Revolution 250 Podcast
Revolution 250 Podcast
"Washington's Marines" with Maj. General Jason Q. Bohm
Jarheads, Devil Dogs, and Leathernecks are all nicknames that have been used to describe members of the United States Marine Corps. However, their esprit de corps and valor stand as their most iconic and reliable qualities. Many are unaware how The Corps got their start during the American Revolution as a valuable multi-faceted and innovative fighting force equally comfortable in sea fights and land engagements. Join Professor Robert Allison (Suffolk University Department of History, Language & Global Culture) in conversation with Major General Jason Q. Bohm, a 30-year veteran of the United States Marine Corps and author of "Washington's Marines; The Origins of the Corps and the American Revolution, 1775 - 1777."
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Hello, everyone.
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Welcome to the Revolution 250 podcast.
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I'm Bob Ellison.
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I chair the Rev 250 Advisory Group.
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We are a consortium of 70 groups in Massachusetts looking at ways to commemorate the beginnings of the American Revolution.
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And our guest this week is Major General Jason Q. Baum.
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And Major General Bohm is an author.
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He has recently written From the Cold War to ISIL, One Marine's Journey.
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But the book we're going to be talking to him today about is his work of history, Washington's Marines, the Origins of the Corps and the American Revolution, 1775, 1777.
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Thank you for joining us.
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Well, thank you, Dr. Allison.
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It's my pleasure and honor.
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30 years a Marine and you took to writing.
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I know Marines do have a great history.
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I've known many Marines who like to tell it, but what got you into writing history as a Marine?
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Well, great question.
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Thank you.
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So it actually started when I was a school director for the Marine Corps.
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I commanded the Marine Corps Expeditionary Warfare School.
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And I had the history director of the Marine Corps teaching some classes at our course.
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And he encouraged me to take on a more ambitious project than what I had been doing up to that point was writing for our professional journal, the Marine Corps Museum.
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And so I did, and I had no intention of getting it published, but he encouraged me to do that.
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And that was the first book, From the Cold War to ISIL.
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And Naval Institute Press picked that up, and it talks about the evolving national military strategy from the end of the Cold War, when I first came into Marine Corps, until the fight against ISIL.
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And I was very fortunate to lead the first conventional forces back into Iraq once ISIL invaded Iraq.
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And that experience just really got me to catch the bug of writing.
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And I, as a hobby, would always be studying Marine Corps history.
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And history and tradition is extremely important to Marines.
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It's actually a force multiplier on the battlefield for us because we refuse to let those who went before us down by not living up to the legacy they established.
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But a lot of people don't really know about the true history of early Marine Corps history.
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They know the myths behind lots of the stories, but I wanted to tell the real story and a part of our history that, quite frankly, even though Marines love history, they don't know.
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And so that was the basis of this project.
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And the book does a very good job with the military history of the time.
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And as you say, it's not the myth.
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It really is.
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what happened and told in a very compelling way.
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And I wonder if there were surprises to you in writing the book.
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Any people surprised you or events?
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Yeah, absolutely.
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So I was raised on the myths and I'll use two in particular.
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One is the fact that the first Marine that was commissioned by John Hancock, who was serving as president of the Continental Congress, was a gentleman named Samuel Nicholas.
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And many people have mistakenly referred to Samuel Nicholas as being the first Commandant of the Marine Corps because he was the first Marine officer commissioned and therefore the senior Marine officer.
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But that's in fact not true because the Congress did not bestow that title on the Commandant until 1798, well past the end of the American Revolution and during the Quasi-War with France.
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And another one was the birthplace of the Marine Corps,
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is commonly known to be ton tavern which was a bar in downtown philadelphia which marines take great pride in being in the bar but the real story behind that is it is true that the owner of ton tavern a gentleman named robert mullen was commissioned as a marine corps officer and ton tavern was used as a recruiting site but the real reason that it's the birthplace is because
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On the 2nd November, 1775, there was a committee of safety in Nova Scotia from Passamaquoddy, Nova Scotia, that contacted the Continental Congress asking to become part of the Association of the North Americans fighting for their liberties.
