1st delaware regiment revolutionary war


Lafayette in Delaware. Through the Years with Aunt Clara. [Part of the modern counties of Philadelphia, Bucks, Montgomery, Delaware, Chester, and Lancaster in Pennsylvania, New Castle in Delaware, and Cecil in Maryland. Several newspaper articles dealing with Delawares role in the American Revolution may be found in the American Revolution and Bicentennial folders. 1 (1931): 108-147. Miers, Earl Schenck. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1942. Burning of King Georges Portrait, event poster, 1976. The 1st Rhode Island Regiment was a Continental Army regiment from Rhode Island during the American Revolutionary War (1781-1783). The committees were kept busy throughout the Lower Counties. RG 9200K02.000 Robert Kirkwood Papers, 1777-1791 (1 box). . R-53: Letters of Dr. John McKinly, 1773-1778. Volumes IV and V of the Archives, dealing with the War of 1812, are not listed here. On 3 September 1777 they were met at Coochs Bridge on the Christina Creek, just south of Newark, by about 700 American troops led by Brigadier General William Maxwell. George Washington to Mordecai Gist, from Wilmington (transcript), 1777, 21. One source of revenue was the seizure and sale of estates belonging to Loyalists. 16mm motion picture, VHS. Once upon a Time in Delaware. . Johnson, Amandus. Butterfield, L. H. Letters of Benjamin Rush. Princeton: Princeton University Press for the American Philosophical Society, 1951. . Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1933. Committees of Correspondence throughout the colonies strengthened opposition to British policies embodied in measures like the Intolerable Acts, passed in the aftermath of the Tea Party.(2). 4. . General Anthony Wayne letters to Robinson family, 1776-1780, 18. The Delaware States Privy Council, created by the 1776 Constitution, worked with the President. Marshall, John. The committee persuaded Holliday to sign a statement disavowing his letter. Photostat. Delaware troops were present here as well. Reports of the Auditor of Accounts, Joint Committees of the Assembly . Route of the British in 1776 . A Distinguished Son of Chester County, Bulletins of the Chester County Historical Society, 1902-03. 14. Taking into account rank and length of service, auditors estimated how much each soldier should receive, issuing depreciation certificates because the currency had been devalued so severely.(16). 1. de Valinger, Leon Jr. Map of Dover, Delaware in Revolutionary Times. 1775, 1936. Correspondents include General Charles Lee, John Hancock, Benjamin Rush, and General George Washington. Pitz, Henry C. The Brandywine Tradition. 3. McLanes company annexed to Delaware Regiment ( document photograph), 1779, 23. 1st Georgia Regiment. 17. . New York: New York Historical Society, 1926. 19. Delaware, resolutions of the Council, 1776, 3. 30 Camp a head of Elk . Despite Delawares small size, small population, and divided citizenry, the state played an important role in the struggle for independence. Encampment of the Division under Lt. Gen. Knyphausen 29th August 1777. 1777 (5). Cooch, Edward W. The Battle of Coochs Bridge. . State treasurers accounts with Edward Pole, 1807, Revolutionary War Records, AccountsForfeited Estates, 1771-1790 (13 folders), 7. The Story of Caesar Rodney. Yorktown Sesquicentennial Pageants: 1931. Transparency Philadelphia: For the Subscribers, 1848. Topics of discussion include the forming of the second Continental Congress, events in America and England, a letter from woman sculptor Patience Wright, preparations for war, and Dickinsons commission as colonel for a Philadelphia militia unit, all in 1775. James Wilson, Founding Father: 1742-1798. Delaware Troops Leaving the Green, print of 1915 painting by Stanley Arthurs. Washington, D.C.: Office of Publications, National Park Service, 1975. The regiment would see action at the Battle of Saratoga, Battle of Monmouth and the Battle of Rhode Island.The regiment was disbanded on January 1, 1781, at West Point, New York. Photostat. Record of receipts and disbursements made by the State. Photostat. The Nehemiah Tilton papers folder contains photostats of two letters from 1782 dealing with current events and Delaware politics. ca. Sellers, John R., et al., comps. Photostat. Revolutionary War Records Overview The Military Association, 1775-1777 At the beginning of 1775, Pennsylvania, founded under Quaker auspices, differed from other American colonies in being totally devoid of military organization. 