L'autore:
John T. Cunningham has long been known as "New Jersey's popular historian," a title bestowed upon him by the New Jersey Historical Commission. His prolific contributions to state history in his books, magazine articles, documentary films and talks demonstrate that he knows, writes and talks about his native state from experience and diligent research.This is his fiftieth book. His first, This is New Jersey, published in 1953, has never gone out of print. Well known in the state's schools, his extensive program of New Jersey studies features the noted text, You, New Jersey and The World. One of the founders of the New Jersey Historical Commission, he has served as its chair, and was also president of the New Jersey Historical Society. Rutgers University, in bestowing an honorary degree on Mr. Cunningham, called him "Mr. Jersey." The New York Times said: "He helped to give New Jersey legitimacy." With years of experience as a reporter on a major New Jersey newspaper, Mr. Cunningham considers himself to be a historian who approaches his writing with a journalist's quest for truth combined with a style accessible to all readers.
Dalla seconda/terza di copertina:
Every American is familiar with the image of a somber George Washington on horseback, huddled in his cape, while around him ragged soldiers stand outside log huts in the snow. It's Valley Forge, of course, the most famous winter encampment of the Revolutionary War, a symbol of American endurance. In reality, that winter was a reasonably mild one - that is, compared to the difficult winters in New Jersey that may well have saved the American Revolution. Four of the war's harshest winters saw Washington's troops camped in the "geological fortress" of New Jersey's Watchung Mountains.In The Uncertain Revolution, John T. Cunningham tells the story of those forgotten winters in Middlebrook and Morristown and of their critical importance to the course of the war.Geographically, the Watchungs made an excellent defensive position, hiding from the British the disarray of the American army and the horrific conditions. Reports of the strength and numbers of American troops fluctuated wildly as Washington and his officers tried to stave off desertion and mutiny.Washington's army survived a small pox epidemic at Morristown, a season of short supplies at Middlebrook, the most brutal winter of the war in 1779-80, and the war's most dire mutiny on New Year's Day 1781. There's drama - including the cat-and-mouse game played with the unpredictable British general, George Clinton, and treachery - with one of his favorite officers, Benedict Arnold. There's also the fierce performance of the New Jersey militia in defense of their homes and farms. In The Uncertain Revolution Cunningham makes the case for the importance of Morristown and the mountains to an understanding of the war itself.Just as the history of those winters has long been neglected, so were the physical places over time. The soldiers huts in the mountains at Jockey Hollow disintegrated, and the houses that had served as Washington's headquarters were almost lost to neglect and development. The author's account of their reclamation and eventual incorporation into the country's first National Historical Park in 1933 is a fitting conclusion to his story of Washington in the Watchungs.
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