When Americans think about the American Revolution, certain names come
quickly to mind--George Washington, Paul Revere, and Samuel Adams. These
men deserve to be remembered, yet their stories do not give us a clear
picture of what life was like for the average person during the years
before, during, and immediately after the war. Typical history books do
not describe how a nine-year-old Massachusetts boy might have felt when
his friend was killed in the Boston Massacre or what went through the
mind of a teenage Quaker girl when her family fled Philadelphia. These
are the kinds of stories you will find in this book. Many of these
children not only survived the war but played an active role in it.