 01:33:59,400 --> 01:34:03,280 for Washington and his army and the hopes of the cause 1823 01:34:03,304 --> 01:34:06,350 in December of 1776. 1824 01:34:06,374 --> 01:34:08,218 As he gets into Pennsylvania 1825 01:34:08,242 --> 01:34:11,622 and he's looking back across the Delaware River, 1826 01:34:11,646 --> 01:34:14,791 his options are very, very limited. 1827 01:34:14,815 --> 01:34:17,060 He's been evicted from New York. 1828 01:34:17,084 --> 01:34:20,831 His army is down to maybe 3,000 men. 1829 01:34:20,855 --> 01:34:22,165 He writes his brother at one point and says, 1830 01:34:22,189 --> 01:34:24,568 "I think the game is pretty near up." 1831 01:34:24,592 --> 01:34:27,404 He doesn't let his men know that he's feeling that despondent, 1832 01:34:27,428 --> 01:34:30,574 but he's feeling pretty glum. 1833 01:34:30,598 --> 01:34:32,376 ♪ 1834 01:34:32,400 --> 01:34:36,546 Narrator: But now his army had begun to grow again. 1835 01:34:36,570 --> 01:34:38,682 General William Alexander, 1836 01:34:38,706 --> 01:34:41,084 who had been freed from British captivity, 1837 01:34:41,108 --> 01:34:44,788 arrived with a thousand ragged reinforcements. 1838 01:34:44,812 --> 01:34:47,958 A thousand Philadelphia militia appeared. 1839 01:34:47,982 --> 01:34:51,328 General John Sullivan, also exchanged, 1840 01:34:51,352 --> 01:34:53,397 brought in 2,000 more men 1841 01:34:53,421 --> 01:34:57,801 who had served under the captured General Lee. 1842 01:34:57,825 --> 01:35:02,205 On December 22nd, the 16-year-old fifer John Greenwood 1843 01:35:02,229 --> 01:35:05,008 and some 600 other New Englanders 1844 01:35:05,032 --> 01:35:08,578 also staggered into camp. 1845 01:35:08,602 --> 01:35:10,347 Washington's appeals for help 1846 01:35:10,371 --> 01:35:13,417 had reached all the way to Ticonderoga, 1847 01:35:13,441 --> 01:35:17,421 and these men had been on their way for nearly a month. 1848 01:35:17,445 --> 01:35:22,693 Washington now had about 6,000 men fit for duty. 1849 01:35:22,717 --> 01:35:25,295 The question was what he might do with them 1850 01:35:25,319 --> 01:35:29,433 in the 10 days remaining before their enlistments ran out 1851 01:35:29,457 --> 01:35:34,871 and most of his best-trained soldiers went home. 1852 01:35:34,895 --> 01:35:37,040 Voice: Our cause is desperate and hopeless 1853 01:35:37,064 --> 01:35:39,876 if we do not take the opportunity of the collection 1854 01:35:39,900 --> 01:35:43,246 of troops at present to strike some stroke. 1855 01:35:43,270 --> 01:35:48,118 Delay with us is now equal to total defeat. 1856 01:35:48,142 --> 01:35:50,277 Joseph Reed. 1857 01:35:51,846 --> 01:35:54,558 Narrator: Washington decided to strike the garrison 1858 01:35:54,582 --> 01:35:58,995 at Trenton, New Jersey, manned by some 1,500 Hessians 1859 01:35:59,019 --> 01:36:02,232 under the command of Colonel Johann Rall. 1860 01:36:02,256 --> 01:36:05,469 Most of the little town's inhabitants had fled, 1861 01:36:05,493 --> 01:36:08,505 and their homes had been turned into barracks. 1862 01:36:08,529 --> 01:36:12,309 Washington outlined a bold and ambitious plan of attack 1863 01:36:12,333 --> 01:36:15,479 that called for 3 simultaneous crossings 1864 01:36:15,503 --> 01:36:17,748 of the ice-choked Delaware, 1865 01:36:17,772 --> 01:36:21,618 all to be launched on Christmas night. 1866 01:36:21,642 --> 01:36:23,019 [Drums beating rhythmically] 1867 01:36:23,043 --> 01:36:25,956 1,800 Pennsylvanians and Rhode Islanders 1868 01:36:25,980 --> 01:36:28,658 were to cross downriver near Bristol 1869 01:36:28,682 --> 01:36:32,996 and march toward a second Hessian outpost at Burlington. 