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Now, the Continental Congress looked at that and started salivating and think that this was a golden opportunity to take on a 14th colony in the fight against England.
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And so the Congress created a committee of three, which was originally called the Naval Committee, and that consisted of John Adams from Massachusetts, Celestine from Connecticut, and John Langdon from New Hampshire, to devise a plan to conduct a naval campaign to capture the principal naval base in Halifax, Nova Scotia, at the bequest of
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the Committee of Safety of Passamaquoddy, Nova Scotia.
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Now, in order to do this, those three gentlemen met in the second story room of the Tun Tavern.
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And they devised a plan that was briefed to the Congress on the 9th of November.
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And on the 10th of November, the full Congress resolved to create two battalions of American Marines.
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And therefore, that is the birth of the Marine Corps is established from the creation and the Naval Committee in the Tun Tavern.
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And 10 November has become a Marine Corps history of the whole state of the Marine Corps celebrated by Marines throughout the world, even until today.
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That's great.
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And now, can you tell us the difference then between Marines?
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I mean, there was a Continental Army in formation, not really a Continental Navy.
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So what would the role of Marines have been as opposed to Army or Navy?
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Sure.
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Well, I think it's important to understand before you understand why we need Marines.
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It's because America is a maritime nation.
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We have a vast eastern seaboard with the 13 colonies at the time and countless rivers and lakes and canals to be able to move people and things very quickly.
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And so if you were going to take on the most powerful armed forces in the world, and particularly the most powerful Navy in the world, you needed men who can fight on land and sea effectively.
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And that is what the Marines were created for, to serve with the fleet.
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to conduct good order and discipline on ships, to fight from the ships, to board enemy ships or repel enemy borders, but also to conduct limited land campaigns in support of larger naval campaigns.
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Now, soldiers obviously focus on the land and sailors focus on the sea.
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but the Marines are the bridge between the two.
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And they would do that very effectively during the 10 crucial days in mid-December 76 through mid-January 77.
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Right, you tell that story very well in your book, the recounting of those 10 crucial days.
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I wonder if we can just back up a little bit, because Samuel Nicholas is a character that does loom large in this, but can tell us a bit more about who he was and how he gets involved in this.
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Sure.
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Well, Samuel Nicholas at the time, 1775, was a 31-year-old Quaker from Philadelphia.
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His father passed away when he was seven years old, and he was sent to the Academy of Philadelphia, which is modern-day University of Pennsylvania.
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He graduated from that school when he was 16 years old and became a merchant man and the proprietor of the Conestoga Wagon Tavern, also in downtown Philadelphia.
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So in his dealings as a merchant, as a tavern owner, he was mixing elbows and rubbing elbows with prominent figures in Philadelphia.
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So when the time came to create a Marine Corps, he was the first gentleman to receive a commission as a Marine officer.
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And then he served through much of the war.
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He actually would serve all the way throughout the entire war from 75 all the way through 1783 and would continue to serve as the senior Marine officer throughout.
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And in fact, when the first fleet was created, the campaign to capture the base at Halifax actually never did occur.
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And the reason for that is the Congress directed George Washington
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in order to cherry pick soldiers who had previous sea fear and experience to create these two battalions.
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Now, Washington at the time was holding a British under siege at Boston, and he balked at the idea.
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He told John Hancock, he's like, you got to be kidding me, John.
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I got my handful right here in Boston, and I don't have the ability or the resources to conduct a campaign to capture Halifax.
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So John Hancock acquiesced and he said, it's okay, George, you're okay, but we still understand the value of creating these Marines.
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So instead of creating two separate battalions, they created 10 separate companies of 50 Marines each.
