Dallas Public Library

"Villainy and maddness", Washington's Flying Camp, by Richard Lee Baker

Label
"Villainy and maddness", Washington's Flying Camp, by Richard Lee Baker
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references (p. 109-113) and index
Illustrations
mapsillustrations
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
"Villainy and maddness"
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
700421388
Responsibility statement
by Richard Lee Baker
Sub title
Washington's Flying Camp
Summary
"The "Flying Camp" is a vaguely understood episode of the American Revolution. In May 1776 the Continental Congress authorized the formation of a force of 10,000 militia, conceived by General George Washington as a "mobile reserve" that would both defend the army's garrisons in the Middle States and spread alarm amongst the British. Most, but not all, of the putative organization was to come from the states of New York, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and Maryland. In point of fact, the Flying Camp was an idea and in actuality barely survived the year. In the wake of the New York and New Jersey campaigns of 1776 it became abundantly clear that what Washington needed was a reliable and substantial Continental Army, not short-term, undersubscribed militia haphazardly organized under the chimera of a "Flying Camp." Despite its unsustainability as a military concept, the officers and noncommissioned members of the various elements of the Flying Camp rendered important service to the Nation in the campaigns of Long Island, Trenton, and Princeton, among others. Drawing on original sources, particularly the correspondence of the Continental Congress, state committees of safety, the George Washington papers, and more, Baker fills in the gaps in the history of the Flying Camp that have eluded historians until now. In his able hands, we trace the Flying Camp from its beginnings in Washington's imagination, to the dispatches of the new Congress enjoining the Middle States to commit specified numbers of militiamen to this important cause, to the logistical difficulties in achieving the objectives in General Washington's master plan, and to the actual service of Flying Camp militia in the campaigns of 1776." -- Publisher
resource.variantTitle
Villainy and madnessWashington's Flying Camp
Classification
Mapped to