1870 01:36:33,020 --> 01:36:37,167 800 Pennsylvania militia were to cross and hold the bridge 1871 01:36:37,191 --> 01:36:41,004 over Assunpink Creek and keep the Hessians from escaping 1872 01:36:41,028 --> 01:36:43,473 once the battle began. 1873 01:36:43,497 --> 01:36:47,210 In the main attack, Washington himself would lead 1874 01:36:47,234 --> 01:36:52,015 2,400 Continentals across the river at McConkey's Ferry 1875 01:36:52,039 --> 01:36:57,077 and then begin the 9-mile march south toward their target. 1876 01:36:58,145 --> 01:36:59,856 Voice: None knew but the first officers 1877 01:36:59,880 --> 01:37:01,691 where we were a-going. 1878 01:37:01,715 --> 01:37:03,960 I never heard a soldier say anything 1879 01:37:03,984 --> 01:37:06,062 nor ever saw him trouble himself 1880 01:37:06,086 --> 01:37:08,965 about where they led him or where he was. 1881 01:37:08,989 --> 01:37:11,034 It was enough to know that he must go 1882 01:37:11,058 --> 01:37:13,870 wherever the officer commanded him. 1883 01:37:13,894 --> 01:37:17,274 Through fire and water, it was all the same, 1884 01:37:17,298 --> 01:37:20,477 for it was impossible to be in a worse condition 1885 01:37:20,501 --> 01:37:22,479 than what they were in. 1886 01:37:22,503 --> 01:37:24,281 John Greenwood. 1887 01:37:24,305 --> 01:37:26,283 ♪ 1888 01:37:26,307 --> 01:37:29,653 Narrator: Thomas Paine, who had been with Washington's army 1889 01:37:29,677 --> 01:37:31,822 as it retreated across New Jersey, 1890 01:37:31,846 --> 01:37:36,593 had just published a new essay meant to restore sagging morale 1891 01:37:36,617 --> 01:37:39,629 called "The American Crisis." 1892 01:37:39,653 --> 01:37:43,533 By the time Washington's army got underway on Christmas, 1893 01:37:43,557 --> 01:37:46,203 patriots up and down the river 1894 01:37:46,227 --> 01:37:49,573 had read and been inspired by it. 1895 01:37:49,597 --> 01:37:53,844 Voice: These are the times that try men's souls: 1896 01:37:53,868 --> 01:37:57,514 The summer soldier and the sunshine patriot 1897 01:37:57,538 --> 01:37:59,249 will, in this crisis, 1898 01:37:59,273 --> 01:38:02,152 shrink from the service of their country; 1899 01:38:02,176 --> 01:38:04,588 but he that stands by it NOW, 1900 01:38:04,612 --> 01:38:08,425 deserves the love and thanks of man and woman. 1901 01:38:08,449 --> 01:38:13,129 Tyranny, like hell, is not easily conquered; 1902 01:38:13,153 --> 01:38:16,399 yet we have this consolation with us, 1903 01:38:16,423 --> 01:38:22,329 that the harder the conflict, the more glorious the triumph. [Paine] 1904 01:38:24,932 --> 01:38:27,911 Narrator: A freezing rain began to fall at dusk 1905 01:38:27,935 --> 01:38:30,714 as the Americans clambered into the ferry boats 1906 01:38:30,738 --> 01:38:32,782 and cargo vessels that made up 1907 01:38:32,806 --> 01:38:35,285 Washington's hastily assembled fleet. 1908 01:38:35,309 --> 01:38:36,853 ♪ 1909 01:38:36,877 --> 01:38:38,588 The river was fast-running 1910 01:38:38,612 --> 01:38:43,159 and filled with swirling, jagged pieces of floe ice. 1911 01:38:43,183 --> 01:38:45,428 Somehow, Colonel John Glover 1912 01:38:45,452 --> 01:38:48,498 and his Massachusetts sailors from Marblehead, 1913 01:38:48,522 --> 01:38:51,301 the same men who had rescued Washington's army 1914 01:38:51,325 --> 01:38:54,905 after the Battle of Long Island and stopped the British advance 1915 01:38:54,929 --> 01:38:58,341 following Kips Bay, now managed to get 1916 01:38:58,365 --> 01:39:02,479 all 2,400 men, some 50 horses, 1917 01:39:02,503 --> 01:39:06,683 and 18 field pieces across safely. 