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True to the Old Flag

Gelesen von LibriVox Volunteers

(4,194 Sterne; 67 Bewertungen)

This book tells the story of the American war of Independence from the side of the British. The old flag mentioned in the title is the flag of England. This is a book for young readers, but - as a good book should be - everybody can enjoy it". (Summary by Stav Nisser) (10 hr 49 min)

Chapters

Preface

2:42

Read by Chela

A Frontier Farm

36:10

Read by Chela

An Indian Raid

36:22

Read by Chela

The Redskin Attack

29:15

Read by msjodi777

The Fight at Lexington

27:00

Read by msjodi777

Bunker's Hill

29:26

Read by msjodi777

Scouting

33:14

Read by TriciaG

In the Forest

32:34

Read by TriciaG

Quebec

34:21

Read by TriciaG

The Surprise of Trenton

34:35

Read by TriciaG

A Treacherous Planter

41:46

Read by MaryAnn

The Capture of Philadelphia

30:25

Read by Chris Caron

The Settler's Hut

32:40

Read by TriciaG

Saratoga

33:25

Read by Chris Caron

Rescued!

31:46

Read by Chris Caron

The Island Refuge

29:04

Read by Chris Caron

The Great Storm

22:28

Read by Anna Simon

The Scout's Story

29:39

Read by Chris Caron

The Siege of Savannah

27:57

Read by MaryAnn

In an American Prison

32:03

Read by TriciaG

The War in South Carolina

32:12

Read by TriciaG

The End of the Struggle

10:39

Read by Abigail Bartels

Bewertungen

Randall

(4 Sterne)

The most historical book I ever read. The book which may of captured interest and pride of the English, as written, it is impossible to believe that the English could have possibly lost the war. The witlessness of American command and should have created a situation where the English army promptly crushed the American rebellion. The American losses in men and military equipment, as per the text, should have rendered the rebellion totally hopeless. The American fighters seemed always fleeing from the battle and many times in a wild confused way that the collected large stockpiles of cannon, shot, and gunpowder. A flagrant prejudiced depiction of the War of Independence.

henty but not at his finest

(3 Sterne)

A British perspective of the Revolutionary War. I found the historical setting interesting and the book brought details about the revolutionary war that I wasn’t familiar with, but the plot felt lacking. It didn’t have the same care for a good story while telling history that most of the Henty books have. I found some of the readers a bit hard to listen to because of mispronunciations.

Not Henty’s Best

(2,5 Sterne)

As a thoroughly biased American patriot, I consider this the worst of Henty’s books. It seemed forced, didn’t have as good of a story as is normal with his books, and he tried to force his point (that the colonials were wrong to resist unlawful tyranny) a little too hard to the point of being overly blunt.

i loved it thank you for thinking of it

(5 Sterne)

i think it is a good bit of fighting for a amazing story but I still think it's great!

(5 Sterne)

GREAT book by Henty. the story is brought to life

(5 Sterne)

This is very interesting story about the history of America.

JINGOISM REARS ITS UGLY HEAD

(3 Sterne)

I realize that Henty's books were historical novels, but his reputation as a historian suffers greatly with this work. Certainly, his assertion that British troops won virtually every pitched is true, but he adroitly sidesteps the fact that not one, but TWO British armies surrendered in the field, a happening fairly unprecedented in the military annals of Britain. We learned in Vietnam what Britain learned in America--a majority of the people in a foreign land cannot be subjugated by anything less than total (and perpetual) military occupation, a crushing expense not to be assumed. Henty should have read the writings of John Adams when he asserted that by the time war started the majority of the colonials were American, not British. Henty also alludes to instances of colonial mistreatment of prisoners, but he conveniently fails to even mention Britains use of prison ships wherein deaths of hundreds and even thousands of colonial troops reached proportions approaching fifty percent.