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The USA Is An Extension Of Western Europe
Just learned about this Jew who helped to finance the American Revolution:
Patrick says
Just learned about this Jew who helped to finance the American Revolution:
And we still are trying to pay off the loan.
On July 4, 1776, as the ink dried on the Declaration of Independence, the city of New York braced for invasion. George Washington, standing under a giant elm on the Bowery, read the Declaration aloud to his troops —many shoeless, some illiterate— who roared with approval. That night, patriots tore down a statue of King George III and melted it into 42,088 bullets.
Not tourist trinkets. Bullets.
Those early patriots knew liberty wasn’t just a legal theory. Among other things, it was a fight. And when the time came, they acted, transforming dictatorial symbols into ammunition.
I really do hate this holiday. Bunch of people that cannot handle their booze. They already are going off at 1pm central around me. I'd like to just fly out to Montana and rent a 40 acre ranch in the middle of no where but that's expensive. I'd like to go back to this place though https://www.bookbigsky.com/property/Silvertip-Big-Sky No fireworks allow due to fires. But a big ranch would be ideal.
Sounds like you live in a 'trailer park like' ghetto
patriots tore down a statue of King George III and melted it into 42,088 bullets.
They made statues out of lead back then? Ain't nobody melting bronze for musket balls.
On July 9, 1776, after the Declaration of Independence was read aloud in New York City, a crowd of patriots (including soldiers and civilians) marched to Bowling Green, where a 2,000-pound lead statue of King George III stood on horseback. They toppled it, decapitated it, and later melted it down.
The Fate of the Metal: 42,088 Bullets
The statue was made of lead (gilded with gold), which was extremely valuable for making musket balls.
According to accounts, the patriots transported the metal to Litchfield, Connecticut, where General Oliver Wolcott supervised its melting.
The lead was recast into 42,088 bullets for the Continental Army.
Historical Evidence
Eyewitness accounts confirm the event, including entries in the diary of Rev. Ewald Gustav Schaukirk.
Fragments of the statue were later found in the 19th century—some are now in the New-York Historical Society.
The original statue’s design (based on a famous equestrian statue of Roman Emperor Marcus Aurelius) was well-documented.
Legacy
The act was highly symbolic, marking the rejection of British rule.
The bullets were used in battles, turning the king’s likeness into weapons against his own troops—a powerful irony.
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