1918 01:39:06,707 --> 01:39:12,255 John Greenwood was among the first to step ashore. 1919 01:39:12,279 --> 01:39:14,891 Voice: We had to wait for the rest to cross, 1920 01:39:14,915 --> 01:39:16,793 so we began to pull down the fences 1921 01:39:16,817 --> 01:39:18,828 and make fires to warm ourselves, 1922 01:39:18,852 --> 01:39:22,365 for the storm came on so fast that it rained, hailed, 1923 01:39:22,389 --> 01:39:26,169 and snowed and froze and blew a hurricane, 1924 01:39:26,193 --> 01:39:29,806 so much so, when I turned my face toward the fire, 1925 01:39:29,830 --> 01:39:32,042 my back was a-freezing. 1926 01:39:32,066 --> 01:39:36,646 By turning round and round, I kept myself from perishing. [Greenwood] 1927 01:39:36,670 --> 01:39:39,115 Narrator: Washington hoped that the landing 1928 01:39:39,139 --> 01:39:41,184 would be completed by midnight 1929 01:39:41,208 --> 01:39:44,387 so that his men could reach Trenton before dawn, 1930 01:39:44,411 --> 01:39:47,157 but the last boat did not scrape ashore 1931 01:39:47,181 --> 01:39:49,192 till 3:00 in the morning. 1932 01:39:49,216 --> 01:39:51,494 And though Washington did not know it yet, 1933 01:39:51,518 --> 01:39:54,197 ice had prevented the two other forces 1934 01:39:54,221 --> 01:39:56,766 from getting across the river. 1935 01:39:56,790 --> 01:39:58,668 If Trenton were to be taken, 1936 01:39:58,692 --> 01:40:02,605 it would be up to Washington's force alone. 1937 01:40:02,629 --> 01:40:05,875 As he and his men finally started toward the town, 1938 01:40:05,899 --> 01:40:11,281 the driving snow, fierce cold, and hardship of hauling 18 guns 1939 01:40:11,305 --> 01:40:16,553 along a frozen, rutted road slowed the advance. 1940 01:40:16,577 --> 01:40:18,388 Voice: When we halted in the road, 1941 01:40:18,412 --> 01:40:21,124 I sat down on a stump of a tree 1942 01:40:21,148 --> 01:40:24,661 and was so benumbed with cold, I wanted to go to sleep. 1943 01:40:24,685 --> 01:40:26,696 And if I had, unnoticed, 1944 01:40:26,720 --> 01:40:29,599 I should have been frozen to death without knowing it, 1945 01:40:29,623 --> 01:40:32,836 but, as good luck always attended me, 1946 01:40:32,860 --> 01:40:34,771 Sergeant Madden came to me 1947 01:40:34,795 --> 01:40:37,741 and aroused me up and made me walk about. [Greenwood] 1948 01:40:37,765 --> 01:40:40,877 Narrator: Two other soldiers did fall asleep 1949 01:40:40,901 --> 01:40:43,880 and froze to death. 1950 01:40:43,904 --> 01:40:47,317 At a crossroads, the column split in two. 1951 01:40:47,341 --> 01:40:49,586 Washington went with Nathanael Greene 1952 01:40:49,610 --> 01:40:52,255 and turned left for the Pennington Road. 1953 01:40:52,279 --> 01:40:55,625 John Sullivan and his men, including John Greenwood, 1954 01:40:55,649 --> 01:40:59,262 continued to the right along the River Road. 1955 01:40:59,286 --> 01:41:02,265 Each column reached its assigned position 1956 01:41:02,289 --> 01:41:06,469 outside the still-dozing town just before 8:00. 1957 01:41:06,493 --> 01:41:09,072 [Men shouting] 1958 01:41:09,096 --> 01:41:11,908 Nathanael Greene's men began the attack, 1959 01:41:11,932 --> 01:41:14,677 charging out of the snow-filled woods. 1960 01:41:14,701 --> 01:41:19,115 "The storm continued with great violence," one officer recalled, 1961 01:41:19,139 --> 01:41:20,750 "but was in our backs 1962 01:41:20,774 --> 01:41:23,720 and consequently in the faces of the enemy." 1963 01:41:23,744 --> 01:41:25,488 [Gunfire] 1964 01:41:25,512 --> 01:41:28,858 Hessian pickets spotted them through the snow, 1965 01:41:28,882 --> 01:41:31,261 opened fire, then fell back 1966 01:41:31,285 --> 01:41:35,932 as remaining townspeople watched in terror. 