Cochise Stronghold Chapter, NSDAR

Cochise Stronghold Chapter, NSDAR Daughters of the American Revolution Chapter, located in Benson Az.

05/15/2022
01/12/2022

During her time in the White House, First Lady Caroline Harrison served as the first president general of the National Society Daughters of the American Revolution (NSDAR). The National Society Daughters of the American Revolution was founded in October 11, 1890, and Mrs. Harrison was asked to lend her services due to her interest in history and the prestige of having the first lady involved in the organization. The NSDAR was supported by the National Society Sons of the American Revolution, and the following year local chapters were established.

Mrs. Harrison spoke at the First Continental Congress for the Society, which was held at the Church of Our Father on 13th and L Street in Washington, D.C., in February 1892, at the close of the White House social season. During her opening remarks she stated, “I welcome you, regents and delegates of the society, to this city and to the first congress of the Daughters of the American Revolution, with the hope and desire that your conference may be one of pleasure to yourselves, having the promise of strength and progress for the future.” On the evening of February 24, 1892, Caroline hosted a reception in the East Room of the White House for nearly one hundred NSDAR regents and delegates.

Mrs. Harrison served as president general until she passed away in 1892 from tuberculosis. General Henry V. Boynton remembered Mrs. Harrison’s time as president general of the NSDAR fondly, writing, “She was not only the presiding officer, but a working member of it and took the liveliest interest in its proceedings. The board of management, I know, ascribed the great success of the society as much to Mrs. Harrison’s work as to all other influences. It is now a very flourishing society.”

Upon her passing, the society sent a resolution of all Mrs. Harrison’s services as president general to President Benjamin Harrison and a floral design of the group’s insignia to the White House. The NSDAR later commissioned and donated a portrait of Mrs. Harrison (pictured), painted by Daniel Huntington in 1894. It remains in the White House Collection today.

Image: White House Collection/White House Historical Association

12/31/2021

in 1776 — New Year's Eve after the crossing of the Delaware and a victory at Trenton — General Washington's soldiers' enlistments were set to end. He gave an impassioned speech, along with $10 in hard coins for any man who stepped forward to stay. Half of his men stayed.

Read more here: https://bit.ly/3JuhHTa

12/05/2021

in 1782, King George III addressed Parliament regarding the Treaty of Paris and his recognition of America's independence. In a voice a witness described as "constrained," George III declared his former colonies to be "free and independent states." He went on to add that "religion, language, interest, affections may, and I hope will, yet prove a bond of permanent union between the two countries."

Caption: A portrait of young King George III.
Credit: Thomas Frye

12/05/2021

On this day in 1783, George Washington says his final goodbye to a group of officers at Fraunces Tavern in New York.

New York had served as the British headquarters throughout the long years of the American Revolution. It was the last city to be evacuated when the war was over. On November 25, however, the British finally left, and George Washington entered the city.

Despite the celebrations and elaborate dinners that ensued over the course of the next week, the British hadn’t entirely left the area. Some lingered on boats nearby. Others were still on Staten and Long Islands. They were waiting for the weather to clear sufficiently for a voyage across the Atlantic, and they were waiting for sufficient transports. Even as the celebrations continued, Washington waited for this final departure.

One of his biographers explains: “Not an hour would Washington remain in New York, as Commander-in-Chief, beyond the time all danger of a clash of arms had ended.”

On December 1, British Sir Guy Carleton wrote to Washington: “Wind and weather permitting, I hope that the Embarkation of such of his Majesty’s Troops as yet remain on Long Island and Staten Island may be completed [by December 4].”

Surely Washington was thrilled to receive the letter! He was always aching to return to his beloved Mount Vernon. A farewell to his officers was scheduled for noon on December 4 at Fraunces Tavern.

The meeting was not exceptionally large, with fewer than 30 officers gathered. Importantly, the head of Washington’s secret Culper Spy Ring, Benjamin Tallmadge, was in the room that day. He later wrote of the experience:

“We had been assembled but a few moments, when His Excellency entered the room. His emotion, too strong to be concealed, seemed to be reciprocated by every officer present. After partaking of a slight refreshment, in almost breathless silence, the General filled his glass with wine, and turning to the officers, he said: ‘With a heart full of love and gratitude, I now take leave of you. I most devoutly wish that your latter days may be as prosperous and happy as your former ones have been glorious and honorable.’” He concluded, “I cannot come to each of you, but shall feel obliged if each of you will come and take me by the hand.”

Historian Thomas Fleming has offered an alternative explanation for the strong emotions that day: There had been a fair amount of dispute regarding soldiers’ pay in recent months. Was Washington simply upset that he’d failed to get more for his men? Was he leaving on a note of regret?

Either way, the tears apparently flowed freely after Washington’s short speech. Henry Knox was the closest to Washington. Tallmadge again reports that Washington “suffused in tears, was incapable of utterance, but grasped [Knox’s] hand; when they embraced each other in silence. In the same affectionate manner, every officer in the room marched up to, kissed, and parted with his General-in-Chief.”

