Holly A. Mayer is Professor Emerita of History at Duquesne University in Pittsburgh and the author of Belonging to the Army: Camp Followers and Community during the American Revolution.
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"In addition to being a valuable contribution to social and military studies about the Revolutionary War, Congress's Own is an outstanding regimental history that goes beyond the confines of a narrow examination of a single unit. Readers learn much about the organisation, administration, movements and personalities of this particular regiment, but they are also introduced to a new perspective on the Continental Army and the struggles over forming a national union. The book will be of immense interest to scholars and students of early American and Canadian history, the politics of Patriotism and Loyalism and eighteenth-century military cultures. Drawing on concepts of borderlands and community, Mayer reminds historians that a borderland is not only found between the lines on a map. In a figurative sense it can be uncovered in the interactions of people of diverse backgrounds with different motivations as they formed a new community and forged new identities over the course of a destabilising and destructive war."-- Canadian Military History "Congress's Own is a deep dive into a Continental regiment, its officers, its men and women, and their experiences and tribulations, but it is also much more. Here is the story of the war and the Revolution. Mayer shows us how the Continental government functioned through its commander-in-chief, through the Board of War, and ultimately through its army. Somehow, in all the chaos, a nation was made, carried forward on the backs of a very unlikely and diverse cast of characters."--Wayne Lee, author of Barbarians and Brothers: Anglo-American Warfare, 1500-1865 "By far one of the most important and original studies of the Continental Army yet published, Holly Mayer's book is notable for how deeply and broadly it explores the Canadian borderlands context that gave birth to Congress's Own Regiment, as well as the meanings of community, independence, and union for which Continental soldiers fought and died."--David L. Preston, author of Braddock's Defeat: The Battle of the Monongahela and the Road to Revolution "Executing a deep dive into archival accounts, both official and personal, Holly Mayer produces a comprehensive and multi-faceted view of a singular regiment of the Continental Army. This is a thoroughly researched and detailed investigation of the totality of the people of the regiment and their place in the American Revolution." --Journal of America's Military Past