1967 01:41:35,956 --> 01:41:37,500 Voice: In the gray dawn came 1968 01:41:37,524 --> 01:41:40,670 the beating of drums and the sound of firing. 1969 01:41:40,694 --> 01:41:44,507 The Hessian soldiers quartered in our house hastily decamped. 1970 01:41:44,531 --> 01:41:47,744 All was uproar and confusion. 1971 01:41:47,768 --> 01:41:49,746 Martha Reed. 1972 01:41:49,770 --> 01:41:51,548 ♪ 1973 01:41:51,572 --> 01:41:54,918 Narrator: The German soldiers formed up as best they could, 1974 01:41:54,942 --> 01:41:56,586 prepared to fight, 1975 01:41:56,610 --> 01:42:00,123 but Henry Knox had positioned cannon and howitzers 1976 01:42:00,147 --> 01:42:03,159 at the upper end of King and Queen Streets 1977 01:42:03,183 --> 01:42:05,829 that ran through the heart of the town, 1978 01:42:05,853 --> 01:42:09,732 and when the German commander Johann Rall mounted his horse 1979 01:42:09,756 --> 01:42:13,269 and ordered his men to charge into them, Knox remembered, 1980 01:42:13,293 --> 01:42:16,306 "these [guns], in the twinkling of an eye, 1981 01:42:16,330 --> 01:42:18,808 cleared the streets." 1982 01:42:18,832 --> 01:42:20,877 Some Hessians scattered. 1983 01:42:20,901 --> 01:42:24,347 Brief, fierce firefights followed. 1984 01:42:24,371 --> 01:42:26,082 Voice: My mother and we children 1985 01:42:26,106 --> 01:42:29,953 hid in the cellar to escape the shots that fell about the house. 1986 01:42:29,977 --> 01:42:32,689 Our next-door neighbor was killed on his doorstep, 1987 01:42:32,713 --> 01:42:34,624 and a bullet struck the blacksmith 1988 01:42:34,648 --> 01:42:37,827 as he was in the act of closing himself in his cellar, 1989 01:42:37,851 --> 01:42:41,798 and many other townspeople were injured by chance shots. [Martha Reed] 1990 01:42:41,822 --> 01:42:43,466 [Gunshot] 1991 01:42:43,490 --> 01:42:45,435 Narrator: As Nathanael Greene's column 1992 01:42:45,459 --> 01:42:47,670 drove through town from the north, 1993 01:42:47,694 --> 01:42:51,074 John Sullivan's column moved in from the south. 1994 01:42:51,098 --> 01:42:53,676 Voice: They made a full fire right at us, 1995 01:42:53,700 --> 01:42:55,979 but I did not see that they killed anyone. 1996 01:42:56,003 --> 01:42:59,449 Orders were given to charge bayonets and rush on. 1997 01:42:59,473 --> 01:43:01,684 As we came within pistol shot, 1998 01:43:01,708 --> 01:43:04,320 they fired again point blank at us. 1999 01:43:04,344 --> 01:43:07,056 We dodged, and they did not hit a man. 2000 01:43:07,080 --> 01:43:09,192 Before they had time to load again, 2001 01:43:09,216 --> 01:43:11,361 we were within 3 feet of them. 2002 01:43:11,385 --> 01:43:13,396 They broke in an instant 2003 01:43:13,420 --> 01:43:16,633 and ran like so many frightened devils. [Greenwood] 2004 01:43:16,657 --> 01:43:19,969 Narrator: Colonel Rall was shot from his horse, 2005 01:43:19,993 --> 01:43:22,605 mortally wounded. 2006 01:43:22,629 --> 01:43:24,340 Voice: Finally, they were driven 2007 01:43:24,364 --> 01:43:26,943 through the town into an orchard beyond. 2008 01:43:26,967 --> 01:43:30,813 The poor fellows saw themselves completely surrounded. 2009 01:43:30,837 --> 01:43:32,549 Henry Knox. 2010 01:43:32,573 --> 01:43:34,284 ♪ 2011 01:43:34,308 --> 01:43:37,987 Narrator: It was all over in less than 45 minutes. 2012 01:43:38,011 --> 01:43:40,156 ♪ 2013 01:43:40,180 --> 01:43:43,893 22 Hessians lay dead or dying in the snow. 2014 01:43:43,917 --> 01:43:46,162 83 more were wounded. 2015 01:43:46,186 --> 01:43:48,598 900 were captured. 