Killing England

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Killing England Page 34

by Bill O'Reilly


  fur hat

  ill health of

  in London

  in Paris

  physical appearance of

  as printer and inventor

  transatlantic crossing

  women and

  Franklin, Deborah Read

  Franklin, James

  Franklin, Josiah

  Franklin, William

  Franklin, William Temple

  Fraunces Tavern

  Frederick the Great

  Freeman’s Farm

  French and Indian War

  Braddock’s Defeat

  frostbite

  Gainey, Micajah

  Gates, Horatio

  Saratoga battles

  George II, king of England

  George III, king of England

  arsenic poisoning

  descent into madness

  end of war

  robes of

  George IV, king of England

  Georgia

  Germain, George

  Germantown, Battle of

  German troops. See Hessians

  Germany

  Gibbons, Mary

  gin

  Gist, Mordecai

  Glorious Revolution

  Grant, James

  Gray, Thomas

  Great Chain

  Great Lakes

  Greene, Caty

  Greene, Nathanael

  Greensboro, North Carolina

  grog

  Guadeloupe, HMS

  guerrilla warfare

  Guilford Courthouse, Battle of

  gun deck

  gunpowder

  Hale, Nathan

  Halkett, Peter

  Hamilton, Alexander

  death of

  postwar life

  at Yorktown

  Hamilton, Elizabeth Schuyler

  Hamilton, William

  Hancock, John

  hand-to-hand combat

  hangings

  Harcourt, William

  Harrison, Benjamin

  Hartley, David

  Heath, William

  Hemings, Betty

  Hemings, Robert

  Hemings, Sally

  Henry, Patrick

  Henry VIII, king of England

  Hessians

  Heyward, Thomas, Jr.

  Hickey, Thomas

  hanging of

  Hillsborough, Lord (Wills Hill)

  Holland

  Honeyman, John

  horses

  hospitals

  House of Commons

  House of Lords

  Howard, Lord (Charles Howard)

  Howard, William

  Howe, Richard

  Howe, William

  at Germantown

  New York campaign

  postwar life

  Hudson River

  Hudson River Valley

  Huntington, Ebenezer

  Huntington, Samuel

  Hutchinson, Thomas

  Hutchinson letters

  Independence Day

  Independence Hall

  India

  Intolerable Acts. See Coercive Acts

  Ireland

  iron production

  Iroquois Indians

  Jackson, Andrew

  Jackson, Elizabeth Hutchinson

  Jamaica

  Jamaica Pass

  James, John

  Jameson, John

  James River

  James II, king of England

  Jamestown

  Jay, John

  Jefferson, Jane

  Jefferson, Lucy Elizabeth

  Jefferson, Martha

  Jefferson, Mary

  Jefferson, Patsy

  Jefferson, Thomas

  death of

  Declaration of Independence

  essays by

  as governor of Virginia

  independence debate

  at Monticello

  notebook of

  postwar life

  Sally Hemings and

  slaves of

  Johnson, Thomas

  Johnson, William

  Jones, John Paul

  at Flamborough Head

  postwar life

  Jouett, Jack

  Keith, William

  Kentucky

  Ketchum, Isaac

  King’s Closet

  Kings Mountain, Battle of

  Knox, Henry

  Lafayette, Marquis de

  postwar life

  latrines

  Laurens, Henry

  Laurens, John

  Lee, Charles

  capture of

  Lee, Henry “Lighthorse Harry”

  Lee, Richard Henry

  Lee, Robert E.

