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1001 Heroes, Legends, Histories & Mysteries Podcast

BEST OF (#38 OF 510) UNSUNG HEROES OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION (PT I): WASHINGTON'S SPIES

1001 Heroes, Legends, Histories & Mysteries Podcast

Jon Hagadorn

Society & Culture, History

4.4 • 1.7K Ratings

🗓️ 22 November 2024

⏱️ 55 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Unsung Heroes of the American Revolution (Pt 1): The Culper Spy Ring, Nathan Hale, and others: Few people leaving the Banana Republic Store at 66th and 3rd st Manhattan, NY, stop to notice the plaque on the outside wall that mentions the spot less than 100 yards away where courageous young Nathan Hale spoke his famous last words “I regret that have but one life to give for my country’- before being hung from a tree by his British captors. And many probably have no idea how and why those words stirred General Washington’s heart so profoundly when he heard them. And Lady Gaga probably had no idea that her Rivington Street Rebels derived their name from Washington’s greatest spy- James Rivington- or the Beastie Boys, for that matter, when they chose a picture of Manhattan’s Rivington Street for the cover of their album ,Paul’s Boutique. Or the people leaving the Burger King at the intersection of Gregory Ave. and River Dr. in Passaic NJ who drop trash near the forlorn historical marker located on a small concrete pad right there near a utility pole in the parking lot…the sign that just begins to note the incredible accomplishments of a one-time British Lord, William Alexander –better known , and loved, by his Continental Troops as Lord Sterling. Although it says much more, these few words say it all: “American Patriot, Friend of George Washington”. The American Revolution stretched for eight years, from 1775 to 1783, during which time Commander in Chief George Washington had to depend on his network of spies and most trusted soldiers to stay one step ahead of the noose. The AMC series TURN, based on Alexander Rose's book "Washington's Spies", gives a highly fictionalized account of the actions of Washington's greatest spy ring- The Culper Ring. This is the real story of the courageous men and women who risked and sometimes suffered hanging, beginning with Nathan Hale. While Part I focusses mainly on the Culper Spy Ring,, Part Two will provide many rarely told stories about the unsung heroes who risked everything for the cause of liberty, including the slave spy James Armistead Lafayette, Margaret Corbin, Molly Pitcher, Francis Marion , aka The Swamp Fox, and many others. George Washington's Secret Six: The Spy Ring That Saved the American Revolution (New York: Penguin, 2013), 105-108. DHT Shipley $ Michael Burns, Coffee, Tea, & Conspiracy, www.breedshill.org Beverly Tyler: A Case for Anna Smith Strong: Three Village Historical Society.org Alexander Rose. Washington's Spies. (New York: Bantam Dell, 2006) Music: Mattia Cupelli: The Call; Sam Garner, Patriotic Theme

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Transcript

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0:00.0

The date is September 21st, 1776, and you find yourself sitting on a crude bench in a marquee tent on the property of a lush New York City mansion.

0:11.7

Your only company, a uniformed British engineer named Captain Montresor, who has been assigned to guard you until the hour of your execution,

0:21.7

which is scheduled to take place later this morning at 11 a.m.

0:26.2

Outside, two armed guards quietly watch and listen.

0:31.4

Your mind is spinning between panic and clarity,

0:34.7

memories of the events of the day,

0:36.4

mixing with memories of your short life of 20

0:39.1

years. Your possessions, your uniform, your commission, even the buckles of your shoes,

0:45.7

were left behind at Hempstead after you crossed the Long Island Sound in a longboat in the

0:50.7

dark of the night, avoiding the British patrol ships to protect the fleet in the New York Harbor.

0:56.3

You had only recently joined the Continental Army and volunteered for a mission in British-occupied New York City

1:02.2

that you thought might break up the boredom of camp life and strike a note for the common good as well.

1:08.7

For days you posed as a teacher from Connecticut looking for work,

1:12.3

and all the while secretly gleaning information regarding numbers of British ships in the harbor,

1:17.4

talking to locals, casually asking about troop movements, taking notes and making sketches.

1:23.9

This was exciting work, important work, and much more intriguing than building fortifications

1:29.3

is suffering the tedious boredom of army life between engagements.

1:33.3

There had been no training for this mission, just a request for volunteers, and you accepted it,

1:39.3

despite the advice of your friend and former Yale classmate, now Captain William Hull.

1:45.0

And you might have pulled it off until the fires, likely started by fellow rebels,

1:50.0

broke out in the now British occupied city, creating panic in the streets as men tried to douse flames and save wooden buildings.

1:58.0

And British soldiers scoured the streets hunting for the troublemakers. You headed north

...

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