2016 01:43:48,622 --> 01:43:51,501 Just 2 Americans had died... 2017 01:43:51,525 --> 01:43:54,437 Those frozen before the battle began, 2018 01:43:54,461 --> 01:43:56,706 and only 5 were wounded, 2019 01:43:56,730 --> 01:44:00,877 including an artilleryman from Virginia named James Monroe, 2020 01:44:00,901 --> 01:44:04,047 whose life was saved when a local doctor 2021 01:44:04,071 --> 01:44:06,149 managed to stop the bleeding. 2022 01:44:06,173 --> 01:44:07,750 ♪ 2023 01:44:07,774 --> 01:44:11,221 As the Hessian prisoners were marched to Philadelphia, 2024 01:44:11,245 --> 01:44:13,790 Washington issued a broadside declaring 2025 01:44:13,814 --> 01:44:16,426 that since they were not volunteers, 2026 01:44:16,450 --> 01:44:18,628 but forced into this war, 2027 01:44:18,652 --> 01:44:21,431 they should be seen not as enemies, 2028 01:44:21,455 --> 01:44:24,033 but as innocent people. 2029 01:44:24,057 --> 01:44:26,202 ♪ 2030 01:44:26,226 --> 01:44:29,339 Baer: The Americans decided very early on 2031 01:44:29,363 --> 01:44:31,674 to treat German prisoners well. 2032 01:44:31,698 --> 01:44:34,444 That is a strategic decision, 2033 01:44:34,468 --> 01:44:37,647 portraying these soldiers as the innocent victims 2034 01:44:37,671 --> 01:44:41,417 of the contract of two despots. 2035 01:44:41,441 --> 01:44:45,822 They are being sent, sold by their rulers for money 2036 01:44:45,846 --> 01:44:48,858 to fight in the war that does not concern them. 2037 01:44:48,882 --> 01:44:51,928 In other words, they are victims of tyranny, 2038 01:44:51,952 --> 01:44:54,430 kind of like we are. 2039 01:44:54,454 --> 01:44:58,167 Narrator: Perhaps 1/4 of the 23,000 Hessian soldiers 2040 01:44:58,191 --> 01:45:02,338 who survived the war would choose to stay on afterwards 2041 01:45:02,362 --> 01:45:05,275 and become citizens of the new nation 2042 01:45:05,299 --> 01:45:07,677 they'd fought against creating, 2043 01:45:07,701 --> 01:45:09,946 and many of those who returned home 2044 01:45:09,970 --> 01:45:14,951 would come back again, this time with their families. 2045 01:45:14,975 --> 01:45:21,014 ♪ 2046 01:45:22,215 --> 01:45:24,193 Voice: The small scale of our maps 2047 01:45:24,217 --> 01:45:25,762 deceived us. 2048 01:45:25,786 --> 01:45:28,698 As the word "America" takes up no more room 2049 01:45:28,722 --> 01:45:31,234 than the word "Yorkshire," we seem to think 2050 01:45:31,258 --> 01:45:34,871 the territories they represent are much of the same bigness, 2051 01:45:34,895 --> 01:45:37,407 though Charleston is as far from Boston 2052 01:45:37,431 --> 01:45:39,642 as London from Venice. 2053 01:45:39,666 --> 01:45:43,713 We have undertaken a war against farmers and farmhouses 2054 01:45:43,737 --> 01:45:47,984 scattered through a wild waste of continent. [British commentator] 2055 01:45:48,008 --> 01:45:50,520 [Bells ringing] 2056 01:45:50,544 --> 01:45:52,055 Voice: Philadelphia... 2057 01:45:52,079 --> 01:45:55,625 This affair has given new life and spirits to the cause 2058 01:45:55,649 --> 01:45:58,795 and has lowered the crests of the Tories in this place, 2059 01:45:58,819 --> 01:46:00,730 who looked upon the matter as settled 2060 01:46:00,754 --> 01:46:03,366 and were hourly expecting the King's troops 2061 01:46:03,390 --> 01:46:06,169 to arrive without molestation. 2062 01:46:06,193 --> 01:46:09,539 Things begin to wear a better aspect. 2063 01:46:09,563 --> 01:46:14,010 General Washington's army has now become respectable. 2064 01:46:14,034 --> 01:46:16,579 Reverend David Griffith. 2065 01:46:16,603 --> 01:46:20,817 Narrator: Washington's army may have become respectable, 2066 01:46:20,841 --> 01:46:23,920 but it was still about to disintegrate. 