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Oct 19, 2019 21:15:50   #
lpnmajor Loc: Arkansas
 
slatten49 wrote:
I just received this from a fellow poster, quite a bad-a** himself, and had to share....

The guy's name was Samuel Whittlemore.

He was born in 1696 in Charlestown, Massachusetts. He was already pushing 50 when he joined Colonel Jeremiah Moulton’s Third Massachusetts Regiment and fought in King George’s War (1744–1748).
It’s not clear whether he fought in the French and Indian War (1754–1763), but evidence suggests that he did. He would have been 67 years old when he participated in an expedition against Chief Pontiac in 1763. In between wars, he was a peaceful farmer near the present-day town of Arlington, Massachusetts.
Most people’s glory days are long behind them when they become a septuagenarian. But not Samuel Whittlemore. Far from it.

April 19, 1775. Samuel, still hale and hearty even at the ripe old age of 78, was out working in his fields on a beautiful spring day. He looked up and spotted a column of British soldiers returning to Boston after the battles of Lexington and Concord. Samuel had no doubt heard the shots in the distance that morning—American m*****amen sniping at the British from behind trees and rocks and stone walls as they marched.
Now, despite having fought for the British Crown for most of his life, Samuel Whittlemore was a staunch proponent of American independence. He didn’t want his grandchildren to be subject to the whims and unjust laws of a distant king.

So it’s no surprise what he did next.

Samuel threw down his hoe, ran to his house, and grabbed his trusty musket. He flung himself down behind a stone wall and, judging the timing just right, reared up and fired, ambushing the British Grenadiers of the 47th Regiment of Foot single-handedly. He k**led a redcoat with his first shot. The perilous old Samuel jumped up, drew his dueling pistols, and laid waste, k*****g a second redcoat and mortally wounding a third. By that time, the British were upon him. Samuel tossed his pistols in the dirt and drew his sword.

When the dust settled, Samuel Whittlemore had been shot in the face, bayoneted 19 times, and left for dead in a pool of his own blood. Nearby minutemen found him a short while later…not only still alive, but trying to reload.

He was immediately packed off to a doctor, who gravely pronounced that he had no chance of survival. Samuel Mutha-Humpin’ Whittlemore, 100% grade-A prime American badass, not only recovered, but lived another 18 years. He died on February 2, 1793, at the age of 96. Just a month later, George Washington was sworn in for his second term as the President of the United States of America, a country that Samuel Whittlemore had almost died to help create. Samuel holds the distinction of being the oldest man known to have participated in the American Revolutionary War.

They just don’t make ’em like that anymore, people.

P.S. I'm pretty sure ol' Sam had been a USMC reservist.
I just received this from a fellow poster, quite a... (show quote)


Oh, I believe they DO make 'em like that still, they just don't get a lot of recognition. Ole Sam is proof that the folks who won this country's independence, were not the nicely dressed Buffoons in the Continental Congress, or the heroically posed Generals, but the farmers, crofters, tradesmen and their women, who were willing to stand in harms way, take wounds and bleed................................then get up and do it again until the job was done.

Reply
Oct 19, 2019 21:41:06   #
slatten49 Loc: Lake Whitney, Texas
 
lpnmajor wrote:
Oh, I believe they DO make 'em like that still, they just don't get a lot of recognition. Ole Sam is proof that the folks who won this country's independence, were not the nicely dressed Buffoons in the Continental Congress, or the heroically posed Generals, but the farmers, crofters, tradesmen and their women, who were willing to stand in harms way, take wounds and bleed................................then get up and do it again until the job was done.

Damn straight they make 'em like that still, Doc. And, as our experiences have told us, they come from all political and ideological persuasions...just as they always have. Americans, one and all

Reply
Oct 19, 2019 22:45:21   #
Coos Bay Tom Loc: coos bay oregon
 
slatten49 wrote:
I just received this from a fellow poster, quite a bad-a** himself, and had to share....

The guy's name was Samuel Whittlemore.

