ipl-logo

What Was The Difference Between The Crossing And The Civil War

627 Words3 Pages

What does your freedom mean to you? The Crossing and The Crisis No. 1 are both profound moments in U.S. history and they showed the patriotism and the coming together of all Americans since the Plymouth settled in Cape Cod, Massachusetts. Although The Crisis and The Crossing have the same underlying cause, they have some differences. Between the patriotism and the low point in the conflict for the Americans, The Crisis was made for The Crossing. The Crisis, which was written by Thomas Paine, was published in December 1776, which was a few days before the army would cross the Delaware River. Paine wrote this to persuade the men of our country that we need to fight for our freedom against Great Britain. He used different language methods so that everyone could comprehend the writing, and he used emotional and logical appeals, rhetorical questions, metaphors, and much more to gain the reader's interest. When it was published in the Pennsylvania …show more content…

In the movie, George Washington makes an arcane decision to cross the Delaware River to separate the troops from the other British command and attack the Hessians on the other side of the river. Hugh Mercer, Henry Knox, and almost everyone else besides Gen. John Glover was skeptical of this decision because the troops weren’t well trained and ready for this type of battle that Washington was proposing, which wasn’t a very propitious argument according to others. The Battle at Trenton would be the first time that the army attacked someone first, which was a huge step into the foreseen. However, on the day after Christmas, 1776, George Washington’s coherent plan led him and the continental Army to war and this resulted in them defeating a formidable garrison of Hessian mercenaries. If the Americans hadn’t taken action on this day there might have been an inevitable fate of the U.S. losing the war for freedom from

Open Document