11. Preparations for peace were a topic of discussion, as were soldiers pay and reimbursement for the medical services of Dr. James Tilton. . Map of the Original Thirteen Colonies (S. Augustus Mitchell, 1876). 3. Colonial Delaware: A History. . Swedish Contributions to American Freedom, 1776-1783, vol. RG 1111.021 Proceedings of the Freemen . Dyer, Alan F. The Colonial and Early National Periods in American History (1492-1789): A Bibliography of Dissertations. 1937. Philadelphia: Thomas, Cowperthwait and Company, 1846. It is best to consult the lists following groups of documents. Depreciation certificates were issued to soldiers to be redeemed at a later date, as Continental currency by 1780 was worthless. Commission issued by the Vice Admiralty Court, Bermuda, against American shipping, to Robert Burton, 1782, 6. Ryden, George H. Delaware Troops in the Revolution. Amounts spent for clothing or provisions for companies or the regiment as a whole are among the items found in accounts. Minutes and other papers (American Archives transcripts, photostats), 1775-1776, 2. B. Lippincott Company, 1948. Reed, H. Clay. A casualty return from the battle at Eutaw Springs, September 1781 may be found, as well as a transcript of correspondence between General Henry Clinton and General Benjamin Lincoln before Lincolns surrender of Charleston in 1780. Coleman, John M. Thomas McKean: Forgotten Leader of the American Revolution. 1778. Men enlisting for the duration of the war were guaranteed a pension. Gross Receipts Tax . Manuscript Sources in the Library of Congress for Research on the American Revolution. 12. As the morning progressed, the enemy began to encircle the Americans. The 15th Massachusetts Regiment was raised on September 16, 1776, under Colonel Timothy Bigelow at Boston, Massachusetts, as part of Massachusetts contribution to the Resolve of 88 Regiments. Baltimore: Read-Taylor Press, 1925. Friedrich Adolph Julius van Wangenheim. Payment for delivery of provisions, ca. The enlistment, provisioning, clothing, and payment of troops proved a constant concern. 20. . Washington and Tarleton. Colored engraving. These records are a mixture of primary and secondary materials. In September 1781, after the battle of Eutaw Springs, British general Cornwallis retreated to Yorktown, where Washington and his French allies besieged the British forces. Photostat. The Americans regrouped and in a series of battles turned the tide against the British. Military Uniforms in America: The Era of the American Revolution, 1755-1795. Davis, Burton. Rules and articles, Delaware Troops, n.d. 2. Morris, Irving. The 1st Delaware Regiment and the Blue Hens date back to the American Revolution where the 3 Lower Counties on the Delaware River of Pennsylvania not only broke away from Great Britain in June 1776 - but also from the State of Pennsylvania. Daniel Ferguson: Revolutionary Soldier. Typescript, 1942. Selesky, Harold E. A Demographic Survey of the Continental Army that Wintered at Valley Forge, Pennsylvania, 1777-1778. : Edward W. Cooch, 1940. San Rafael, Ca. Meeting minutes include original manuscripts and printed documents, photostats, and typed transcripts. Colonel Samuel Pattersons Battalion, flying camp. . 1776, regarding rumored changes in the Constitution, a list of members of the Council, Correction and Addenda to the published Minutes, resolutions for opening subscriptions for Continental Loan Office certificates, and acts regarding payment, clothing and supplies for Delawares troops. Many of these articles were part of a series featured in the Wilmington Morning News, Looking Back 200 Years, which ran in 1975 and 1976. The First Two Years of War (1776-1778): On January 17, 1776, six months before the Declaration of Independence, Robert Kirkwood (at age twenty) was commissioned a First Lieutenant in Col. John Haslet's Regiment of Light Infantry (fore-runner of the Delaware Continental Regiment). (Wikimedia) 24. [Campaigns of 1776 and 1777]. (Wilmington: James and Webb, 1875). 4. Records include original manuscripts and printed documents, photostats, and typed transcripts. Exportation of wheat to French and Spanish fleets (photostat), 1780, 26. Delaware Troops in the Revolution. Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Record Administration, 1995. Bibliographies and indexes to material held elsewhere are also included. By October Delaware had supplied roughly 460 out of a requested 600 men, commanded by Colonel Samuel Patterson. Theophilus Park to Rodney (photostat), 1776, 11. Inquiry re: George Williams veteran status, 1830, Revolutionary War Records, Council of Safety, 1775-1776 (4 folders), 1. As years passed family members and relatives also became eligible for a pension. Philadelphia: G. W. Jacobs and Company, 1900. Washington passing through Wilmington on the way to the Battle of Brandywine. John Montressor journal extracts (transcripts), 1777, 16. MacNeill, Henry T., and Aime Junkers MacNeill. The regiment would see action during the Battle of Brandywine, Battle of Germantown, Battle of Monmouth, Battle of Camden, Battle of Guilford Court House, Battle of Eutaw Springs and the Battle of Yorktown. . General Howes proclamation (transcript), 1777, 17. Delaware. The Third Company, commanded by Captain Robert Kirkwood of the Blues, consisted mainly of Delawareans. The regiment disbanded on January 1, 1783 at Charleston, South Carolina. Brunhouse, Robert L. The Counter-Revolution in Pennsylvania, 1776-1790. Withholding Tax 2. (12), A regiment of Delaware militia was called into service alongside the Continental Army in the summer of 1780. Newark: University of Delaware, 1953. Carpenter and Walker of Port Penn, 1778, Revolutionary War Records, Committee of Correspondence, 1774-1775 (7 folders), 1. Commission, John Carr, ensign, Fifth Pennsylvania Regiment, 1777, 14. The sixth volume listed here, containing miscellaneous Revolutionary War items, was collated but remains unpublished. [1] Main, Jackson Turner. Stamp Act Congress (photocopies), 1765, 2. Jones, Gilbert S. Valley Forge Park: Historical Record and Guide Book. R-46.146.2: Delaware Papers, Colonial and Revolutionary Documents, at the Library of Congress, volumes I & II, III & IV. Dickens, Charles W., ed. Commanded by Col.s Habersham's /Rae The flag is a Delaware militia flag that's in the Delaware Historical Society's collection. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1935. Dickinsons correspondence from 1779 includes letters from colleagues, commentary on current events, and letters from Caesar Rodney regarding war-related matters. A catalogue of the muster rolls, pay rolls, and miscellaneous papers pertaining to the Delaware troops in the Revolutionary War: Collected in the Office of the Secretary of State, 1908, Revolutionary War Records, Miscellaneous, 1765-1787 (3 folders), 1. . Originals of the Settlement of Revolutionary War Claims may be found in RG 1315.6, and of the Auditors Account Book in RG 1315.7. Harrisburg: Pennsylvania Historical Commission, 1942. N.p., 1903. Hamilton, Edward P. The Champlain Valley in the American Revolution. Kent County (transcripts and photostats), 1775-1776, 3. Edward Roche to James Booth, from Valley Forge (photocopy), 1778, 25. An Allen McLane folder, with articles on efforts taken in the 1960s to restore his burial place, is among the four American Revolution folders. A number of Delawareans, no matter how much they disliked taxation, remained loyal to Great Britain. Newark: University of Delaware Press, 1988. Also available on Reference Reel R-77. Historical Register of Officers of the Continental Army During the War of the Revolution. . . Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1974. Washington, D.C.: Library of Congress, 1972. The compensation of soldiers was a concern due to the collapse of the currency system. Many of these letters relating to the Revolution may also be found in George Herbert Rydens The Letters of Caesar Rodney, 1756-1784 (see bibliography section). Part of the II Corps it served in the Eastern Theater of the American Civil War. Photostat. Conrad, Henry. Contains two folders pertaining to McLanes Revolutionary War activities. The Dr. The letterbook shows date, name of addressee, matters under consideration, and signature of Eleazer McComb. American Revolutionary War. Photostat. . This was especially true in lower Delaware where the areas isolation and conservatism, the influence of the Anglican Church, and the presence of British ships offshore kept many loyal to the Crown. (Albany: New York State American Revolution Bicentennial Commission and Champlain Valley Committee for the Observance of the Bicentennial of the American Revolution, n.d.). [Congressional Bills 118th Congress] [From the U.S. Government Publishing Office] [H.R. In 1774, Rodney, McKean, and Read were selected by the Assembly to represent Delaware at the Continental Congress. (Original painting in Delaware Public Archives.). Box 1 contains correspondence through 1774. Proceedings and correspondence, Kent County Committee of Correspondence (transcripts from Historical Society of Delaware), 1774-1775, 7. Commanders of the Delaware Regiment 1776-1779, 11. Skinner, Mrs. G.S. When a soldier became too old or disabled he would request his pension. A Plan of the Delaware River from Chester to Philadelphia. 