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Aug 26 10 tweets 5 min read Read on X
The Battle of Long Island Begins

1/ On this day, August 26, 1776, skirmishes sparked the Battle of Long Island, fought fully on August 27 in Brooklyn, New York—the first major clash after the Declaration of Independence. Gen. George Washington’s 10,000 patriots faced British Gen. William Howe’s 20,000 troops. The battle cost ~2,400 casualties, a crushing American defeat that lost New York City. This thread details the Revolutionary War’s context, the battle’s chaos, and its legacy—a pivotal setback that tested the young nation’s resolve.Image
Background

2/ By 1776, the American Revolution escalated after Lexington and Concord (1775). The Declaration of Independence (July 4) defied Britain, prompting a massive response. British strategy targeted New York City, a Loyalist stronghold and port, to crush rebellion. Howe landed 32,000 troops (including Hessians) on Staten Island by July. Washington, expecting attack, fortified Brooklyn Heights with 10,000 men—Continentals and militia—while skirmishing on Long Island. British naval dominance and manpower set a daunting stage for the war’s largest battle yet.Image
Prelude and Skirmishes on August 26

3/ On August 22, Howe landed 15,000 troops on Long Island’s Gravesend Bay, advancing toward Brooklyn. By August 26, British scouts probed American outposts at Flatbush and Red Hook, sparking skirmishes. American riflemen under Col. Samuel Atlee engaged Hessian advance guards, losing ~50 men in brief clashes. Washington reinforced Brooklyn with 3,000 troops, expecting a frontal assault. Howe, however, planned a flanking maneuver via Jamaica Pass, setting up the main battle. August 26’s actions drew both armies into a fateful collision.Image
Forces and Battle Plans

4/ Washington’s 10,000 troops—half Continentals, half militia—held fortified lines from Gowanus Creek to Bedford. Key commanders: Israel Putnam, William Alexander (Lord Stirling). Howe’s 20,000 included British regulars, Hessian mercenaries, led by Henry Clinton and Charles Cornwallis. British plan: pin Americans with frontal feints while 10,000 under Clinton flanked via Jamaica Pass, a lightly guarded route. Washington, misreading British intent, concentrated forces at Brooklyn Heights, leaving the pass vulnerable. Heat and tension gripped the armies.Image
The Battle Begins - British Flanking Maneuver

5/ At midnight August 26–27, Clinton’s 10,000 troops marched through Jamaica Pass, unguarded due to American scouting errors. By dawn August 27, they outflanked American lines at Bedford. British feints under Grant and Hessians under von Heister hit Gowanus and Flatbush, pinning Stirling and Sullivan’s divisions. At 8:00 AM, Clinton’s column struck from the rear, catching Americans off-guard. Cannon and musket volleys erupted; panic spread as patriots faced encirclement in Brooklyn’s fields and woods.Image
Fierce Fighting and American Collapse

6/ American defenses crumbled under the British flank attack. Sullivan’s 5,000 men at Battle Pass were routed, with 1,000 captured in chaotic retreats through woods. Stirling’s Marylanders held Gowanus Creek, fighting hand-to-hand against Grant’s regulars; 256 of 400 Marylanders fell, buying time. By noon, British forces converged, driving survivors to Brooklyn Heights. Militia fled; Continentals fought bravely but were overwhelmed. The battle’s intensity, with bayonets and smoke, marked a devastating American defeat.Image
Washington’s Retreat and Escape

7/ By afternoon, ~9,000 Americans crowded Brooklyn Heights, expecting British assault. Howe, cautious after Bunker Hill, paused to siege. On August 29–30, under fog, Washington executed a daring retreat across the East River to Manhattan. 9,000 men, guns, and supplies evacuated silently in boats, undetected by British patrols. The retreat saved the army but ceded New York. British naval dominance loomed; Washington’s gamble preserved the Revolution’s core for future fights.Image
Casualties and Immediate Aftermath

8/ Long Island’s toll: ~2,400 casualties. Americans: ~300 dead, 700 wounded, 1,000 captured (including Sullivan). British/Hessians: ~63 dead, 314 wounded. Captured patriots faced brutal prison ships; many died in captivity. Howe occupied New York City, holding it until 1783. Washington regrouped in Manhattan, morale shaken but army intact. The defeat exposed militia weaknesses and command errors, prompting Washington to refine tactics. British overconfidence grew, setting up later setbacks.Image
Strategic Impact and Legacy

