Life and Times of Washington, Volume 2 Revised, Enlarged, and Enriched

audiobook

Life and Times of Washington, Volume 2 Revised, Enlarged, and Enriched

by John Frederick Schroeder, Benson John Lossing

EN·~31 hours·35 chapters

Chapters

35 total

LIFE AND TIMES OF WASHINGTON - VOLUME II

0:02

By John F. Schroeder and Benson John Lossing

0:29

VOLUME II. PART IV. Washington Continental Commander-in-Chief. 1775-1783.

0:04

CHAPTER X. — WASHINGTON OUT-GENERALS HOWE. 1777.

1:36:58

CHAPTER XI. — WASHINGTON HOLDS HOWE IN CHECK. 1777.

1:07:16

CHAPTER XII. — BURGOYNE'S INVASION OF NEW YORK PUNISHED BY SCHUYLER AND GATES. 1777.

1:23:30

CHAPTER XIII. — WASHINGTON AT VALLEY FORGE. 1777, 1778.

1:20:07

CHAPTER XIV. — MONMOUTH. 1778.

40:55

CHAPTER XV. — WASHINGTON DIRECTS A DESCENT ON RHODE ISLAND. 1778.

43:16

CHAPTER XVI. — WASHINGTON PREPARES TO CHASTISE THE INDIANS. 1778.

33:18

Description

Amid the bleak winter of 1776‑77 at Morristown, General George Washington wrestles with a problem that eclipses battlefield tactics: the brutal treatment of American prisoners by the British. The narrative reveals his growing frustration as British commanders dismiss the rebels as criminals unworthy of humane standards, prompting heated debates in the Continental Congress. Washington's resolve to protect his men leads him to consider retaliation, but he remains keenly aware of the moral stakes involved.

When the capture of British General Charles Lee ignites a diplomatic impasse, Washington proposes an exchange—six Hessian officers for Lee—only to be rebuffed by General Howe, who labels Lee a deserter. Congress then authorizes a mirror‑image retaliation, ordering the detention of comparable British officers, a move that plunges both sides into a cycle of harsh confinement. The chapter lays bare the delicate balance Washington must strike between justice for his own troops and the broader quest for a humane war ethic.

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Details

Full title

Life and Times of Washington, Volume 2 Revised, Enlarged, and Enriched Revised, Enlarged, and Enriched

Language

en

Duration

~31 hours (1796K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Charles Aldarondo, Tiffany Vergon, Marvin A. Hodges, Charles Franks, the Online Distributed Proofreading Team and David Widger

Release date

2005-05-01

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the authors

JF

John Frederick Schroeder

1800–1857

A 19th-century Episcopal clergyman and writer, he paired religious work in New York with a strong interest in charity, public service, and American history. His books range from sermons and social appeals to large-scale historical writing on George Washington.

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Benson John Lossing

Benson John Lossing

1813–1891

Best known for turning American history into vivid, image-filled storytelling, this 19th-century writer and illustrator helped generations of readers picture the Revolution and the Civil War. His books blended reporting, sketching, and research in a way that made the past feel close at hand.

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