2067 01:46:23,944 --> 01:46:26,823 The Continental regiments from New England... 2068 01:46:26,847 --> 01:46:30,093 His most disciplined, most seasoned soldiers... 2069 01:46:30,117 --> 01:46:33,563 Were all planning to go home in just 5 days, 2070 01:46:33,587 --> 01:46:37,667 leaving him with 1,400 men with which to face 2071 01:46:37,691 --> 01:46:41,938 what he feared would be a swift reprisal from the enemy. 2072 01:46:41,962 --> 01:46:45,675 He now had to persuade as many of them as he could 2073 01:46:45,699 --> 01:46:49,178 to remain with him at least a little longer. 2074 01:46:49,202 --> 01:46:52,348 ♪ 2075 01:46:52,372 --> 01:46:54,717 On New Year's Eve at Trenton, 2076 01:46:54,741 --> 01:46:58,788 Washington asked that all his depleted regiments assemble 2077 01:46:58,812 --> 01:47:01,391 so that he could speak to them. 2078 01:47:01,415 --> 01:47:05,261 He praised his men for their courage, one sergeant recalled, 2079 01:47:05,285 --> 01:47:10,600 and "in the most affectionate manner entreated us to stay," 2080 01:47:10,624 --> 01:47:11,968 but when he finished, 2081 01:47:11,992 --> 01:47:14,804 and the drums beat for volunteers, 2082 01:47:14,828 --> 01:47:18,207 not a single man stepped forward. 2083 01:47:18,231 --> 01:47:20,877 Washington spoke again. 2084 01:47:20,901 --> 01:47:22,245 ♪ 2085 01:47:22,269 --> 01:47:24,347 Voice: My brave fellows, 2086 01:47:24,371 --> 01:47:26,682 you have done all I asked you to do 2087 01:47:26,706 --> 01:47:30,319 and more than can reasonably be expected, 2088 01:47:30,343 --> 01:47:32,855 but your country is at stake, 2089 01:47:32,879 --> 01:47:38,027 your wives, your houses, and all that you hold dear. 2090 01:47:38,051 --> 01:47:42,298 You have worn yourselves out with fatigue and hardships, 2091 01:47:42,322 --> 01:47:46,202 but we know not how to spare you. 2092 01:47:46,226 --> 01:47:50,573 If you will consent to stay only one month longer, 2093 01:47:50,597 --> 01:47:53,776 you will render that service to the cause of liberty 2094 01:47:53,800 --> 01:47:58,214 and to your country, which you probably never can do 2095 01:47:58,238 --> 01:48:01,017 under any other circumstances. 2096 01:48:01,041 --> 01:48:03,920 The present is emphatically the crisis 2097 01:48:03,944 --> 01:48:06,389 which is to decide our destiny. [Washington] 2098 01:48:06,413 --> 01:48:08,124 ♪ 2099 01:48:08,148 --> 01:48:10,593 Narrator: "This time," the sergeant remembered, 2100 01:48:10,617 --> 01:48:13,830 "the soldiers felt the force of the appeal. 2101 01:48:13,854 --> 01:48:17,800 "One said to another, 'I will remain if you will.' 2102 01:48:17,824 --> 01:48:20,403 "A few stepped forward, 2103 01:48:20,427 --> 01:48:22,772 "and their example was immediately followed 2104 01:48:22,796 --> 01:48:25,942 by nearly all who were fit for duty." 2105 01:48:25,966 --> 01:48:29,312 In the end, more than half the New England troops 2106 01:48:29,336 --> 01:48:32,815 agreed to fight on for 6 weeks. 2107 01:48:32,839 --> 01:48:36,819 On New Year's Day 1777, 2108 01:48:36,843 --> 01:48:39,655 supplemented by scattered militia 2109 01:48:39,679 --> 01:48:43,793 and 4 fresh regiments of Continentals from Pennsylvania, 2110 01:48:43,817 --> 01:48:49,799 George Washington again commanded some 6,500 men. 2111 01:48:49,823 --> 01:48:52,768 John Greenwood was not among them. 2112 01:48:52,792 --> 01:48:54,003 ♪ 2113 01:48:54,027 --> 01:48:55,738 Voice: I had the itch then so bad 2114 01:48:55,762 --> 01:48:58,007 that my breeches stuck to my thighs, 2115 01:48:58,031 --> 01:49:00,443 and I had a hundred lice on me. 2116 01:49:00,467 --> 01:49:03,779 I told my lieutenant I was going home. 2117 01:49:03,803 --> 01:49:08,518 Says he, "My God, you are not, I hope, going to leave us, 2118 01:49:08,542 --> 01:49:10,753 "as you are the life and soul of us. 2119 01:49:10,777 --> 01:49:13,055 You are to be promoted." 