After this solemn farewell, Washington went down to the wharf where a barge was waiting for him. He was leaving the city, but he would soon appear before the Continental Congress to resign his commission.

The war was over. Our independence was won.

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If you enjoy these history posts, please see my note below. :)

Gentle reminder: History posts are copyright © 2013-2021 by Tara Ross. I appreciate it when you use the shar e feature instead of cutting/pasting.

12/05/2021

On this day in 1764, a heroine is born in Virginia. Susanna Bolling would go on to perform a little-known feat that helped George Washington’s army win the American Revolution. She’s been called the “Girl Who Won the Revolutionary War.”

Susanna was just 16 years old at the time.

She surely had no idea what was in store for her when British General Charles Cornwallis arrived at her family’s plantation during May 1781. Cornwallis demanded shelter, and he and his men stayed at the plantation overnight.

It was a scene that was repeated far too often in America’s fight for independence: British redcoats would arrive at a home, confronting mothers and daughters left behind as their husbands, fathers, sons, and brothers went to war. The Redcoats demanded shelter—or information about family members who had left to join the militia.

In this case, Cornwallis demanded food and a place for his men to stay. He must have gotten cocky because he spoke too freely in front of the Bolling women. He had big plans for the next day: He intended to track down the Marquis de Lafayette at the Half Way House, which was between Richmond and Petersburg. Lafayette was one of Washington’s most trusted officers, and Cornwallis intended to capture him.

It could be the beginning of the end for Washington’s army, and Susanna knew what she had to do.

The young girl used an underground tunnel to sneak out of her home. The tunnel took her straight to the family’s dock on the Appomattox River. Once there, she took a canoe and paddled her way across the river. It was risky! If she were too noisy, she’d give herself away.

Upon reaching the other side of the river, she borrowed a neighbor’s horse and rode as quickly as she could to warn Lafayette.

Amazingly, she not only found him in time, but she returned home before her absence was discovered. Her warning enabled Lafayette to get away.

Indeed, Lafayette would go on to play a game of “cat-and-mouse” as the Virginia legislature would later say, with Cornwallis’s army. Because of Lafayette, Cornwallis and his men were trapped in Yorktown by September 1781.

And the rest, of course, is history. George Washington’s army would hold Cornwallis under siege at Yorktown, ultimately winning the American fight for independence.

Would any of it have been possible without the brave young teenager?

Every person, every effort, always makes a difference—especially when you are fighting for liberty.

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If you enjoy these history posts, please see my note below. :)

Gentle reminder: History posts are copyright © 2013-2021 by Tara Ross. I appreciate it when you use the shar e feature instead of cutting/pasting.

12/04/2021
12/03/2021

On Dec 2, 1775 (246 years ago), the Virginia Gazette reported that Lord Dunmore had recruited 2,000 loyalists to subdue rebellious Virginia colonists around Norfolk. Meanwhile on the march from Suffolk to the Great Bridge, Col. William Woodford’s company had captured a dozen loyalists in the Deep Creek area including a man named Ives, and Lt. Col. Charles Scott’s advanced guard of about 150 Virginia militia had arrived at the Great Bridge and exchanged fire with the British. The Battle of Great Bridge was still a week away. Stay tuned!

11/19/2021

Congress Pleads for Soldiers
On this day in 1776, Congress pleads for the states to send more soldiers to serve in the Continental Army, reminding them "how indispensable it is to the common safety, that they pursue the most immediate and vigorous measures to furnish their respective quotas of Troops for the new Army, as the time of service for which the present Army was enlisted, is so near expiring."
Just as the British had discovered the difficulties of waging war with obstreperous Yankees for soldiers during the Seven Years' War, Commander in Chief George Washington, the Virginia planter-cum-soldier, was unimpressed upon meeting his supposed army outside Boston in 1775. He saw "stupidity" among the enlisted men, who were used to the easy familiarity of being commanded by neighbors in local militias with elected officers. Washington promptly insisted that the officers behave with decorum and the enlisted men with deference. Although he enjoyed some success with this original army, the New Englanders went home to their farms at the end of 1775, and Washington had to start fresh with new recruits in 1776. Washington and Congress struggled to reconstitute the army at the beginning of each new year throughout the war.
Washington fought an uphill battle for military order until Friedrich von Steuben arrived at the Continental Army encampment at Valley Forge on February 23, 1778. The Prussian military officer commenced training soldiers in close-order drill, instilling new confidence and discipline in the demoralized Continental Army. Before von Steuben's arrival, colonial American soldiers were notorious for their slovenly camp conditions. Von Steuben insisted on reorganization to establish basic hygiene, ordering that kitchens and latrines be put on opposite sides of the camp, with latrines facing a downhill slope. Just having latrines was a novelty to the Continental troops, who were accustomed to living in their own filth.

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