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The American Revolution was designed by Jim Dunnigan, with graphic design by Redmond A. Simonsen.It was originally published by SPI in 1972 in a white box with the title in a red stripe; later the same year the game was released in a box with artwork by Alonzo Chappel.
Video games about the American Revolution and American Revolutionary War. Pages in category "Video games about the American Revolution" The following 13 pages are in this category, out of 13 total.
The Bucks County Dragoons, also known as the Bucks County Light Dragoons, were an American Loyalist (American Revolution) unit during the American Revolutionary War.They were raised in Philadelphia, Province of Pennsylvania, in February, 1778 and returned with the British Army to New York in 1778.The Dragoons were attached to John Simcoe's Queen's Rangers for the 1779 campaign, and later ...
1776, subtitled "The Game of the American Revolutionary War", is a board wargame published by Avalon Hill in 1974 that simulates the American Revolutionary War.Its release was timed to coincide with the bicentenary of the Revolution, and for several years was a bestseller for Avalon Hill.
1778 Roster of Continental Light Dragoons. Each troop consisted of 32 privates, 1 armorer, 1 farrier, 1 trumpeter, 4 corporals, 1 quartermaster sergeant, a drill or an orderly sergeant, a cornet, a lieutenant, and a captain—a total of 280 men and officers. Whether any of the four regiments of Dragoons was ever at full strength is uncertain.
4th Continental Light Dragoons 4th Legionary Corps; Active: 1777-1783: Allegiance: Continental Congress of the United States: Type: Dragoon: Size: regiment of six troops 116 men in 1781: Part of: Continental Army: Nickname(s) Moylan's Horse: Colors: scarlet coats faced with blue (1777) green coats faced red (1778) blue coats faced red (1782 ...
Sons of Liberty is a game in which American Revolutionary War scenarios include Bunker Hill, Monmouth, and Saratoga. [1] Reception.
The King's American Dragoons primarily served on Long Island in 1782 and early 1783, [2] where they earned local notoriety for destroying a church and burial ground in order to erect Fort Golgotha in Huntington. [3] They were evacuated from New York and resettled in Saint John, New Brunswick, in July 1783. [4] They were disbanded there in ...