Pablo’s Reviews > 1776 > Status Update
Pablo
is on page 11 of 386
He hoped his people in America would see the light, and recognize "that to be a subject of Great Britain, with all its consequences, is to be the freest member of any civil society in the known world."
— Nov 28, 2025 10:33AM
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Pablo’s Previous Updates
Pablo
is on page 263 of 386
Pg 245
Only one American hero was to emerge from what happened at Fort Washington. She was Margaret Corbin, the wife of a Pennsylvania soldier, John Corbin, who had gone into battle at her husband's side, and when he was killed, stepped into his place, to load and fire a cannon, until she fell wounded, nearly losing one arm.
— Jan 26, 2026 02:40AM
Only one American hero was to emerge from what happened at Fort Washington. She was Margaret Corbin, the wife of a Pennsylvania soldier, John Corbin, who had gone into battle at her husband's side, and when he was killed, stepped into his place, to load and fire a cannon, until she fell wounded, nearly losing one arm.
Pablo
is on page 155 of 386
Pg 134
In a matter of hours, forty-five ships had dropped anchor inside Sandy Hook in the Lower Bay, ten miles beyond the Narrows. To a Pennsylvania rifleman closer at hand their masts looked like a forest of trimmed pine trees. "I declare that I thought all London was afloat."
— Jan 15, 2026 10:57AM
In a matter of hours, forty-five ships had dropped anchor inside Sandy Hook in the Lower Bay, ten miles beyond the Narrows. To a Pennsylvania rifleman closer at hand their masts looked like a forest of trimmed pine trees. "I declare that I thought all London was afloat."
Pablo
is on page 41 of 386
Pg 34
(At Cambridge)
It was the first American army and an army of everyone, men of every shape and size and makeup, different colors, different nationalities, different ways of talking, and all degrees of physical condition. Many were missing teeth or fingers, pitted by smallpox or scarred by past wars or the all-too-common hazards of life and toil in the eighteenth century.
— Dec 08, 2025 10:33PM
(At Cambridge)
It was the first American army and an army of everyone, men of every shape and size and makeup, different colors, different nationalities, different ways of talking, and all degrees of physical condition. Many were missing teeth or fingers, pitted by smallpox or scarred by past wars or the all-too-common hazards of life and toil in the eighteenth century.