He was born in 1696 in Charlestown, Massachusetts. He was already pushing 50 when he joined Colonel Jeremiah Moulton’s Third Massachusetts Regiment and fought in King George’s War (1744–1748).
It’s not clear whether he fought in the French and Indian War (1754–1763), but evidence suggests that he did. He would have been 67 years old when he participated in an expedition against Chief Pontiac in 1763. In between wars, he was a peaceful farmer near the present-day town of Arlington, Massachusetts.
Most people’s glory days are long behind them when they become a septuagenarian. But not Samuel Whittlemore. Far from it.

April 19, 1775. Samuel, still hale and hearty even at the ripe old age of 78, was out working in his fields on a beautiful spring day. He looked up and spotted a column of British soldiers returning to Boston after the battles of Lexington and Concord. Samuel had no doubt heard the shots in the distance that morning—American m*****amen sniping at the British from behind trees and rocks and stone walls as they marched.
Now, despite having fought for the British Crown for most of his life, Samuel Whittlemore was a staunch proponent of American independence. He didn’t want his grandchildren to be subject to the whims and unjust laws of a distant king.

So it’s no surprise what he did next.

Samuel threw down his hoe, ran to his house, and grabbed his trusty musket. He flung himself down behind a stone wall and, judging the timing just right, reared up and fired, ambushing the British Grenadiers of the 47th Regiment of Foot single-handedly. He k**led a redcoat with his first shot. The perilous old Samuel jumped up, drew his dueling pistols, and laid waste, k*****g a second redcoat and mortally wounding a third. By that time, the British were upon him. Samuel tossed his pistols in the dirt and drew his sword.

When the dust settled, Samuel Whittlemore had been shot in the face, bayoneted 19 times, and left for dead in a pool of his own blood. Nearby minutemen found him a short while later…not only still alive, but trying to reload.

He was immediately packed off to a doctor, who gravely pronounced that he had no chance of survival. Samuel Mutha-Humpin’ Whittlemore, 100% grade-A prime American badass, not only recovered, but lived another 18 years. He died on February 2, 1793, at the age of 96. Just a month later, George Washington was sworn in for his second term as the President of the United States of America, a country that Samuel Whittlemore had almost died to help create. Samuel holds the distinction of being the oldest man known to have participated in the American Revolutionary War.

They just don’t make ’em like that anymore, people.

P.S. I'm pretty sure ol' Sam had been a USMC reservist.
I just received this from a fellow poster, quite a... (show quote)


A mans man

Reply
 
 
Oct 19, 2019 23:05:09   #
bggamers Loc: georgia
 
lpnmajor wrote:
Oh, I believe they DO make 'em like that still, they just don't get a lot of recognition. Ole Sam is proof that the folks who won this country's independence, were not the nicely dressed Buffoons in the Continental Congress, or the heroically posed Generals, but the farmers, crofters, tradesmen and their women, who were willing to stand in harms way, take wounds and bleed................................then get up and do it again until the job was done.


well said

Reply
Oct 20, 2019 00:27:14   #
debeda
 
lpnmajor wrote:
Oh, I believe they DO make 'em like that still, they just don't get a lot of recognition. Ole Sam is proof that the folks who won this country's independence, were not the nicely dressed Buffoons in the Continental Congress, or the heroically posed Generals, but the farmers, crofters, tradesmen and their women, who were willing to stand in harms way, take wounds and bleed................................then get up and do it again until the job was done.


WELL SAID

Reply
Oct 20, 2019 08:28:05   #
Big dog
 
slatten49 wrote:
I just received this from a fellow poster, quite a bad-a** himself, and had to share....

The guy's name was Samuel Whittlemore.

He was born in 1696 in Charlestown, Massachusetts. He was already pushing 50 when he joined Colonel Jeremiah Moulton’s Third Massachusetts Regiment and fought in King George’s War (1744–1748).
It’s not clear whether he fought in the French and Indian War (1754–1763), but evidence suggests that he did. He would have been 67 years old when he participated in an expedition against Chief Pontiac in 1763. In between wars, he was a peaceful farmer near the present-day town of Arlington, Massachusetts.
Most people’s glory days are long behind them when they become a septuagenarian. But not Samuel Whittlemore. Far from it.

