A Narrative of a Revolutionary Soldier

by Joseph Plumb Martin

Other authorsThomas Fleming (Introduction)
Paperback, 2001

Status

Available

Call number

973.3

Collection

Publication

Signet Classics (2001), Paperback, 272 pages

Description

The Declaration of Independence is barely a year old - and a motley band of farmers and city folk, beggars and gentlemen, makes up the army of a newborn country. Joseph Plumb Martin, once a sixteen-year-old private in the Continental Army of the Revolutionary War, here narrates his true adventures as one of them. With neither horses nor uniforms, little food and less lodging, Martin and his fellows feed off the taste of freedom and warm themselves with only the prospect of independence and the shirts on their backs. Their growling stomachs only sometimes quieted by stale bread and salted horsemeat, Martin and his comrades traverse the mid-Atlantic colonies, from Connecticut over to Pennsylvania and back down through Delaware. Forging most of the path only by foot, these men leave tracks of blood with which the British trace them.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member ksmyth
Joseph Plumb Martin wrote one of the few soldier's accounts of the American revolution. Written some forty years after the war ended from his home Maine, Martin's record is a surprising account of his experiences as a Continental regular. Though he was present at the defense of Fort Mifflin in
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1778, fought at Monmouth and Yorktown, it is not his battle experiences that are most engaging. Rather, it is his vivid accounts of the soldiers' day to day struggle to survive. Though food was hard to come by under most circumstances, due to an ineffective commissary system and badly depreciated currency, the undernourished army reached starvation conditions during the winters. Martin is particularly eloquent regarding the condition of the army during the Valley Forge winter, and the disastrous Morristown winter of 1780.

I highly recommend this book to anyone interested in an inside glance at life inside the Continental Army. It is written with humor, is a quick read, and has the merit of being inexpensive.
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LibraryThing member Oskar_Matzerath
Mr. Martin's experience was that of many; cold, hunger and little pay. Those who stayed, like Martin, know the British were just one obstacle. His testimony is remarkably clear. I love to read about the revolution, its causes, battles and personalities. This book is in a class by itself and gives
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context to all the others.
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Language

Original language

English

Physical description

272 p.

ISBN

0451528115 / 9780451528117
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