1777. Peery, Lynn. 1, Baltimore: Williams and Williams Company, 1915; Vol. Rockaway, N.J.: American Faculty Press, 1975. The Third Lantern for the Third Century, ca. 1820). Revolutionary War: Delaware Was First (Box 1 & 2). The regiment would see action during the New York Campaign, Battle of Trenton, Battle of Princeton, Battle of Brandywine, Battle of Germantown and the Battle of Guilford Court House. 16mm motion picture. A photostat of the proceedings details a call for delegates to an expected colonial congress, and the forming of the New Castle County Committee of Correspondence. In this arrangement, similar to that of other new states, the legislative branch was more powerful; as well as choosing the executive, it also nominated justices of the peace.(4). Entries for each account include disbursements for prisoners of war, the commissarys department, transportation, the hospital department, quartermasters department, contingent expenses, forage department, and for arms, ammunition, and ordnance stores. The following is a list of maps located in the map collection, and maps found in the vertical file collection. Pay rolls and regiment returns list the name, rank, and time of service of soldiers and officers. Elting, John Robert. Adjusted and allowed claims, 1792-1796, 12. Anderson, Enoch, 1753 or 4-1824. . 29. Delaware played an important role in the formation of the United States of America, being the first to ratify the new federal constitution. New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press, 1974. Books relating to the American Revolution may be found in the Research Room. Personal Income Tax Ann Arbor: University Microfilms, 1975. Regulations for American troops (2 military manuals), 1775-1782, 5. Letters to Caesar Rodney (transcripts), 1776, 6. Lefferts, Charles Mackubin. Clark, David Sanders. Orders to Thomas Collins, Kent Militia, n.d. 4. 1777. Munroe, John A. Verification of pensions for Jacob Caulk, Edward Whaley, Joseph Williams, Benjamin Lane, Charles Hamilton and John Alexander, 1818, 29. General RodneyJohn Dagworthy correspondence, 1777, 20. Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Company, 1981. Also available on Reference Reel R-77. Topics of correspondence from 1776 includes the appointment of generals, the purchase of arms, Dickinsons reservations regarding the Declaration of Independence, and Dickinsons service with his troops in New Jersey. Related Topics:American Revolution, Delaware History, Early Delaware History, Revolutionary War, Revolutionary War Guide, Sons of the American Revolution, Delaware's Governor Life and Correspondence of George Read. Baltimore: Southern Book Company, 1955. 1858. These records contain a variety of primary and secondary material. The regiment was under the command of Colonel John Haslet, killed at the Battle of Princeton, and then under Colonel David Hall. The National Archives holds records relating to military service during the Revolutionary War, including both Continental troops and state troops that served as Continental troops. Landing at the Head of Elk in Maryland, British forces marched through Delaware. The Council of Safety supervised county Committees of Inspection and Observation and militias, and was responsible for raising the first Delaware regiment commanded by John Haslet. Cambridge, Mass. I & II. 20. With the coming of war and changes in government, loyalists in Delaware moved beyond letter-writing and verbal comment. . On December 5, 2018, the State of Delaware announced that it had acquired the historic property at Cooch's Bridge, site of the only Revolutionary War battle to take place in the First State. These books include rosters, muster rolls, histories, diaries, and other documents listing Pennsylvanian troops. #405: Aitkens Register account of Delaware, 1774, 20. 2. . Whiteley, William G. The Revolutionary Soldiers of Delaware. Sussex County, A true state of the general disaffection (photocopies), 1776, Revolutionary War Records, General Assembly, 1776 (2 folders), 1. Entries show ledger number, account title, reason for disbursement (military, order of General Assembly, salaries, and services rendered to the state) or receipt (tax, fee, or fine collected), date of entry, totals, and reference to entry in a ledger. Each of the counties, New Castle, Kent, and Sussex, formed such a committee. Liberty and Independence: The Delaware State during the Revolution. Edward Kearney, letter to the governor of Delaware, n.d. 2. . Catharine Meritt, re: William Dowdle, 1837, RG 1800.111 Military Pension Receipt Books, 1817-1829 (1 Box). The second folder includes letters from correspondents such as General Light-Horse Harry Lee and George Washington, returns of Lees partisan corps, to which McLane was attached for a time, troop returns, and pay rolls from this period. 