9/ Long Island’s loss handed Britain a strategic base, prolonging the war. It humiliated the Continental Army but taught Washington to avoid pitched battles against superior forces. The retreat became a masterstroke, preserving the Revolution. The battle spurred French interest, as American resolve persisted. Marylanders’ stand at Gowanus became legend, inspiring later victories. Long Island’s chaos, like your Camden thread’s rout, showed early war fragility but forged resilience for Yorktown.Image
Conclusion of the Battle of Long Island

10/ The Battle of Long Island, sparked by skirmishes on August 26, 1776, was a crushing American defeat, costing ~2,400 casualties and New York City. Howe’s flanking brilliance overwhelmed Washington’s forces, yet his retreat saved the Revolution. Amid Brooklyn’s fields, the battle tested a fledgling nation, exposing flaws but steeling resolve. Like Camden or Wilson’s Creek, it was a bitter setback that fueled perseverance, shaping the path to independence through sacrifice and survival.Image

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More from @ManifestHistory

Aug 25
General Patrick Cleburne, Stonewall of the West 🧵

1/ Patrick Cleburne, the Irish-born Confederate general dubbed “Stonewall of the West,” stunned Union armies with tactical genius at Shiloh, Chickamauga, and Franklin, earning a legend as one of the South’s finest commanders. His immigrant grit and tragic end captivate history. Join me in exploring his life of valor and strategy—a story of brilliance and sacrificeImage
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2/ Patrick Ronayne Cleburne was born on March 16, 1828, in County Cork, Ireland, to a Protestant family. His father, Joseph Cleburne, a physician, died when Patrick was 15, leaving his mother, Mary Ronayne Cleburne, to raise four children. Educated at private schools, Cleburne joined the British Army’s 41st Regiment of Foot at 17 but left after three years. Immigrating to Arkansas in 1849, he worked as a pharmacist, his determination shaping a new path in America.Image
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3/ Settling in Helena, Arkansas, Cleburne studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1856. He built a successful legal practice, earning respect in the community. Joining the local militia, the Yell Rifles, as a captain in 1860, he honed leadership skills. When Arkansas seceded in 1861, Cleburne’s loyalty to his adopted state led him to join the Confederate Army, despite his foreign roots.Image
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Aug 20
On This Day - The Battle of Fallen Timbers Begins

1/ On this day, August 20, 1794, the Battle of Fallen Timbers erupted in present-day Ohio—a decisive clash in the Northwest Indian War. Maj. Gen. Anthony Wayne’s 3,000-man Legion of the United States faced ~1,500 Native warriors of the Western Confederacy, led by Blue Jacket and Little Turtle. Fought amid downed trees, the battle produced ~400 casualties and crushed Native resistance in the Ohio Country. This thread details the war’s roots, the battle’s fierce combat, and its aftermath—a pivotal moment in America’s westward expansion.Image
Background to the Northwest Indian War

2/ After the American Revolution, the 1783 Treaty of Paris ceded the Northwest Territory (modern Ohio, Indiana, Michigan) to the U.S., ignoring Native claims. Tribes like the Shawnee, Miami, and Delaware, united as the Western Confederacy, resisted settler encroachment, backed by British traders from Canada. Early U.S. campaigns under Harmar (1790) and St. Clair (1791) ended in disasters—St. Clair’s defeat cost 900 lives, the young republic’s worst loss to Native forces. In 1792, President Washington appointed Wayne to build a disciplined army to secure the region for settlement.Image
The Road to Fallen Timbers

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1/ J.E.B. Stuart, the Confederate cavalry commander known for his daring raids and flamboyant style, became a legend with bold reconnaissance and charges that turned battles. His charisma and tactical flair defined Southern cavalry. Join me to explore his life of gallantry and glory—a story of speed, bravery, and tragic end.Image
Early Life