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And the reason for that is because they would assign one company of 50 Marines to a single ship to serve with the fleet as that particular ship's Marine detachment.
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And Samuel Nicholas would take personal command of the first flagship of the Navy's first fleet called the Alfred and would serve side by side with a gentleman named John Paul Jones, who was serving as the first lieutenant at the time.
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but nicholas was in command nicholas was in command of the marine detachment attachment yeah his company of marines and john paul jones was serving as the first lieutenant and the first commodore of the fleet was a gentleman named isaac hopkins from rhode island yeah and they had an uh expedition down to um the bahamas to seize gunpowder correct
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Yeah, so really interesting story.
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So when Hopkins set sail in January of 76 with the first fleet, he has two sets of orders.
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And as he goes to sea, he tears open the first set and it talks about how the Congress expects the officers and men to behave themselves on deployments.
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The second set of orders were, quite frankly, very ambitious and unrealistic expectations of what to expect from this nascent fleet, which, by the way, consisted of merchant vessels that were converted to warships by cutting some holes in the gunnels and placing some cannons on board.
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And fairly lightweight cannons at that.
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So the second set of orders tells Hopkins he's to go directly to the Chesapeake Bay to seek out, close with and destroy the British fleet located there.
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That was not enough.
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Once that was complete, he was supposed to continue down to the Carolinas, locate, close with and destroy the British fleet there.
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And if that was not enough, he was then supposed to shoot up north to Rhode Island and do the same thing there.
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But there was a caveat in the orders that Hopkins read that basically said, and I'm paraphrasing, if in your best judgment, you're unable to do these things, use your own judgment to determine what you should do.
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So he looked at that and he said, well, I had recently received an intelligence report that there were cannons and gunpowder being held down in New Providence Island in the Bahamas.
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And George Washington, as many of you will know, did not have the siege cannons needed to successfully conclude the siege of Boston.
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So Hopkins made the decision to head a thousand miles south and conduct a naval raid on
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on New Providence Island to capture two forts, Fort Montague, which protected the eastern approaches to Nassau, New Providence, and Fort Nassau that protected the western approaches.
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And he assigned Samuel Nicholas as the senior Marine as the lead of the landing party consisting of 220 Marines and 50 sailors
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by combining the marine detachments from several ships to land and capture these two forts, which they successfully did.
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And in doing so, they would actually capture 88 cannons, 15 mortars, and hundreds of pounds of ordnance.
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And for you historians out there, kind of a piece of trivia is those were more cannons than were actually brought from Henry Knox from Fort Condoroga to Boston.
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It's just the fact that Knox arrived in Boston before the Marines and the sailors could sail 1,000 miles back up to Boston to share those cannons with General Washington.
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But then these cannons came in very handy during the- They did, and they were used very effectively by the army.
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They were distributed to the army and also to many of the port towns for use in their defensives.
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Now, you quote another historian in your book who talks about the debt we owe to the Boston bookseller, the Rhode Island ironmonger.
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But you say we also should add the Philadelphia tavern keeper.
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Absolutely.
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Samuel Nicholas.
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Do we have muster rolls for these companies of Marines?
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Do we know who any of them were?
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Yeah, we sure do.
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And actually, uh, there are several of them.
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There's a great book that I use as a principal source named, uh, Marines in the Revolution written by Charles Smith that was, uh, published during the bicentennial 17, excuse me, 1975.
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Uh, and he, uh, effectively transcribes many of those original ship rosters, but, uh,
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What I can do for you is share some insight about what a marine company consisted of back in the day.
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So I'll give you a snapshot of what Lieutenant Isaac Craig, who was the commander of the ship detachment from the Androderia, he had a 40-man company.
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And all of his Marines were immigrants from different countries across Europe to include Germany, Holland, Switzerland, Scotland, England, and Ireland.
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All but one of them enlisted from Philadelphia.
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Their average age was 25 years old, with the youngest being 18 and the oldest being 40.
