Calls for independence shook the wealthy gentry with their grand
mansions in Chestertown and their patchwork of prosperous Kent County
plantations and farms. It was in the interest of the upper echelons of
Kent County society to remain loyal to the Crown. Yet the Revolutionary
spirit did ignite, as Chestertown protested parliament's duty on tea and
sent flour to aid the poor in the closed port of Boston. While militia
was raised, Kent County's true value to Washington was as a key
breadbasket for his Continental army. Still, the revolutionaries found
it difficult to gain a firm foothold. Religious and social tensions
created a charged atmosphere as Loyalists burned rebel mills to the
ground only to be in turn attacked by rebel mobs. Author Theodore
Corbett unravels the complexities of a community thrust into war.