It’s one of Abigail Adams’s most famous lines. Early in 1776 — not even 12 months after the battles of Lexington and Concord — she wrote to her husband, John, who was with the Continental Congress.
As the British pushed deeper into North America, they ended up giving Indians concessions that colonists would not tolerate.
How a disagreement with a Scottish lord over westward expansion, a cache of gunpowder, and the future of enslaved labor ...
With the shot heard around the world and launching the American Revolution fired in Massachusetts, this April will mark a ...
tumblr was a tumultuous landscape full of grifting, with hivliving, a hamilton fan blog, somehow coming at the center of it ...
Now, and for some years to come, we will need a lot less Paul Weiss, and a lot more Benjamin Warner.
Black Powder Epic Battles expands into another era of warfare soon from Warlord Games. It was announced this week that we're ...
Fan of Revolutionary history? A new exhibition celebrating Massachusetts' role in the Revolutionary War opens in Boston today ...
A new exhibit at the Concord Museum in Concord, Massachusetts shows what everyday life was like in the 18th century as part ...
Because of the rich historical preservation of this community, do-director David Schmidt said, and the fact that “so much of ...
The role of Billy Flora, a free Black man, in this pivotal victory — and the erosion later of rights — show a paradox of the ...
From the battlefields of Morea to the halls of power in London and Washington, the Greek War of Independence set the stage ...