Joseph Plumb Martin was born in the western part of Massachusetts in 1760 and is the son of a pastor. At the age of seven, he began to live with his wealthy grandfather. By the time the revolutionary war broke out in the spring of 1775, the young Joseph was eager to work hard for the cause of patriotism. In June 1776, at the age of fifteen, Martin joined the army and spent six months in Connecticut militia. By the end of the year, Martin fought against Brooklyn, New York, Kip Bay, White Plains.
Joseph Plum Martin joined the US Army in July 1775 and remained in the army until hostility ceased in 1783. He participated in a big fight from New York to Yorktown and winter in Valley Forge and Morristown. He wrote his experience in a memoir, and Jim Murphy added a historical background. The original photos and files will be copied. The books of the "Dear America" series are written in the form of an imaginary diary. Although the described event and some characters are based on actual historical events and people, Catherine Carrie Lagoon is a fictitious person, and in the diary it is drawn that she was caught by the Indians.
In 1830, an expert war veteran, Joseph Plum Martin, announced a memoir to the Washington General Army. Martin's statement, filled with a sense of humor that he can not imitate, proves the harsh and tough nature of life in the life of the continental army. Martin's assertion about the actual loss of revolutionary war service in the American crisis is clearly an interesting mention to famous events of famous attempts by Thomas Bread's human soul from the American crisis, It is undoubtedly grounded. . As I mentioned in this chapter, military action in the revolutionary war tried that person's body. A wartime injury received by a disabled veteran seriously reminds me of this fact. In this chapter I took out the details of the disabled veterans' pension file and other revolutionary war record information and looked at how invalid pensioners were injured during the war.
Her work history and place as a historical figure were also confirmed by witnesses of the fight of Monmouth. Joseph Plumb Martin has confirmed that Molly Pitcher is more than just a legend. In his most fascinating war diary, he explained how he observed that he was shooting the cannon because of his courage to refer to women and humor. Woman, her husband belongs to an artillery, attached to the work while engaged, and is participating in this work with her husband. When she reaches the cartridge and moves one leg away from the other, she can take one step and the cannon launched from the enemy does not take it away but directly without giving any other damage Go through the legs. All of the lower half of her petticoat