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The Valley Forge Winter: Civilians and Soldiers in War
 
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The Valley Forge Winter: Civilians and Soldiers in War [Hardcover]

Wayne K. Bodle (Author)
3.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Book Description

November 1, 2002
Of the many dramatic episodes of the American Revolution, perhaps none is more steeped in legend than the Valley Forge winter. Paintings show Continentals huddled around campfires and Washington kneeling in the frozen woods, praying for his army's deliverance. To this day schoolchildren are taught that Valley Forge was the "turning point of the Revolution"--the event that transformed a ragged group of soldiers into a fighting army. But was Valley Forge really the "crucible of victory" it has come to represent in American history? Now, two hundred and twenty-five years later, Wayne Bodle has written the first comprehensive history of the winter encampment of 1777-78.

The traditional account portrays Valley Forge in the 1770s as a desolate wilderness far removed from civilian society. Washington's army was forced to endure one of the coldest winters in memory with inadequate food and supplies, despite appeals to the Continental Congress. When the mild weather of spring finally arrived, the Prussian baron Friedrich von Steuben drilled the demoralized soldiers into a first-rate army that would go on to stunning victories at Monmouth and, eventually, at Yorktown.

Bodle presents a very different picture of Valley Forge--one that revises both popular and scholarly perceptions. Far from being set in a wilderness, the Continental Army's quarters were deliberately located in a settled area. And although there was a provisions crisis, Washington overstated the case in order to secure additional support. (A shrewd man, Washington mostly succeeded at keeping his army supplied with food, clothing, and munitions. Farmers from the interior provided food that ensured that the army didn't starve.) As for Steuben's role in training the soldiers, Bodle argues that it was not the decisive factor others have seen in the army's later victories.

The freshness of Bodle's approach is that he offers a complete picture of events both inside and outside the camp boundaries. We see what happens when two armies descend on a diverse and divided community. Anything but stoically passive, the Continentals were effective agents on their own behalf and were actively engaged with their civilian hosts and British foes. The Valley Forge Winter is an example of the "new military history" at its best--a history that puts war back into its social context.



Editorial Reviews

Review

"An excellent book by a scholar who has written extensively on the Middle Colonies and served for some years on the staff of the National Park Service at Valley Forge.... Bodle rescues Washington and his comrades-in-arms by looking at Valley Forge in the context of a nine-month campaign that began with British General Sir William Howe's invasion of Pennsylvania in the fall of 1777 and American reversals at Brandywine and Germantown.... As Wayne Bodie says, Valley Forge may offer fewer morality lessons for schoolchildren than previously believed, but it 'forged a temporal - and especially a spatial - template for the rest of the war in the north.' " - Don Higginbotham, William and Mary Quarterly; "[The Valley Forge Winter] is not a retelling of the quintessential American morality play of military virtue, stoicism, self-sacrifice, and eventual moral and battlefield triumph set against the backdrop of previous defeats and civilian neglect. Rather, it is a model study of war and society that argues convincingly for the Continental Army's service 'as a partial proxy for faltering civilian political legitimacy' in Revolutionary Pennsylvania.... This book is a welcome contribution that should be considered seriously by scholars and interested readers." --Ricardo A. Herrera, The Journal of Military History

About the Author

Wayne Bodle is Assistant Professor of History at Indiana University of Pennsylvania. His articles have appeared in numerous journals, including Pennsylvania History, The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography, and The William & Mary Quarterly.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 304 pages
  • Publisher: Pennsylvania State Univ Pr (November 1, 2002)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0271022302
  • ISBN-13: 978-0271022307
  • Product Dimensions: 9.5 x 6.1 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.6 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,510,622 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
3.3 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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6 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars What happened next?, December 6, 2006
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Textcontext "JMP" (Central Pennsylvania) - See all my reviews
For just a short while there, history writing had taken too much upon itself. Some writers thought they were supposed to answer very large questions about human capacities, conditions, means, and methods. Most of us have shared the experience of re-reading introductory materials in certain theoretically acclaimed MEISTERWERKE, only to privately confess to a dirty little secret: we each suspect ourselves of being too ignorant to peer at the critical theory lavishly draped on the parading emperor. Some writers overreact in the opposite direction, knitting entire monographs out of gossamer arguments over axiomatic minutia. "Out of fashion" for a time, were those history books that might be kept on a shelf and retrieved again to support future research into such questions as "and what happened next?"

Wayne Bodle's _Valley Forge Winter: Civilians and Soldiers in War_ does not masquerade as a philosophy text. The overarching question falls logically from the book's title. "What happens when two armies descend on a diverse population in a divided community with complex and ambiguous historical experiences with war and peace?" Scholars of the American Revolution--professional and amateur alike--will want to own a copy and to keep it handy. But other people, especially those who write other kinds of history books, should take note as well. Bodle has chosen to write about one of the most sacred places and experiences in the American national imagination. Missing from his narration are the god like and therefore incredible caricatures of general officers and struggling statesmen. Instead we are treated to real people, on all sides of the various issues--all with believable motivations and understandable human frailties. What is heroic about these people is not their perfection, but their humanity. All books might be improved; this one could have provided clearer maps to offset the space savings afforded by the myth-endectomy.

Like another reviewer below, I had the good fortune of studying under Professor Bodle several years ago. I took four graduate courses and wish there had been more. So my responsibilities for full disclosure have been hereby discharged. But I have since used this book in teaching American History survey courses with excellent results. Interesting enough to keep grad students turning pages, VFW is a great introduction to scholarly writing for undergraduates as well.
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8 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars What is History without Bias?, May 19, 2003
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WalkingInSnow "lionelhoss" (Pittsburgh, PA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Valley Forge Winter: Civilians and Soldiers in War (Hardcover)
To tell you the truth, yes this book is tedious. If you are interested in History, especially on the American Revolution I think that Dr. Bodle discusses a very well presented arguement between the "Real Struggle" in the Revolution between Morristown and Valley Forge. The Author has a specialized knowledge about the Campaign in Pennsylvania. I have had him for 2 classes being Colonial America and American Revolution. He shows his in depth knowledge of the ideology of social, economical and political aspects of the struggle known as the American Revolution in this book. In short...If you want to learn a wider vision of the Revolution...you would like the ideas from this book. If you can not take the pressure then watch the history channel!
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12 of 31 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Try to stay awake as you read., December 23, 2002
This review is from: The Valley Forge Winter: Civilians and Soldiers in War (Hardcover)
I was looking forward to reading this book before I opened the cover. Then I kept falling asleep as I tried to read the book. Does the author who is Assistant Professor of History at Indiana University of Pennsylvania serve coffee to his class to keep his students awake. True it is a fresh approach to the events of the winter camp at Valley Forge. But one I find hard to believe, due the the past scholarly writing and facts about the winter camp at Valley Forge. The author believes that the suffering of the American army was not as bad as we have be led to believe and that Washington overstated it to congress...
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