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Their average height was 5 foot 6 inches, with the shortest Marine only 5 foot 3 and the tallest being 6 foot.
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Did they have a height requirement?
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There was not.
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If you were a fighter and you were willing to hook and jab with the bad guys, you're on the team.
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We could not be selective back then.
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No.
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Yeah.
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And then they brought a litany of different skills with them.
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There were Miller's Wolf.
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There were farmers, there were artisans who were carpenters and masons and doctors.
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And there are literally about 40 different vocations that they brought with them.
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So a very diverse group that joined this one company as an example.
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That's extraordinary.
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We're talking with Major General Jason Baum, who is not only a 30-year veteran of the Marines, but also is an author.
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He's written Washington's Marines, the Origins of the Corps, and the American Revolution, 1770.
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which is a great book which tells this story and many others and not just the lore, but actually what happened and who these people were and why they were enlisting and then what happened in the course of their service.
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So I was just thinking when you're telling about Congress with a very elaborate plan for what Hopkins and the fleet should do, that it's not the first or the last time Congress would have a really
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Hopkins saw the possibility of something they actually could accomplish, which is to get these munitions from the Bahamas.
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Can we talk a little bit, Jason, about what then happens when Washington has been chased across New Jersey and he and the Marines as well as the remnants of the Continental Army are on the other side of the river?
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What's their role in these 10 crucial days?
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Yeah, great question, Bob.
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So as the Continental Marines and First Fleet were operating down in the Bahamas, George Washington was fighting the New York campaign and then, as you stated, was basically chased across eastern New Jersey until he crossed the Delaware River into Pennsylvania on the 8th of December.
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As this happened, Washington started the New York campaign with 19,000 troops.
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Now, they were militiamen mostly and the beginnings of the Continental Army.
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But by the time he crossed to Delaware due to desertion and disease and casualties and terminating enlistments, the 19,000 he started the New York campaign with had dwindled down to only about 2,500.
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It was dire times for the Continental Army, which meant it was dire times for the nation.
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Washington knew if he did not re-seize the initiative from the enemy that the entire revolution and therefore the nascent nation could be done.
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And so he requested reinforcements from the Congress.
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And he not only asked General Horatio Gates and General Charles Lee to send some forces from New York down south to join him, but there were two other key elements that would join his force.
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The first was a group of Philadelphia militia known as the Associators.
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Associators were originally created by Benjamin Franklin during the French and Indian War.
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and they would disband until re-established in 1775 for the American Revolution.
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Now, the Associators were commanded by a gentleman named John Colwalder, and that name will matter here in a moment.
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The second group were the Continental Marines.
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So because Samuel Nicholas, once the first raid was complete down in the Bahamas, the admiral sent him with dispatches to Philadelphia to notify the Congress of the success of the raid.
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The Congress promoted Nicholas from captain to major.
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And they kept him in Philadelphia instead of sending him back to his flagship, the Alfred.
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And the reason they were doing that was in December of 75, the Congress authorized the construction of 13 frigates that would be built in the major seaports on the eastern seaboard.
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Four of those frigates, the Delaware, the Effingham, the Randolph,
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and the Washington were being built in Philadelphia.
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So the Congress assigned Nicholas with enlisting four new companies of Marines to serve as a Marine detachments on each of those four ships.
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But when Washington found himself in dire straits and he asked for more troops, the Congress assigned Nicholas with the task of creating a battalion of Marines by bringing these Mardets together and forming that battalion of 120 to 130 Marines.
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So Nicholas did so.
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He left a detachment from the Randolph in Philadelphia because that ship was the closest to being complete in construction.
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And the Congress wanted to get it to sea before it could be captured.
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So Nicholas loads his Marines on the gondolas and they head up the Delaware River and they link up with Washington at Trenton on the 8th of December.
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Now, Washington had earlier created his own ad hoc navies, both in New York and in Boston, because the Continental Navy at first didn't exist.
