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I read a recent article in Time magazine about how Americans are cozying up to Revolutionary War-era politicians like never before. Supporting that theory is the popularity of books like David McCullough’s John Adams (Simon & Schuster, $18.95) and Joseph Ellis’ Founding Brothers: The Revolutionary Generation (Vintage, $14).
When, in 1774, John Adams wrote his wife Abigail, “We live, my dear soul, in an age of trial. What will be the consequence, I know not,” he certainly couldn’t have imagined what lay in America’s path. Thousands and thousands of patriots took up an unheard of cause-the dissolution of a bond of “ownership” between an empire and its possession.
For today’s genealogists, tracing their heritage back to a Revolutionary War patriot is an act of pride, and oftentimes a step toward joining a lineage organization like the Daughters of the American Revolution.
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I found my first patriot ancestor a number of years ago. Since then, as I’ve discovered more branches, I’ve come up with a half-dozen Revolutionaries. It seems that the broader my research becomes, the more soldiers I find. I’m willing to bet you’ll find the same.
To learn more about your Revolutionary War ancestors:
• Revolutionary War Genealogy Books
www.cswnet.com/~sbooks/html/revolutionary_war.htm
• Revolutionary War Military Records
www.genealogy.com/genealogy/24_myra.html?Welcome=995229930
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• Revolutionary War Bounty Land Grants
www.genealogy.com/genealogy/24_land.html
• Sons of the American Revolution
www.sar.org
• American Revolutionary War Soldiers & Their Descendants
www.rootsweb.com/~ars/index.htm
• Loyalist Genealogy
www.royalprovincial.com/genealogy/gen.shtml
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