biography
| sex:
| male
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| lived:
| (1750–1806)
|
| biography:
| American soldier and bookseller, born in Boston, Massachusetts, USA. One of 10 sons of a shipmaster who died when Henry was 12, he worked as a bookseller. Having joined the Boston Grenadier Corps (1772), he became knowledgeable about military tactics and artillery, and he volunteered for the Revolutionary forces at the outbreak of war with England. He soon became a trusted friend and adviser to George Washington, was appointed to command the Continental army's artillery (Nov 1775), and overcame incredible difficulties in getting the pieces of artillery from Fort Ticonderoga to force the British to evacuate Boston (Mar 1776). From then on he was with Washington in nearly every major engagement of the war, including the crossing of the Delaware to take Trenton, the winter of 1778–9 at Valley Forge, and the final victory at Yorktown. His suggestion led to the establishment of a military academy at West Point, and he was a founder of the Society of the Cincinnati (1783). He served as secretary of war in 1785–94, afterwards retiring to an estate in Maine, where he lived in great style. He died of complications after swallowing a chicken bone. |
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