Since its founding in 1751, Carlisle, Pennsylvania, has been at the
crossroads of history as the site of Washington's headquarters during
the Whiskey Rebellion, a city shelled and occupied by Confederate forces
and the home to Dickinson College and the Carlisle Indian Industrial
School. With lively vignettes and firsthand accounts, Joseph David Cress
recounts the remarkable history of the borough. Tales of the McClintock
Slave Riot of 1847 and the courthouse fire of 1845 stand alongside the
legendary figures of Molly Pitcher and all-American athlete Jim Thorpe.
Cress chronicles Carlisle's evolution from an outpost on Pennsylvania's
rough-and-tumble frontier to a vibrant and thriving hub of the
Cumberland Valley.