2/ James Ewell Brown Stuart was born on February 6, 1833, in Patrick County, Virginia, to a planter family. His father, Archibald Stuart, a War of 1812 veteran and politician, and his mother, Elizabeth Letcher Pannill Stuart, raised 11 children on Laurel Hill farm. Young “Jeb” developed a love for horses and adventure. He attended Emory and Henry College before entering West Point in 1850. He graduated 13th in his class in 1854. His charisma and equestrian skill marked him for cavalry service.Image
Early Military Career

3/ Commissioned a second lieutenant in the Mounted Rifles in 1854, Stuart served on the Pacific Coast and Texas frontier. He fought Comanche raids. Promoted to first lieutenant in the 2nd Cavalry in 1855, he led patrols. He earned a reputation for bravery after a severe arrow wound in 1857. His frontier experience honed his aggressive style. It prepared him for larger conflicts.Image
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Aug 16
American Revolution: The Battle of Camden

1/ On this day, August 16, 1780, the Battle of Camden unfolded in South Carolina—a catastrophic American defeat in the Revolutionary War’s Southern Theater. Maj. Gen. Horatio Gates’ 3,700 patriots faced Lt. Gen. Charles Cornwallis’ 2,100 British/Loyalists. The clash produced ~2,200 casualties, mostly American, in a humiliating rout that shattered patriot morale. Gates’ overconfidence led to disaster, paving the way for British advances but sparking guerrilla resistance. This thread details the buildup, chaotic combat, and consequences—a low point that reshaped the Southern campaign.Image
Background to the War in the South

2/ By 1780, British strategy shifted south after stalemates in the North. Capturing Charleston in May, with 5,500 American prisoners, gave Britain control of South Carolina. Loyalists rallied, while patriots faced repression. Congress appointed Gates, hero of Saratoga, to command the Southern Department, hoping to reclaim the region. Gates assembled a ragtag army of Continentals and militia, marching from North Carolina to challenge Cornwallis. Divided loyalties fueled guerrilla warfare, but British regulars under Cornwallis aimed to crush organized resistance and secure the Carolinas.Image
American and British Forces and Plans

3/ Gates’ 3,700 troops included 1,500 Continentals (Maryland/Delaware lines) and 2,200 militia from Virginia/North Carolina—many sick, untrained, and low on supplies. Gates planned to surprise Camden, a British supply base. Cornwallis, with 2,100 elite regulars and Loyalists (e.g., Tarleton’s Legion), reinforced after intelligence warned of Gates’ approach. Outnumbered but superior in discipline, Cornwallis opted for open battle, marching north from Camden on August 15. Both armies collided unexpectedly at dawn August 16, amid pine woods and swamps.Image
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Early Life

2/ Andrew Jackson was born on March 15, 1767, in the Waxhaws region on the Carolina border, to Scotch-Irish immigrants. His father, Andrew Jackson Sr., died before his birth, leaving his mother, Elizabeth Hutchinson Jackson, to raise three sons in poverty. During the Revolutionary War, at age 13, Jackson served as a courier for Patriots. Captured by British forces, he was threatened by an officer who demanded he clean his boots; Jackson refused, suffering a sword slash to his hand and head, an incident that fueled his lifelong hatred of the British.

(Photo: monument claiming to be location of Jackson’s birthplace)Image
Pre-War Career

3/ After being orphaned at 14 following his mother’s death, Jackson studied law in North Carolina. He became a frontier lawyer in Tennessee by 1787. Jackson built a reputation as a duelist, fighting over 100 quarrels, including a 1806 duel where he killed Charles Dickinson but was wounded. He prospered as a planter and merchant by the early 1800s. Jackson entered politics, serving as Tennessee’s first U.S. Congressman in 1796 and Senator in 1797. His rough edges and charisma made him a force in the young republic.Image
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Early Life

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Pre-Civil War Military Career

3/ Commissioned a second lieutenant in the Corps of Engineers in 1838, Beauregard designed forts and drainage systems in Louisiana. He excelled in the Mexican-American War (1846-1848), serving under Winfield Scott at Veracruz, Cerro Gordo, and Chapultepec, earning brevets to major for bravery. Post-war, he supervised New Orleans customs house construction and briefly served as superintendent of West Point in 1861, dismissed for Southern sympathies.Image
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