2120 01:49:13,079 --> 01:49:16,759 I told him I would not stay to be a colonel. [Greenwood] 2121 01:49:16,783 --> 01:49:21,097 Narrator: 20 months earlier, 14-year-old John Greenwood 2122 01:49:21,121 --> 01:49:25,134 had walked all the way from Maine to Massachusetts 2123 01:49:25,158 --> 01:49:29,205 and joined the American cause, hoping it would somehow help him 2124 01:49:29,229 --> 01:49:33,609 get back to his parents in British-occupied Boston. 2125 01:49:33,633 --> 01:49:37,780 Now he would tramp more than 300 miles back home, 2126 01:49:37,804 --> 01:49:39,715 where his father saw to it 2127 01:49:39,739 --> 01:49:42,852 that the boy's clothes were baked in the oven, 2128 01:49:42,876 --> 01:49:45,888 and he himself was fumigated with sulfur 2129 01:49:45,912 --> 01:49:48,257 before he could re-enter the home 2130 01:49:48,281 --> 01:49:51,294 he'd yearned for for so long. 2131 01:49:51,318 --> 01:49:55,765 For now, the Revolution would have to go on without him, 2132 01:49:55,789 --> 01:49:57,934 but it would go on, 2133 01:49:57,958 --> 01:50:02,305 thanks to the sacrifices he and his fellow soldiers had made 2134 01:50:02,329 --> 01:50:04,707 and the victory they had won 2135 01:50:04,731 --> 01:50:08,244 when no victory had seemed possible. 2136 01:50:08,268 --> 01:50:14,016 ♪ 2137 01:50:14,040 --> 01:50:16,252 [Drum beating rhythmically] 2138 01:50:16,276 --> 01:50:17,453 [Rhiannon Giddens humming "Amazing Grace"] 2139 01:50:17,477 --> 01:50:23,092 ♪ Mm ♪ 2140 01:50:23,116 --> 01:50:28,531 ♪ Hmm ♪ 2141 01:50:28,555 --> 01:50:33,169 ♪ Mm-hmm ♪ 2142 01:50:33,193 --> 01:50:35,071 ♪ 2143 01:50:35,095 --> 01:50:38,941 ♪ Mm ♪ 2144 01:50:38,965 --> 01:50:44,347 ♪ Mm ♪ 2145 01:50:44,371 --> 01:50:48,618 ♪ Mm ♪ 2146 01:50:48,642 --> 01:50:53,456 ♪ Mm ♪ 2147 01:50:53,480 --> 01:50:55,224 ♪ 2148 01:50:55,248 --> 01:50:57,627 ♪ Mm ♪ 2149 01:50:57,651 --> 01:51:02,965 ♪ Mm ♪ 2150 01:51:02,989 --> 01:51:06,335 ♪ Mm ♪ 2151 01:51:06,359 --> 01:51:10,339 ♪ Mm mm mm ♪ 2152 01:51:10,363 --> 01:51:12,308 ♪ 2153 01:51:12,332 --> 01:51:14,377 ♪ Mm ♪ 2154 01:51:14,401 --> 01:51:22,401 ♪ Mm ♪ 2155 01:51:23,643 --> 01:51:24,654 Announcer: Next time on 2156 01:51:24,678 --> 01:51:25,688 "The American Revolution." 2157 01:51:25,712 --> 01:51:27,089 Brandywine... 2158 01:51:27,113 --> 01:51:28,591 Nathaniel Philbrick: Brandywine was a hellscape 2159 01:51:28,615 --> 01:51:29,992 in so many ways. 2160 01:51:30,016 --> 01:51:31,494 Announcer: Germantown... 2161 01:51:31,518 --> 01:51:33,996 and the pivotal battle of Saratoga. 2162 01:51:34,020 --> 01:51:36,966 [Gunfire and shouting] Native peoples are divided. 2163 01:51:36,990 --> 01:51:38,834 Darren Bonaparte: We're killing each other. 2164 01:51:38,858 --> 01:51:41,771 For what? So somebody else can claim our land? 2165 01:51:41,795 --> 01:51:43,939 Announcer: and the strategy of a general. 2166 01:51:43,963 --> 01:51:45,675 Joseph Ellis: Washington reaches the insight... 