April 19, 1775. Samuel, still hale and hearty even at the ripe old age of 78, was out working in his fields on a beautiful spring day. He looked up and spotted a column of British soldiers returning to Boston after the battles of Lexington and Concord. Samuel had no doubt heard the shots in the distance that morning—American m*****amen sniping at the British from behind trees and rocks and stone walls as they marched.
Now, despite having fought for the British Crown for most of his life, Samuel Whittlemore was a staunch proponent of American independence. He didn’t want his grandchildren to be subject to the whims and unjust laws of a distant king.

So it’s no surprise what he did next.

Samuel threw down his hoe, ran to his house, and grabbed his trusty musket. He flung himself down behind a stone wall and, judging the timing just right, reared up and fired, ambushing the British Grenadiers of the 47th Regiment of Foot single-handedly. He k**led a redcoat with his first shot. The perilous old Samuel jumped up, drew his dueling pistols, and laid waste, k*****g a second redcoat and mortally wounding a third. By that time, the British were upon him. Samuel tossed his pistols in the dirt and drew his sword.

When the dust settled, Samuel Whittlemore had been shot in the face, bayoneted 19 times, and left for dead in a pool of his own blood. Nearby minutemen found him a short while later…not only still alive, but trying to reload.

He was immediately packed off to a doctor, who gravely pronounced that he had no chance of survival. Samuel Mutha-Humpin’ Whittlemore, 100% grade-A prime American badass, not only recovered, but lived another 18 years. He died on February 2, 1793, at the age of 96. Just a month later, George Washington was sworn in for his second term as the President of the United States of America, a country that Samuel Whittlemore had almost died to help create. Samuel holds the distinction of being the oldest man known to have participated in the American Revolutionary War.

They just don’t make ’em like that anymore, people.

P.S. I'm pretty sure ol' Sam had been a USMC reservist.
I just received this from a fellow poster, quite a... (show quote)


He knew what “Freedom “ means. People today will fight for L***Q rights, but they’ve no clue Why they CAN fight for them.

Reply
Oct 20, 2019 09:59:13   #
Hug
 
Old Sam was a United States of America Paratrooper.

Reply
 
 
Oct 20, 2019 10:33:29   #
slatten49 Loc: Lake Whitney, Texas
 
Hug wrote:
Old Sam was a United States of America Paratrooper.

Old school airwing, huh

Reply
Oct 20, 2019 11:24:30   #
Wonttakeitanymore
 
slatten49 wrote:
I just received this from a fellow poster, quite a bad-a** himself, and had to share....

The guy's name was Samuel Whittlemore.

He was born in 1696 in Charlestown, Massachusetts. He was already pushing 50 when he joined Colonel Jeremiah Moulton’s Third Massachusetts Regiment and fought in King George’s War (1744–1748).
It’s not clear whether he fought in the French and Indian War (1754–1763), but evidence suggests that he did. He would have been 67 years old when he participated in an expedition against Chief Pontiac in 1763. In between wars, he was a peaceful farmer near the present-day town of Arlington, Massachusetts.
Most people’s glory days are long behind them when they become a septuagenarian. But not Samuel Whittlemore. Far from it.

April 19, 1775. Samuel, still hale and hearty even at the ripe old age of 78, was out working in his fields on a beautiful spring day. He looked up and spotted a column of British soldiers returning to Boston after the battles of Lexington and Concord. Samuel had no doubt heard the shots in the distance that morning—American m*****amen sniping at the British from behind trees and rocks and stone walls as they marched.
Now, despite having fought for the British Crown for most of his life, Samuel Whittlemore was a staunch proponent of American independence. He didn’t want his grandchildren to be subject to the whims and unjust laws of a distant king.

So it’s no surprise what he did next.

