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  2. John Buchanan (frontiersman) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Buchanan_(frontiersman)

    After losing his brother Alexander at Ft. Nashborough's 1781 "Battle of the Bluff," Buchanan wrote Nashville's first book, John Buchanan's Book of Arithmetic. [ 4 ] After living approximately four years at Fort Nashborough, Buchanan and his family moved a few miles east and established Buchanan's Station on Mill Creek, at today's Elm Hill Pike ...

  3. Fort Nashborough - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fort_Nashborough

    Fort Nashborough, also known as Fort Bluff, Bluff Station, French Lick Fort, Cumberland River Fort and other names, was the stockade established in early 1779 in the French Lick area of the Cumberland River valley, as a forerunner to the settlement that would become the city of Nashville, Tennessee. The fort was not a military garrison.

  4. List of American Revolutionary War battles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_American...

    Battle of Spencer's Ordinary: June 26, 1781: Virginia: British victory Francisco's Fight: July 1781: Virginia: American victory Battle of Green Spring: July 6, 1781: Virginia: British victory Naval battle of Louisbourg: July 21, 1781: Nova Scotia: Franco-American victory Battle of Dogger Bank: August 5, 1781: North Sea: British victory Battle ...

  5. History of Nashville, Tennessee - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Nashville...

    In 1843 it became the state capital of Tennessee. In the Civil War Nashville was seized by Federal troops in 1862 and became a major Union military base. Confederate General J. B. Hood was decisively defeated in the Battle of Nashville in 1864. The city became the political, transportation, business and cultural center of the Middle Tennessee ...

  6. Buchanan's Station - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buchanan's_Station

    [a] On September 30, 1792, it was the site of the critical Battle of Buchanan's Station during the Cherokee–American wars of the late eighteenth century. The assault by a combined force of around 300 Chickamauga Cherokee , Muscogee Creek , and Shawnee , nominally led by Chief John Watts , was repelled by 15 gunmen under Major Buchanan ...

  7. Jean-Baptiste Donatien de Vimeur, comte de Rochambeau

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jean-Baptiste_Donatien_de...

    Jean-Baptiste Donatien de Vimeur was born in Vendôme, in the province of Orléanais, and he was educated at the Jesuit college in Blois.After the death of his elder brother, he entered a cavalry regiment and served in Bohemia, Bavaria, and on the Rhine during the War of the Austrian Succession.

  8. Battle of Groton Heights - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Groton_Heights

    Location of Groton, Connecticut. The Battle of Groton Heights (also known as the Battle of Fort Griswold, and occasionally called the Fort Griswold massacre) was a battle of the American Revolutionary War fought on September 6, 1781 between a small Connecticut militia force led by Lieutenant Colonel William Ledyard and the more numerous British forces led by Brigadier General Benedict Arnold ...

  9. Battle of Summerfield - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Summerfield

    [5] [1] One month prior to the Battle of Guilford Courthouse, the armies of Col. Otho Williams and Col. Henry Lee stopped to dine at the home of a Patriot supporter, Charles Bruce. While they were encamped at the home of Bruce, a farmer and supporter of the Patriot cause, Isaac Wright, appeared to inform the soldiers that a group of British ...