  Leutze, Emanuel, Washington Crossing the Delaware

  Lexington, Battle of

  Liberty Bell

  lice

  Lincoln, Abraham

  Lincoln, Benjamin

  Livingston, Robert

  London

  London Chronicle

  Long Island

  long rifle

  Loring, Elizabeth

  Loring, Joshua

  Louisiana

  Louisiana Purchase

  Louis XVI, king of France

  Loyalists

  African American

  postwar

  in South Carolina

  Luzerne, Chevalier de la

  Madison, James

  Maine

  malaria

  Manhattan, See also New York City

  Manuel, Louis-Pierre

  Marion, Francis

  at Blue Savannah

  postwar life

  Maryland

  Massachusetts

  Bunker Hill

  charter revoked

  Lexington and Concord

  militia

  siege of Boston

  Masters-Penn Mansion

  Matthews, David

  Mawhood, John

  McKean, Thomas

  McKonkey’s Ferry

  Mercer, Hugh

  merchant vessels 123

  Middleton, Arthur

  military drills

  militias. See also specific state militias

  Mississippi River

  mixed-race children

  Mohawk Indians

  molasses

  Molasses Act

  Moncks Corner, South Carolina

  Monmouth, Battle of

  Monroe, James

  Montagu, John

  Monticello

  Montreal

  Morgan, Daniel

  Morgan’s Riflemen

  Morris, Robert

  Morristown, New Jersey

  Mount Pleasant

  Mount Vernon

  Mount Whoredom

  muskets

  wet

  Native Americans

  French and Indian War

  war tactics

  see also specific tribes

  Nelson, Thomas

  New Brunswick

  Newburgh, New York

  New England Courant

  New France

  New Hampshire

  New Jersey

  militia

  Monmouth

  Princeton

  Trenton

  wartime

  New London

  New Orleans, Battle of

  New York

  militia

  Saratoga battles

  New York City

  Brooklyn battle

  retaken by Washington

  wartime

  New York Harbor

  Nicolls, Mari

  Norfolk, Virginia

  North, Lord (Frederick North)

  North Carolina

  wartime

  North Castle, New York

  Nova Scotia

  nurses

  O’Hara, Charles

  Ohio River Valley

  Old Stone House

  Olive Branch Petition

  Oswald, Richard

  Paine, Thomasr />
  The American Crisis

  Common Sense

  Paoli’s Massacre

  Paris

  society

  Treaty of Paris

  Parliament

  end of war

  patriots

  Patton, George S.

  Paulding, John

  Pearson, Richard

  Pee Dee River

  Penn, Richard

  Penn, William

  Pennsylvania

  Germantown

  militia

  Valley Forge

  Pennsylvania Gazette

  Pennsylvania State House

  Philadelphia

  British occupation of

  society

  Pitt, William (Lord Chatham)

  Poor Richard’s Almanack

  Portugal

  Potomac River

  powder monkeys

  presidential election, first

  Presidential Mansion

  primogeniture

  Princeton

  Battle of

  prison ships, British

  privateering

  privy

  Privy Council

  Proclamation for Suppressing Rebellion and Sedition, A

  propaganda

  prostitution

  Prussians

  public executions

  Putnam, Israel

  Quakers

  Quebec

  Quincy, Josiah

  Rall, Johann

  rape

  Read, George

  Reed, John

  refugees

  religion

  Reprisal, USS

  Revolutionary War

  Arnold’s treason

  beginning of

  Blue Savannah

  Brooklyn Heights

  Bunker Hill

  casualties

  Delaware River crossings

  end of

  fall of Charleston

  Flamborough Head

  French alliance

  Germantown

  Lexington and Concord

  Monmouth

  in New Jersey

  in New York City

  peace talks

  Princeton

  Saratoga battles

  siege of Boston

  in South Carolina

  surrender of British Army

  Treaty of Paris

  Trenton

  Valley Forge

  Virginia campaign

  Yorktown

  see also British Army; Continental Army; militias; specific battles and officers

  Rhode Island

  Richmond

  British invasion of

  Ritchie, Juliana

  roads

  Rochambeau, John-Baptiste

  Rodney, Caesar

  Roman Empire

  royal colonies

  Royal Society

  rum

  Rush, Benjamin

  Rutledge, Edward

  Rutledge, John

  St. James’s Palace

  sanitation, poor

  Santee River

  Saratoga, First Battle of

  Saratoga, Second Battle of

  Savage, HMS

  Savannah

  scalping

  Scammell, Alexander

  Schuyler, Philip

  science

  “scorched earth” policy

  Scotland

  Selden, Ezra

  sentries

  Serapis, HMS

  Seven Nations of Canada

  Seven Years’ War. See French and Indian War

  Shawnee Indians

  Sherman, Robert

  Shippen, Edward IV

  Shippen, Peggy. See Arnold, Peggy Shippen

  shipping

  merchant vessels

  smuggling

  shoes, shortage of

  Six Nations

  slavery

  smallpox

  inoculation

  Smith, Joshua Hett

  South Carolina

  Blue Savannah

  fall of Charleston

  militia

  wartime

  Spain

  Armada

  spies

  British

  French

  Loyalist

  of Washington

  Stacey, Samuel

  Stamp Act

  stand of arms

  Stansbury, Joseph

  Staten Island

  Staten Island Peace Conference

  Stephen, Adam

  Sterne, Laurence, The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman

  Stevenson, Margaret

  Stevenson, Polly

  sugar

  Sugar Act

  Sullivan, John

  Sumter, Thomas

  Supreme Court, U.S.

