“The Forgotten Revolution” covers 12 sites. He’s visited them, spoken to local residents — Mayers calls them “witnesses,” — many of whom have ancestors who lived in the area during the war for independence or who served in the army and wrote about their experiences in diaries or letters. Others are specialized historians, such as re-enactors, who have studied specific regiments and their battles, or members of local historical societies who have acquired and studied original documents involving the area.
Early on, in 1777, the British came from the Amboys and tried to draw Washington out of Bridgewater. They wanted him on the plains of New Jersey to fight a “European-style battle on the plains, with two armies facing each other and firing into each other,” he said.
Washington, who was at Washington Rock in Watchung, could see the lines of British coming. They came through Edison and Metuchen, and Washington sent Lord Stirling with a detachment of about 1,000 soldiers to Plainfield, telling him to “Guard my flank … hold these people off ‘til I get to safety,” Mayers said.
If you love American history or just enjoy the history of the Garden State along comes a very interesting late-summer read.
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