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And then when it did, it was off fighting elsewhere.
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And Washington understood he needed that capability that Navy and Marines bring him.
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And he originally used soldiers to serve in the capacity of Marines.
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And they did not perform very well.
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So Washington had a low opinion of Marines.
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to begin with.
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And when they showed up outside of Trenton on the 8th of December, he wasn't really sure what to do with the Continental Marines.
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So he talked to John Colwalder in charge of the Associators and he said, hey, go talk to those Marines over there and determine whether they intend to fight on the water or on the land.
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And he came back and said, well, General, they're here to fight for you in the Continental Army.
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He said, very well.
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I'm assigning them to you in the Associated Brigade as a separate battalion.
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So over the course of the next four to five months, the Marines would be assigned to the Brigade of Associators under the command of John Colwalder, but fighting as an independent and separate battalion.
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Hmm.
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And so they do see action.
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I mean, they do get across and then not get across on the night of the 26th when Washington is crossing.
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There's terrible weather.
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Yeah, so it's a great story.
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So there are actually three key battles that they'll participate in in the course of those next 10 days, the 10 crucial days.
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And the first one was a historic crossing of the Delaware on Christmas Day.
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Now, Washington came up with a grand plan where he would lead 2,400 regular Continental soldiers at the key crossing site of McConkie's Ferry, march nine miles south and attack Johan Rall and his Hessian Brigade at Trenton.
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But in order to be successful in that operation, he had three supporting efforts.
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which first one consisted of New Jersey and Pennsylvania militia crossing the Delaware south of Trenton and capturing a key bridge on the Austin Pink Creek, which is on the south side of Trenton.
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That was supposed to block any Hessians from escaping from Trenton as Washington attacked from the west and the north.
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The second support and effort consisted of the Associators and Continental Marines.
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They were supposed to cross over into New Jersey from the Burlington, Pennsylvania area, and they were supposed to establish a blocking position to prevent the Hessians under a gentleman named Bondanoff from moving north to reinforce Rall during the main attack.
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And then a final group sent over from General Putnam from Philadelphia was supposed to hold the Hessians in that area at bay as well.
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Now, all four groups were supposed to cross that evening, but unfortunately, due to the weather conditions and Nor'easter rolling in and the ice on the river, the only successful crossing was the one led by George Washington.
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Actually, Henry Knox was the one who led that crossing.
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Calwalder and the Continental Marines actually got two-thirds of their force across the river,
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before the Nor'easter became too dangerous and they could not land their artillery, so he aborted that mission, thinking that no one else successfully crossed either.
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And the next morning, Karl Walder is writing a note to Washington saying, hey, I recommend we consolidate our forces here on the Pennsylvania side.
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And all of a sudden, off in the distance, he hears cannons booming in the direction of Trenton.
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Holy cow, you know, the general made it across and now the blood is stirring inside the Marines and the Associators.
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They convinced Cal Walter to get across the river as quickly as possible to join Washington and join the fight.
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They successfully crossed that morning, unbeknownst to them that Washington had just recrossed into Pennsylvania with 900 Hessian prisoners.
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So now Karl Walder is at an inflection point here, and he has to make a decision, and he starts to flounder and is at the point of deciding to abort the mission and go back into Philadelphia, or excuse me, Pennsylvania, and the Marines and his Philadelphia Associators convince him not to do that because the Hessians are now in full retreat in eastern New Jersey, and they're moving up towards
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Princeton, where there's a brigade of British regulars holding out.
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So they're now on the Pennsylvania, excuse me, New Jersey side of the river.
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Washington's on the Pennsylvania side.
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And Colwalder sends a message to Washington and says, hey, the enemy's running scared here.
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Come back over, General.
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We can do more.
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Washington listens.
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Over the next four days, he recrosses the river, and he consolidates his forces south of Trenton on the south side of the Ossipan Creek.