1919. Abraham Wiles and Major Hitchens, letter from H. Ridgely, 1820, 55. New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press, 1954. Position of the Army Near Aikens Tavern. 1777 (8). (Also contains information on the Delaware regiments of the Continental Army) General orders, muster rolls, returns of provisions, pay rolls, lists for depreciation of pay, a history of the Delaware line, commissary accounts, extracts from the Minutes of the Privy Council, recruiting accounts, exchange of prisoners of war, miscellaneous receipts and accounts, women members of the Delaware Regiment, extracts from the State Auditors journal, miscellaneous items. Soldiers awaiting depreciation certificates, 1779-1780, 21. New York: American Heritage Publishing Company, 1958. Delaware Tercentenary Commission map of Delaware, with illustrations, 1938. On 1 December 1776, the end of their enlistment, Patterson and his men returned home. Letter from President of the convention, New Castle County (photocopy), 1776, 10. The acquisition included ten acres, several outbuildings, and the Cooch family's ancestral home, a three-story structure built circa 1760. Typescript copies of correspondence transcribed from Peter Forces American Archives series and the Papers of the Continental Congress may also be found. The Blues saw little action the remainder of 1779 and they wintered at Morristown, New Jersey. Thomas Kitchin, Sr. Seat of the War in the Environs of Philadelphia . General John Sullivans Indian Expedition, 1779. (Pennsylvania Historical Commission, 1929). Proceedings and correspondence, New Castle County Committee of Correspondence (transcripts, photostats, originals), 1774-1775, Revolutionary War Records, Committee of Inspection and Observation, 1775-1777 (4 folders), 1. Soundings . Petitions for pay are found here, as are letters concerning Pennsylvania troops and the ongoing peace process. Taunton: Historic Reproductions, 1975. 2, 1950. Regiment returns, expenditure accounts, supply requisition, receipt for supplies, officer rosters, receipt for pay, account voucher, list of pay rates, salary listing, Assembly resolution appointing commissioners of inspection, officer evaluations, commissioners reports, muster rolls, subsistence rolls. . An index to the journal and order book found among the Kirkwood papers. R-26.1R-26.4: John Dickinson material in the R. R. Logan Collection at the Historical Society of Pennsylvania. In July 1775, the Sussex County Committee of Inspection suspected Thomas Robinson of expressing Tory sympathies. Supply and requisition of cartridges, n.d. 5. Certificates of military service, 1784, 36. A Revolutionary War-era flag from the First State and the man who captured it are having a reunion of sorts. 16. Division of Historical and Cultural Affairs. Box 6 contains photostats of Tilton correspondence from throughout the Revolutionary period. Louder Calloway and John Stevens(on), 1829, 62. 16. 1. Charlottesville: Published for the Friends of the John Dickinson Plantation by the University Press of Virginia, 1983. (9), More men was not long in coming. During that time, the Delaware militia defeated loyalist forces in Kent County. The personal accounts date mostly from the 1800s. Loyalists were active along the Delaware, and the need for a schooner for protection against Loyalist forays is raised in Dickinsons correspondence. Acts of Congress concerning hospitals are also included (typescript copies). Guide to Federal Records in the National Archives. 1. Hastings-on-Hudson, N.Y.: N.p., 1966. Strasburg, Va.: Shenandoah Publishing House, 1935. . 5. R-50: James B. Jackson, A History of Lieutenant-Colonel Henry Neills Second Delaware Regiment of Militia in the War of the American Revolution, 1959. Top Consequences of the Battle . 2. Dedication of State House/Independence Festival 76, event poster, 1976. Livingston recruited men from Chambly, Quebec as early as September 1775 19. 