Valley Forge
All through the winter of 1777 and '78 the British and the
American armies lay only twenty miles apart. The
redcoats with their commander, General Howe, were
quartered in Philadelphia. There they were entertained
by the Tories who gave parties, and balls and dinners,
and did all in their power to make the winter a
pleasant one for these British soldiers.
Twenty miles away, in a rocky, desolate, mountain gorge
known as Valley Forge, Washington had led his army from
White Marsh. When he went there in bitter December
weather, his men, shoeless and almost naked, had
marked their way with blood from their bare feet. They
reached the valley, and for want of tents were obliged
to cut down trees and build huts of logs for shelter
from the cold. Congress had no money to pay the men,
no money to buy them food. For days and days together,
during this winter, they had no bread and lived upon
salt pork alone. They sickened with hunger and cold,
and there was no money to buy medicines, no comfortable
hospitals where they could be nursed. They were ragged
and without shoes.
It was a terrible winter for them all. Washington's
brave heart ached, and sometimes was very heavy as he
saw his men starving, and freezing, and dying. It
seemed almost as if the cause of the colonists must be
given up. But you have heard the saying that "it is
always darkest just before day." And so it proved just
now; for in the spring word came from France that aid
was to be sent them from that country. When the
British heard this, they would have been very glad to
make peace with the colonists. Indeed, messengers were
sent over from England with very liberal
offers—offers which, before the war, the colonists
would have accepted; but that time was past now. Then
these messengers tried to bribe some of the officers in
the patriot army. One man, General Reed of
Pennsylvania, was offered ten thousand guineas and
distinguished honors if he would exert his influence to
effect a reconciliation. "I am not
worth purchasing," said the honest patriot, "but such
as I am, the king of Great Britain is not rich enough
to buy me."
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