2167 01:51:45,699 --> 01:51:47,243 He doesn't have to win. 2168 01:51:47,267 --> 01:51:48,577 He only has not to lose. 2169 01:51:48,601 --> 01:51:53,006 Announcer: When "The American Revolution" continues next time. 2170 01:51:54,174 --> 01:51:55,885 ♪ 2171 01:51:55,909 --> 01:51:58,421 Announcer: Scan this QR code with your smart device 2172 01:51:58,445 --> 01:52:01,857 to dive deeper into the story of "The American Revolution" 2173 01:52:01,881 --> 01:52:05,661 with interactives, games, classroom materials, and more. 2174 01:52:05,685 --> 01:52:10,356 ♪ 2175 01:52:13,426 --> 01:52:16,005 Announcer: "The American Revolution" DVD and Blu-ray, 2176 01:52:16,029 --> 01:52:18,808 as well as the companion book and soundtrack, 2177 01:52:18,832 --> 01:52:21,410 are available online and in stores. 2178 01:52:21,434 --> 01:52:24,680 The series is also available with PBS Passport 2179 01:52:24,704 --> 01:52:26,940 and on Amazon Prime Video. 2180 01:52:29,209 --> 01:52:32,321 ♪ Mm ♪ 2181 01:52:32,345 --> 01:52:34,557 ♪ Mm ♪ 2182 01:52:34,581 --> 01:52:37,193 ♪ 2183 01:52:37,217 --> 01:52:43,799 ♪ Mm ♪ 2184 01:52:43,823 --> 01:52:46,168 [Bagpipes stop, drums continue] 2185 01:52:46,192 --> 01:52:54,192 ♪ 2186 01:52:59,472 --> 01:53:03,076 ♪ 2187 01:53:04,177 --> 01:53:06,522 Announcer: The American Revolution caused 2188 01:53:06,546 --> 01:53:08,758 an impact felt around the world. 2189 01:53:08,782 --> 01:53:13,896 The fight would take ingenuity, determination, 2190 01:53:13,920 --> 01:53:16,031 and hope for a new tomorrow 2191 01:53:16,055 --> 01:53:18,167 to turn the tide of history 2192 01:53:18,191 --> 01:53:21,461 and set the American story in motion. 2193 01:53:26,032 --> 01:53:28,878 What would you like the power to do? 2194 01:53:28,902 --> 01:53:30,470 Bank of America. 2195 01:53:33,773 --> 01:53:35,050 Announcer: Major funding 2196 01:53:35,074 --> 01:53:36,185 for "The American Revolution" 2197 01:53:36,209 --> 01:53:37,586 was provided by The Better Angels Society 2198 01:53:37,610 --> 01:53:38,854 and its members 2199 01:53:38,878 --> 01:53:40,089 Jeannie and Jonathan Lavine 2200 01:53:40,113 --> 01:53:42,024 with the Crimson Lion Foundation 2201 01:53:42,048 --> 01:53:44,126 and the Blavatnik Family Foundation. 2202 01:53:44,150 --> 01:53:47,496 Major funding was also provided by David M. Rubenstein, 2203 01:53:47,520 --> 01:53:50,599 the Robert D. and Patricia E. Kern Family Foundation, 2204 01:53:50,623 --> 01:53:51,934 the Lilly Endowment, 2205 01:53:51,958 --> 01:53:54,103 and by Better Angels Society members: 2206 01:53:54,127 --> 01:53:56,472 Eric and Wendy Schmidt, Stephen A. Schwarzman, 2207 01:53:56,496 --> 01:53:59,175 and Kenneth C. Griffin with Griffin Catalyst. 2208 01:53:59,199 --> 01:54:00,943 Additional support was provided by 2209 01:54:00,967 --> 01:54:03,012 The Arthur Vining Davis Foundations, 2210 01:54:03,036 --> 01:54:04,814 the Pew Charitable Trusts, 2211 01:54:04,838 --> 01:54:06,749 Gilbert S. Omenn and Martha A. Darling, 2212 01:54:06,773 --> 01:54:08,184 the Park Foundation, 2213 01:54:08,208 --> 01:54:10,152 and by Better Angels Society members: 2214 01:54:10,176 --> 01:54:13,088 Gilchrist and Amy Berg, Perry and Donna Golkin, 2215 01:54:13,112 --> 01:54:15,658 The Michelson Foundation, Jacqueline B. Mars, 2216 01:54:15,682 --> 01:54:19,161 the Kissick Family Foundation, Diane and Hal Brierley, 2217 01:54:19,185 --> 01:54:21,897 John H.N. Fisher and Jennifer Caldwell, 2218 01:54:21,921 --> 01:54:23,365 John and Catherine Debs, 2219 01:54:23,389 --> 01:54:25,201 The Fullerton Family Charitable Fund, 2220 01:54:25,225 --> 01:54:27,036 and these additional members. 2221 01:54:27,060 --> 01:54:28,671 "The American Revolution" 2222 01:54:28,695 --> 01:54:30,139 was made possible with support 2223 01:54:30,163 --> 01:54:32,374 from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, 2224 01:54:32,398 --> 01:54:33,638 and Viewers Like You. Thank You. 176187

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