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He establishes a key defensive position on key terrain, utilizing the creek as a natural barrier, and then he weights his defensive positions on
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along that key strategic bridge that spans the creek, and then three other ford sites in which a man could cross the creek at chest level of water.
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The Marines and the Associators are initially placed on the right flank of the main force covering one of those fjord sites.
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Now, at the time, Lord Cornwallis is directed by General Howe to accumulate 10,000 British soldiers and Hessian mercenaries and attack South to defeat Washington once and for all.
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Cornwallis had been ready to go back to England.
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He thought the rebellion was over since Washington had been chased into England.
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Then they get this news that actually Washington has taken these prisoners and retaken Trenton.
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So Cornwallis and 10,000 men are going to be on the move across New Jersey.
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Yeah, absolutely correct.
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Cornwallis was actually on board ship to go back to England to see his alien wife when Howe canceled his orders of leave and sent him to Princeton to assume overall command from Grant.
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And so Cornwallis will attack south that following day, and Washington sends a force up to Maidenhead and Princeton to conduct spoiling attacks and delaying tactics to buy him the time he needs to consolidate his forces and dig in south of the Austin Pink Creek.
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They successfully delay him until dusk, and the British and Hessians will try unsuccessfully three times to attack across the bridge.
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They take hundreds of casualties in the process.
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During the heat of the battle when Washington thinks the British are going to force the bridge, he calls for the Marines and brings them in from the flank to that key part of the battle covering the bridge.
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And then Cornwallis will pull his forces back that evening, licking his wounds.
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And he says, don't worry about it.
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We'll bag the fox in the morning.
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And General Irksine, his logistics officer, says, General, if Washington's half the general I think he is, he won't be there in the morning.
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And Cornwallis just said, don't worry about it.
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You know, we'll take care of business and end this war once and for all in the morning.
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Unbeknownst to him, Washington makes the decision in the middle of night to use deception and guise to make the British believe that they're still in their defensive positions and preparing for the next day's battle.
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But he actually pulls his forces off the line and then hikes 11 miles further north, deeper into enemy-held territory to attack the British force that is held out in Princeton.
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Unbeknownst to him that next morning, the force under a gentleman named Charles Mahood is under orders from Cornwallis to move south to reinforce Cornwallis for the final attack to defeat Washington.
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And so they have what's called a meeting engagement in which two forces unknown to each other have a chance meeting unexpectedly.
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And it becomes a race to see who can gain fire superiority, who will win that battle.
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And what happens is the Americans, unsure of the size of this British force, send Hugh Mercer and his brigade up to the high ground out of this sunken road along the Stony Brook.
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And Mercer has 100 riflemen and 100 infantrymen going up against now, unbeknownst to him, 700 British soldiers.
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So the brigade is quickly defeated.
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Hugh Mercer shot off of his horse, bayoneted several times.
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And as that's happening, Carl Walder and Samuel Nicholas hear the battle begin and move their force out of the low ground to join that fight.
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They start to form with the Associators on the left and the Marines on the right.
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They move forward to the side of the guns.
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They fire one volley at the British.
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But then at that key point in the battle, Hugh Mercer's brigade is retreating at full speed right into their face as they're taking enemy fire.
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That momentum carries the whole American force back about 150 yards before Nicholas and Carl Walker regain control of them.
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And at that decisive moment, General Washington shows up on the scene.
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The cover of the book, Washington's Marines, has a great painting painted by Charles Waterhouse that depicts this scene.
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It was Washington pointing at the British and saying, go get them, boys.
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And they counterattack, and they win the day, and the British are in a full retreat.
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And Washington is actually so caught up in the emotion of the moment, he's riding his horse at full speed saying, follow me, boys.
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It's a fine fox chase.
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They had to rein them back in and conclude the battle at Nassau Hall in downtown Princeton, where about 250 British held up.