23. During September and October, the British occupied Wilmington. Subjects of legislation include money bills, acts pertaining to the militia, punishment of treason, raising troops, punishment for desertion, the export of provisions overseas, pardon for those swearing allegiance to the state, the quartering of soldiers, ratification and amending of the Articles of Confederation, recovery of public debts, prevention of fraud within the quartermaster and commissary departments, suspending the use of Continental bills of credit as legal tender, protection of trade on the Delaware river and bay, and determining depreciation of pay. Harry Schenawolf, in his Revolutionary War Journal article "Battle of Mamaroneck . Other accounts include the depreciation of pay to the Delaware Regiment. They include letters asking for funds to defend the state, letters from Caesar Rodney asking individuals to break away from the British Crown, and correspondence between Rodney and the Assembly. James Tilton of Delaware, 1745-1822: A Patriotic Doctor in Our Two Wars with Britain, which apparently was never published. The 1st Canadian Regiment, an Extra Continental regiment, was raised by James Livingston to support Colonial efforts in the American Revolutionary War during the invasion of Quebec. . The 1st and 2nd Regiments went on to form the Legion of the United States in 1792 which later became the foundation of the United States Army in 1796. . T. J. Wharton. At Long Island, the 1st Delaware Regiment (pictured here) fought alongside the Marylanders on the American right flank. Maryland Revolutionary Records. B. Lippincott and Co., 1870. (10), The war had come to Delaware. Robert Wilcox petition, surgeon of the Second Delaware Regiment of Militia, 1780, 32. Tax Center Washington, D.C.: American Revolution Bicentennial Office, 1975. RG 1315.008 Auditor of Accounts Waste Book, 1784-1796. #149: Revolutionary Warmilitary records, bounty warrants, HMS Roebuck, Delaware soldiers burial sites, Coochs Bridge, 10. Photostat. 1814. Claims settlements include disbursements for prisoners of war, Commissary Department, transportation, Hospital Department, Quartermasters Department, and depreciation of pay. Passages from the Remembrancer of Christopher Marshall. The first Delaware regiment was no more. : Raymond B. Clark, 1976. Record types contained in this collection include: Muster rolls Payrolls Strength returns Misc., personnel, pay, and supply records of American Army units Correspondence re: Dover Light Infantry (photostat), 1776, 5. These records may be found on microfilm. Letters to His Wife from Dr. John McKinly. Typescript, n.d. Lodge, Henry Cabot, ed. Photostat. 1st Pennsylvania Regiment (Revolutionary War) Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Military Records Pennsylvania in the Revolutionary War 1st Pennsylvania Regiment Brief History Also known as the Pennsylvania Rifle Battalion and Thompson's Rifle Battalion. Position of the Division under Lt. Gen. Knyphausen at Cecil Church, Sep. 1777. 1777 (6). Officer rosters, regiment returns, pay rolls, muster rolls, casualty reports, list of officers and men to be struck from muster rolls, reports to the President of Delaware State, lists of prisoners of war, list of discharges, inspection reports, passes. Revolutionary War Records, Accounts, 1776-1807 (23 folders). Haslet and his men managed to capture thirty-six men and a collection of weapons and blankets. Battle of Brandewyne on the 11th September, 1777. 1777. State Agencies 18. 1976, RG 8005.046 Department of Public InstructionMotion Pictures Collection. Letter from David Hall, Council of Safety (photocopy), 1776, 8. Report of the Valley Forge Park Commission. Land claim bonus for Levin McGee by John McGee, 1779, 27. Those who refused were ineligible to hold office, vote or serve on juries. Boatner, Mark Mayo. Wayne, 1806). Dickens, Charles W., ed. Ford, Paul Leicester, ed. . U.S., Revolutionary War Pension and Bounty-Land Warrant Application Files, 1800-1900. Folder 2 contains pay rolls and muster rolls from 1777-1780, and January 1781, another musical notation, a furlough from 1779, and regiment returns from August and November 1781. Facsimile reproduction. Committees to ensure compliance with boycott agreements were also formed. Boulder: Colorado Associated University Press, 1978. Conrad, Robert T., ed. A Brief Sketch of Captain Joseph Davis and Lieutenant William Jones of the Pennsylvania Line. Londahl-Smidt, Donald M. Notes Concerning the Uniform of the Delaware Battalion. Military Collector & Historian XIX, no. Pyle, Katharine. Muster Roll of the Late Delaware Regiment now the First Company in the Second Battalion of Col. William's Regiment of Infantry serving in the Southern Army of the United States for the Month of November 1780 . In February, at the battle of Guilford Court House, 15 March 1781, the Delaware troops held their own against the British.

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