  Tappan, New York

  Tarleton, Banastre

  postwar life

  Tarrytown, New York

  taverns

  taxation

  tea

  textiles

  Thomas, John

  Thompson, Elizabeth

  Thomson, Charles

  Tilghman, Tench

  Till, Hannah

  tobacco

  Tories

  Townshend Acts

  trade

  transatlantic crossing

  treason

  of Benedict Arnold

  high

  Treaty of Alliance between France and the United States

  Treaty of Paris

  Trenton, Battle of

  Trumbull, John

  Tryon, William

  United States, birth of

  Valley Forge

  conditions

  Van Arsdale, Jack

  Van Wart, Isaac

  Vergennes, Count of

  Vernier, Pierre-François

  Virginia

  legislature

  militia

  society

  wartime

  Yorktown

  von Steuben, Baron

  postwar life

  voting rights

  Vulture, HMS

  wagons

  Wales

  Walpole, Horace

  Ward, Artemis

  War of 1812

  Warren, James

  Washington, DC

  Washington, George

  Arnold’s treason

  assassination plot against

  becomes commander of Continental Army

  Brooklyn defeat

  Cornwallis surrenders to

  council of war

  death of

  Delaware River crossings

  elected president

  end of war

  false teeth of

  French and Indian War

  at Germantown

  horses and

  ill health of

  Life Guards of

  military strategy

  at Monmouth

  in New Jersey

  New York campaign

  personality of

  in Philadelphia

  plot to capture Arnold

  postwar life

  at Princeton

  retakes New York City

  siege of Boston

  slavery and

  smallpox and

  spies of

  at Trenton

  at Valley Forge

  at West Point

  at Yorktown

  Washington, John Augustine

  Washington, Lawrence

  Washington, Lund

  Washington, Martha

  Wayles, John

  Wedderburn, Alexander

  Weems, Mason

  West Indies

  Westminster Abbey

  West Point

  Whig Party

  White, Joseph

  Whitehall Palace

  White’s tavern

  Wickes, Lambert

  Wilkinson, James

  William of Orange

  Williams, David

  Williamsburg, Virginia

  With
erspoon, John

  women

  Parisian

  prostitutes

  rape

  wartime role of

  Wythe, George

  “Yankee Doodle” (song)

  Yates, Bartholomew

  York, Pennsylvania

  York River

  Yorktown

  Siege of

  trench preparation

  ALSO BY BILL O’REILLY AND MARTIN DUGARD

  Killing Lincoln

  Killing Kennedy

  Killing Jesus

  Killing Patton

  Killing Reagan

  Killing the Rising Sun

  About the Authors

  BILL O’REILLY is the trailblazing TV journalist who has experienced unprecedented success on cable news and in writing thirteen national number-one bestselling nonfiction books. There are currently more than 17 million books in the Killing series in print. He lives on Long Island. You can sign up for email updates here.

  MARTIN DUGARD is the New York Times bestselling author of several books of history, among them the Killing series, Into Africa, and The Explorers. He and his wife live in Southern California. You can sign up for email updates here.

  Thank you for buying this

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  For email updates on Bill O’Reilly, click here.

  For email updates on Martin Dugard, click here.

  Contents

  Title Page

  Copyright Notice

  Dedication

  Acknowledgments

  Prologue

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  Chapter 34

  Chapter 35

  Epilogue

  Postscript

  Notes

  Sources

  Illustration Credits

  Index

  Also by Bill O’Reilly and Martin Dugard

  About the Authors

  Copyright

  KILLING ENGLAND. Copyright © 2017 by Henry Holt. All rights reserved. For information, address Henry Holt and Co., 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10010.

  www.billoreilly.com

  www.henryholt.com

  Cover design by Rick Pracher

  Our e-books may be purchased in bulk for promotional, educational, or business use. Please contact the Macmillan Corporate and Premium Sales Department at 1-800-221-7945, extension 5442, or by e-mail at [email protected].

  CIP data from the Library of Congress for the print edition is available.

  e-ISBN 978-1-62779-065-9

  First Edition: September 2017

 

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