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And a young gentleman, a captain from New York named Alexander Hamilton, comes forward with his battery and fires cannonballs into the front door of Nassau Hall to force the British to surrender.
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He was also a Columbia man.
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Yes, and a Columbia man.
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Thank you.
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We're talking with Major General Jason Baum, who is not only a veteran Marine officer, but also an historian.
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And the way you just told that story, I was going to ask what current officers and men have to learn from these
31:41.358 --> 32:04.577
long long ago episodes but the way you just told that we can see the contingencies and this evolving battlefield and the decisions that the commanders are having to make as situations change it's really an extraordinary way of looking at you know this battle which is familiar to historians but really looking at it with fresh eyes of someone seeing it for the first time it's really been
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A revelation.
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Yeah.
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And I'll tell you that that's a great insight, Bob.
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And if I could, today's Marines, we have a war fighting doctrine called war fighting.
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And in it, we train our young Marines to understand the fog and friction of war.
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And with that is understanding that the enemy always gets a vote, the environment gets a vote, the weather gets a vote, and it's basically going to ruin your plans.
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We train our people to be flexible, adaptable problem solvers.
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You may have a plan.
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You may go into a fight with a concept of how you think the plan is going to play out, but it will normally never play out the way you expected.
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And you have to be able to succeed in that chaotic and uncertain environment.
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So those initial lessons all began right here in Trenton and Princeton.
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It's amazing.
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I wonder if we could talk a little bit about, you've mentioned the Associators, there were other state Marine forces and what their relationship would have been with the Continental Marines that Congress and Nicholas and Washington have created.
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Yeah, absolutely.
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Another good question.
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So when we talk about Washington's Marines, I really identify four separate and distinct groups that all held the title Marines.
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The first group is what I mentioned earlier, and that's the fact that not only General Washington, but also General Benedict Arnold, who created a freshwater fleet up on Lake Champlain to fight the Battle of Elcor Island that blocked the British attack from Canada, also used soldiers to serve in the capacity of sailors and Marines.
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He also had very negative experiences.
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There's a great quote in a book about how he says, the Marines, the refuse of the battalions.
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Basically, the soldiers didn't send their best soldiers to go serve in the Marines.
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They did not comport themselves very well, but they served a valuable service.
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As you know, although a tactical defeat at Belcor Island, it was a strategic victory by delaying the British for another year.
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So the first group was soldier Marines.
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The second group was there was a very lucrative privateer business going on at the start of the war.
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Because the Congress did not yet have a formal Navy, they used a stopgap of privateers, which are private citizens or sanctioned pirates who were basically given letters of mark to capture British merchant ships or warships if they could.
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And they would use merchant ships that they converted into warships by placing cannon on them to capture unarmed or lightly armed British ships carrying resupplies or reinforcements from England.
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And those ships also had people serving in the role of Marines as privateer Marines.
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In fact, one of them was a gentleman named William Shippen, who is a 27-year-old, originally a merchant from Philadelphia, married with four kids.
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He served as a privateer at the start of the war and then would move on to become a Pennsylvania state Marine to serve on the...
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Pennsylvania Navy's flagship called the Montgomery.
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And then once the Hessians attacked all the way to the Delaware River and came close to his home, he left the ship and then would fight ashore side by side with the Continental Marines as a state Marine and with the Associators.
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In fact, William Shippen would be the first state Marine killed because he was killed in the Battle of Princeton.
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The third group were the state Marines.
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And another gentleman named Thomas Forrest was a state Marine.
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And originally on the Delaware River,
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As part of the Pennsylvania Navy, they had two floating batteries, each armed with 12 18-pound cannons.
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And they were exclusively manned by Pennsylvania State Marines.
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One of them being Thomas Forrest, who commanded one of them.
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And he would go on to be transferred to the Pennsylvania State Artillery Corps.
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and would cross the Delaware with Washington in his main force.