Samuel threw down his hoe, ran to his house, and grabbed his trusty musket. He flung himself down behind a stone wall and, judging the timing just right, reared up and fired, ambushing the British Grenadiers of the 47th Regiment of Foot single-handedly. He k**led a redcoat with his first shot. The perilous old Samuel jumped up, drew his dueling pistols, and laid waste, k*****g a second redcoat and mortally wounding a third. By that time, the British were upon him. Samuel tossed his pistols in the dirt and drew his sword.

When the dust settled, Samuel Whittlemore had been shot in the face, bayoneted 19 times, and left for dead in a pool of his own blood. Nearby minutemen found him a short while later…not only still alive, but trying to reload.

He was immediately packed off to a doctor, who gravely pronounced that he had no chance of survival. Samuel Mutha-Humpin’ Whittlemore, 100% grade-A prime American badass, not only recovered, but lived another 18 years. He died on February 2, 1793, at the age of 96. Just a month later, George Washington was sworn in for his second term as the President of the United States of America, a country that Samuel Whittlemore had almost died to help create. Samuel holds the distinction of being the oldest man known to have participated in the American Revolutionary War.

They just don’t make ’em like that anymore, people.

P.S. I'm pretty sure ol' Sam had been a USMC reservist.
I just received this from a fellow poster, quite a... (show quote)


We will will all fight for our presidents second term!

Reply
Oct 20, 2019 11:26:30   #
Wonttakeitanymore
 
Canuckus Deploracus wrote:
Ok... I'm humbled....

This fellow is awesome

Wonder how he'd v**e these days


He would v**e for the best patriot that could do the job! Not demonrat for sure!!! Maga baby!!!!!

Reply
Oct 20, 2019 11:32:03   #
slatten49 Loc: Lake Whitney, Texas
 
Wonttakeitanymore wrote:
We will will all fight for our presidents second term!

Sir/ma'am, I wouldn't toss around "we" so freely. You surely realize not all "will will".

Reply
 
 
Oct 20, 2019 11:42:35   #
Rose42
 
More people should hear about Samuel Whittlemore.

lpnmajor wrote:
Oh, I believe they DO make 'em like that still, they just don't get a lot of recognition. Ole Sam is proof that the folks who won this country's independence, were not the nicely dressed Buffoons in the Continental Congress, or the heroically posed Generals, but the farmers, crofters, tradesmen and their women, who were willing to stand in harms way, take wounds and bleed................................then get up and do it again until the job was done.


They sure do. Navy Seals at B******i but also those in other places where they don't get any recognition but they don't do it for that. The AF para rescue Pedros that most people don't know about either but they often go in where others don't. There are many such men in our armed forces.

And who can forget to add Desmond Dawes whose heroism in WWII was portrayed in Hacksaw Ridge?

Reply
Oct 20, 2019 11:42:54   #
Wonttakeitanymore
 
slatten49 wrote:
Sir/ma'am, I wouldn't toss around "we" so freely. You surely realize not all "will will".


It’s me in pic and yes it’s ma’am! I throw it around praying that people will realize he is a true patriot that loves our country and has only had its best interest at heart! He is for the people of all colors and positions!

Reply
Oct 20, 2019 11:45:40   #
slatten49 Loc: Lake Whitney, Texas
 
Rose42 wrote:
More people should hear about Samuel Whittlemore.



They sure do. Navy Seals at B******i but also those in other places where they don't get any recognition but they don't do it for that. The AF para rescue Pedros that most people don't know about either but they often go in where others don't. There are many such men in our armed forces.

And who can forget to add Desmond Dawes whose heroism in WWII was portrayed in Hacksaw Ridge?
More people should hear about Samuel Whittlemore. ... (show quote)

I went with another Vet to see that movie and was moved by his story...very impressive

Also...https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rWaehyJb0pg

Reply
Oct 20, 2019 12:08:22   #
debeda
 
Big dog wrote:
He knew what “Freedom “ means. People today will fight for L***Q rights, but they’ve no clue Why they CAN fight for them.


T***H

Reply
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