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Killing England: The Brutal Struggle for American Independence Killing England: The Brutal Struggle for American Independence by Bill O'Reilly
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“Jefferson makes note of the date on which particular flowers bloom. Once autumn comes, he will record the migratory patterns of birds.4”
Bill O'Reilly, Killing England: The Brutal Struggle for American Independnce
“If I were an American, as I am an Englishman, while a foreign troop was landed in my country, I never would lay down my arms. Never. Never. Never.”
Bill O'Reilly, Killing England: The Brutal Struggle for American Independnce
“In this routine, the introverted Jefferson manages his emotions.”
Bill O'Reilly, Killing England: The Brutal Struggle for American Independnce
“LEGEND HERE The initial euphoria of being named commander in chief has long since passed for Washington, replaced by the fear that he has made a very big mistake. “I have often thought how much happier I should have been if, instead of accepting a command under such circumstances, I had taken my musket on my shoulders and entered the ranks,” he has written to a friend.”
Bill O'Reilly, Killing England: The Brutal Struggle for American Independnce
“Three hundred miles away, in Philadelphia, forty-nine-year-old Benjamin Franklin sits naked in his bedroom. He is reading a book with the windows wide open while enjoying the rejuvenation of his daily “air bath.”
Bill O'Reilly, Killing England: The Brutal Struggle for American Independnce
“* * * Thus, General Washington gets emotional and delivers a rare poetic speech to his troops: This army, the main American Army, will certainly not suffer itself to be outdone by their northern brethren.… Let it never be said, that in a day of action, you turned your backs on the foe. Let the enemy no longer triumph. They brand you with ignominious epithets. Will you patiently endure that reproach? Will you suffer the wounds given to your country to go unrevenged? Will you resign your parents, wives, children and friends to be the wretched vassals of a proud, insulting foe—and your own necks to the halter? General Howe … has left us no choice but Conquest or Death. Nothing then remains, but nobly to contend for all that is dear to us. Every motive that can touch the human breast calls us to the most vigorous exertions. Our dearest rights, our dearest friends, and our own lives, honor, glory and even shame, urge us to the fight. And my fellow soldiers! When an opportunity presents, be firm, be brave—show yourselves men, and victory is yours.”
Bill O'Reilly, Killing England: The Brutal Struggle for American Independnce
“In fact, the parade scene in the movie Ferris Bueller’s Day Off memorably honors Von Steuben Day and the Baron’s German heritage.”
Bill O'Reilly, Killing England: The Brutal Struggle for American Independnce
“From their lofty summits overlooking Boston Harbor and the city itself, the colonists can fire cannonballs—which is why the British have spent the last three weeks secretly plotting an invasion of the Charlestown Peninsula, to capture those heights. But just two days ago, on June 13, the rebels got word of the British plans. Working day and night, they have been preparing redoubts from which to fend off the redcoats. Six feet high, made of earth, with wooden platforms on the interior from which men can stand to fire their muskets, the square-shaped”
Bill O'Reilly, Killing England: The Brutal Struggle for American Independnce
“the aging diplomat sits down at the desk of French foreign minister Charles Gravier, the”
Bill O'Reilly, Killing England: The Brutal Struggle for American Independnce
“The face of Capt. Daniel-Hyacinthe-Marie Liénard de Beaujeu is striped in war paint. Primeval forest conceals his French Marines, Canadian militia, and Indian allies as they maneuver into position. Hidden behind boulders and ancient oak trees, they await the massive combined force of the British and colonial armies now marching toward them. Beaujeu’s French and Indians are heavily outnumbered. Unlike the British, they don’t have cannon that can kill and maim dozens with a single blast of canister shot. Instead, their weapons are those of a nimble guerrilla fighting force: muskets, tomahawks, war clubs to bash skulls, and sharp knives for slicing the flesh and hair from a dying man’s head”
Bill O'Reilly, Killing England: The Brutal Struggle for American Independnce
“The term head, in reference to a toilet, comes from the special board extending from the “beak head” of the ship (the pointed bow) out over the ocean for passengers to use as a communal toilet. The wind and waves dispatch any odor or mess.”
Bill O'Reilly, Killing England: The Brutal Struggle for American Independnce