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And it was his cannons with that of Alexander Hamilton that were on the top of King and Queen Street firing down during the Battle of Trenton.
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His battery was also the battery that went forward with that delaying force that delayed Cornwallis fighting south to buy Washington the time he needed to dig in his defensive positions.
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And then the final group of Washington's Marines were the formal national Marines, the Continental Marines.
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And one of them was a gentleman, as an example, named Andrew Porter.
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Andrew Porter was a former schoolmaster who is said to have recruited his current and former students to become his Marine company.
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And an interesting story about Porter is he would take over the Marine detachment on the frigate Effingham.
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And then he would serve as a company commander under Nicholas once they went to support Washington throughout those three battles.
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After the Battle of Princeton, he would resign his Marine commission and would serve as a Continental Army artillery officer.
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And one of the other officers was a gentleman named Major Eustace, who was calling Porter out.
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And he said, ah, Porter,
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You are nothing but a dance pool master.
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And Porter said, sir, I have not forgotten my vocation.
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He draws a sword out and smacks Eustace in the back of the sword.
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That was calling him out to a duel.
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The two gentlemen meet on the corner of 9th and Arch Street in Philadelphia.
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And Porter pulls out his pistol, shoots Eustace right through the heart, kills him on the spot and is court-martialed for killing a fellow officer.
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But then he is exonerated.
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He's promoted to major.
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And then they assign him the position that is now vacant because he just killed the gentleman that held him before that.
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Wow.
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Wow.
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True story.
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Wow.
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You really can't make that up.
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That's a great story.
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It's like something out of the movies.
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It really is.
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Now, do you know if William Shippen was any relation to the Peggy Shippen who marries Benedict Arnold?
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I have not been able to tie the two together, but I would not be surprised since they're from the same area.
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Same city.
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Shippen wasn't an uncommon name in Philadelphia.
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Right.
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Perhaps distant cousins.
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Okay.
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I know there's a lot more we could talk about and we could go on all day talking about the Marines.
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Maybe we can have you back at some point to talk about 1798.
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Are you working on more history?
39:25.874 --> 39:27.074
Yeah, absolutely am.
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And thanks for that question.
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So one of my mentors who got me to write the first book asked me to do a collaborative effort with him.
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So we're basically writing the next chapter of Washington's Marines.
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Washington's Marines cover 75 through 77.
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We're now going to cover 78 and 79.
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And he's writing about Marines fighting on the Mississippi River.
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And I'm writing about the Penobscot expedition of 79.
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So, yeah, so we're near completion of that.
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And we hopefully will see that being out on the streets in the next year.
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Great.
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Wonderful.
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Well, thank you so much, General Bohm, for taking the time to talk to us.
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And it's been great to hear from you and hear about these stories.
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And we look forward to more.
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And I want to also thank you not only for becoming such a fine historian, but also for your years of service to the Marines and to the nation.
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My absolute pleasure and my honor.
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And I want to thank you, Bob, for helping to keep our history alive.
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Extremely important, particularly now more than ever.
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It definitely is.
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And let me also thank Jonathan Lane, our producer.
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And every week I thank folks who are tuning in.
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You know, we initially we thought we'd have a handful of our friends listening, but we actually have listeners all over the country and actually all over the world.
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And every week I thank some of them.
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So if you're in one of these places and you want to send Jonathan Lane an email, jlane at revolution250.org, he'll send you some of our Revolution 250 tchotchkes.
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So this week, let me thank friends in Bangor, Maine.
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and Riverside Park, New Jersey, and in Long Beach, Pensacola, and Helena, Montana, and also in Madrid, Delhi, London, and Shakopee, Minnesota.
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Thank you all for listening.
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And, General, let me just say, too, on behalf of all of us, Semper Fi.
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Semper Fi.
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God bless you all and Semper Fidelis.
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Happy Thanksgiving.
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Happy Thanksgiving to you.
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Now we'll be piped out on the road to Boston.