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SignOnSanDiego.com - The
San Diego Union-Tribune
Revolution had founding members, too
October 24, 2004
by Curran-Downey
Politically speaking, Marc Stockwell-Moniz is
a throwback – 354
years back.
Stockwell-Moniz, who grew up in Boston and lives in Poway, had
always been a history buff. But when a genealogical study helped
him trace his ancestors to their arrival in this country in 1650,
and he subsequently discovered that his great-great-great-great-grandfather
served with George Washington, it seemed a natural progression
that he would write about it.
What separates his book, "George Washington's Unsung Heroes," from
the rest of the literary pack is that the real focus is on the
people who aren't, as he says, "the usual suspects."
"Some of these folks can be found in other books, but they're
largely forgotten," Stockwell-Moniz said.
"These are the folks who did the grunt
work. We consider the people who signed the famous documents
as the founding fathers,
but I like to think of these people also as the founding members
of the country."
Some of the big names – John Hancock, Paul Revere and
Alexander Hamilton – have their own chapters. But so does
Salem Poor, an African-American soldier who fought at the Battle
of Bunker Hill and was with Washington at Valley Forge; Phillis
Wheatley, the first African-American slave to publish a book – of
poetry – in the United States; and John Peter Muhlenberg,
an ordained minister who became a brigadier general in the Continental
Army and later served three terms in the House of Representatives.
Then there was Tench Tilghman. Lt. Col. Tench Tilghman served
as Washington's aide-de-camp, a secretary who worked for two
years without a salary until Washington wrote Congress, insisting
that he be given a commission and a paycheck.
"He's one of my favorites for what he did and how he personally
gave up everything, including his business, to serve Washington," Stockwell-Moniz
said. "His family were loyalists (to the British government),
so he was the only one in his family who believed as he did."
Stockwell-Moniz, who geared the book to middle and high school
students, makes his rounds of local schools as a member of the
Sons of the American Revolution, a national organization of the
descendants of militia men and others who fought for American
independence. The group also sponsors essay contests and awards
scholarships.
"
I show up in my Continental Army uniform, I bring portraits and
documents and try to make it as hands-on as possible for the
kids," he said.
"I try to give them the unusual stories.
I mean, who ever heard of Tench Tilghman? But you know, no
matter what war is
fought, it will always be done by the little guys."
Although Washington was mostly revered, Stockwell-Moniz says
politics took a hard-edged turn in subsequent elections.
"It may have been a little less 'in your face' than today,
but only because they didn't have television," he said. "But
the newspapers were brutal."
And if you think politicians take verbal shots
at one another now, let's not forget that Vice President Aaron
Burr and former
Secretary of the Treasury Alexander Hamilton decided to settle
their personal and political differences in 1804 with a duel – resulting
in a gunshot wound to Hamilton that killed him the following
day.
That fight is the stuff of most history books, but
Stockwell-Moniz said his research into the little-known players
in the Revolutionary
War turned up so many who served without recognition that he
has enough information for a second book.
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