Sally Wister was a 16-year-old Quaker maiden when the British, who had already overtaken New York, threatened Philadelphia. Her family left the city for the safety of the farm of William & Hannah Foulke ("Aunt" Foulke), some 15 miles from the city, in the countryside of Gwynedd, Pennsylvania.
From September 1777 to July 1778, she kept a journal to tell her friend Debby everything that happened, as the American Army marched by and the British invaded their encampment 6 miles away, and she offered descriptions from headquarters, to camps, to social occasions.
During those months, the British captured Philadelphia, battles and skirmishes were held, Burgoyne surrendered, General Washington entrenched at Whitemarsh, and then encamped for the winter at Valley Forge, a cabal rose against Washington, France acknowledged American independence, and, finally, the British withdrew.
This girl, at once a proper Quaker maiden and an enthralled teenager, met with (and fancied) Continental officers, hosted General Smallwood, visited the Americans' camps, and showed us real examples of the fears of war, when brought to your door. (The Quakers were sympathetic to the cause of the revolution, but religiously anti-war.)
This is a terrific resource -- reading like a novel, yet a real, historical autobiography, a primary source, showing the human side of the American Revolution, as the war swirled around her. Written in the language and spelling of the day, it offers a fresh and vital look
The republication of the 1902 edition of the book offers an excellent Introduction by Albert Cook Meyers, placing all the events in context and giving the Wister and Foulke family backgrounds.
From September 1777 to July 1778, she kept a journal to tell her friend Debby everything that happened, as the American Army marched by and the British invaded their encampment 6 miles away, and she offered descriptions from headquarters, to camps, to social occasions.
During those months, the British captured Philadelphia, battles and skirmishes were held, Burgoyne surrendered, General Washington entrenched at Whitemarsh, and then encamped for the winter at Valley Forge, a cabal rose against Washington, France acknowledged American independence, and, finally, the British withdrew.
This girl, at once a proper Quaker maiden and an enthralled teenager, met with (and fancied) Continental officers, hosted General Smallwood, visited the Americans' camps, and showed us real examples of the fears of war, when brought to your door. (The Quakers were sympathetic to the cause of the revolution, but religiously anti-war.)
This is a terrific resource -- reading like a novel, yet a real, historical autobiography, a primary source, showing the human side of the American Revolution, as the war swirled around her. Written in the language and spelling of the day, it offers a fresh and vital look
The republication of the 1902 edition of the book offers an excellent Introduction by Albert Cook Meyers, placing all the events in context and giving the Wister and Foulke family backgrounds.
From September 1777 to July 1778, she kept a journal to tell her friend Debby everything that happened, as the American Army marched by and the British invaded their encampment 6 miles away, and she offered descriptions from headquarters, to camps, to social occasions.
During those months, the British captured Philadelphia, battles and skirmishes were held, Burgoyne surrendered, General Washington entrenched at Whitemarsh, and then encamped for the winter at Valley Forge, a cabal rose against Washington, France acknowledged American independence, and, finally, the British withdrew.
This girl, at once a proper Quaker maiden and an enthralled teenager, met with (and fancied) Continental officers, hosted General Smallwood, visited the Americans' camps, and showed us real examples of the fears of war, when brought to your door. (The Quakers were sympathetic to the cause of the revolution, but religiously anti-war.)
This is a terrific resource -- reading like a novel, yet a real, historical autobiography, a primary source, showing the human side of the American Revolution, as the war swirled around her. Written in the language and spelling of the day, it offers a fresh and vital look at the War.
Another edition, the Library-Binding republication of the 1902 edition, offers an excellent Introduction by Albert Cook Meyers, placing all the events in context and giving the Wister and Foulke family backgrounds.