following:Captain William Blackler of Massachusetts, who commanded the boat that carried George Washington across an ice-choked Delaware River on Christmas night 1776 to attack the Hessian brigade occupying Trenton.Joseph Trumbull of Connecticut, Commissary General of the Continental Army, who kept its weary soldiers from starving during the dark days of 1776.Colonel Samuel Griffin of Virginia, who together with a woman known as the "Mysterious Widow" (whose identity is still unknown to us), managed to divert Hessian troops who were posted south of Trenton away from the scene of the battle on December 26, 1776, when Washington's army attacked the Hessians stationed in Trenton, so that the enemy brigade there could not be rescued from the American assault.Dr. John Riker of New Jersey, who saved the life of a future President, James Monroe, during the December 26thbattle at Trenton.Joseph White of Massachusetts, a young sergeant whose artillery crew captured two enemy cannons aimed at American troops at Trenton on December 26thand then retrieved a damaged cannon that might otherwise have been lost to the enemy.Colonel Edward Hand of Pennsylvania, who commanded a vastly outnumbered force of American skirmishers that fought a daylong running battle against British and Hessian troops marching from Princeton to Trenton on January 2, 1777 and thereby gave Washington the time he needed to organize his defenses and fight off the enemy attack at the Second Battle of Trenton (or the Battle of Assunpink Creek).Colonel Charles Scott of Virginia, whose brigade manned the front line of defense against the enemy assault at Assunpink Creek during what may have been the most underappreciated moment of the Revolutionary War.Colonel John Haslet of Delaware, who provided inspirational leadership and survived one danger after another, including an accidental tumble in freezing Delaware River waters, only to make the supreme sacrifice at the Battle of Princeton on January 3, 1777, during what became the capstone event of the "Ten Crucial Days."Captain Joseph Moulder of Pennsylvania, 62 years of age, who commanded a youthful artillery company that stood its ground against an elite force of onrushing British infantry at Princeton and gave Washington the time he needed to organize a counterattack that carried the army to its climactic victory of the "Ten Crucial Days."Praise forRescuing the RevolutionRescuing the Revolution: Unsung Patriot Heroes and the Ten Crucial Days of America's War for Independencepresents ten unique stories of lesser-known heroes whose courage and patriotism contributed to our nations quest for independence.Through thisinformative and well-crafted account, Price provideseach of these individuals with an honored place in the history of the American Revolution."--Jennifer Martin,Executive Director, Friends of Washington Crossing Park"Mr. Price's deep knowledge and passion for his subject infuses every page and draws the reader into his narrat |