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kingbury enthusiast

@samuel-sinbury

mostly gay hamilton art - sinbury on ao3
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I will kill your friends and family to remind you of my love Da da da dat da dat da da da da ya da Da da dat dat da ya da! Da da da dat da dat da da da da ya da Da da datβ€” Everybody!
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Hc: Sammy is TOL (and he is not wearing a binder, it’s just an undershirt!)

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sewlett

TURN SHIPPING NET

do people still make networks?

TO JOIN:

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  • follow admins, if you want! (@sewlett and @johngravesimcoe​)
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sonofhistory
Anonymous asked:

Do you know anything about how Charles Lee was a person? I can't seem to find much about him other than his revolutionary war career. Thanks.

β€œCharles Lee had become both a favorite of Samuel Adams and John Adams because he was a former British officer who had become fervent about America’s cause. Lee delivered mesmerizing account of his past exploits and tended to behave rudely with civilians. James Warren had once met him in Massachusetts and written to … Adams … Adams reassured him that Lee’s oddities were merely those of a great man.Β β€˜He is a queer creature, but you must love his dogs if you love him, and forgive a thousand whims for the sake of the soldier and the scholar.’” (Langguth 309).Β 

β€œβ€¦he [Charles Lee] said that dogs were faithful and men were not. In his first tour of Charleston, he brought along a Pomeranian as big as a skinny man of forty-four, he was striking ugly, with a bony nose so large that men called himΒ β€œNaso”. His nature was a jumble of contradictory quirks. He was vain enough to deign his own uniform and have it expensively tailored but then wore it wrinkled and often filthy. He quoted from Plutarch and Shakespeare but as easily lasted into a coarseness remarkable even in the army.” (Langguth 330).

β€œApart from a deep affection for his sister, Lee was as disillusioned with women as with men and seemed to prefer casual relations with those who followed an army camp … Mohawks observed the way Lee strode through their camp, always talking, and named himΒ β€˜Boiling Water.’” (Langguth 330).

β€œβ€¦Lee expected to be rewarded for his services to a British ally. Instead, George began to apologize for having no military position to offer him. Lee cut the march short.Β β€œSir,” he said,Β β€œI will never give Your Majesty an opportunity of breaking your promise to me again.” (Langguth 330).

β€œHis officers soon came to accept Lee’s rude manners as a fair trade for his apparent skill” (Langguth 331).

β€œLee ignored … dire events at Harlem heights … But when the British overran the post, Lee was not smug. Instead, he lost all control, railing and shouting that had the wretched place been named for him and not for Washington, it would have been given up long ago … [Joseph] Reed added that Lee could be decisive, a quality often lacking in minds that were otherwise vulnerable.” (Langguth 402).

β€œβ€¦ Lee was reluctant to obey … Lee stalled and delayed asΒ Washington grew moreΒ desperate … excuses he offered were ones Washington could also claim … Despite strict orders, some of Lee’s hungry troops had turned to looting.” (Langguth 403).

β€œHe said he trusted he would be treated like a gentleman.” (Langguth 405).

β€œLee was a thin, quarrelsome, eccentric bachelor who spoke four foreign languages, had lost two fingers in an Italian duel, and traveled everywhere with his pack of dogs at his heels. He had briefly married an Indian women leading the Mohawks to nickname him … Boiling Water. He was a talented by impossibly temperamental man who believed devoutly in his own military genius. Arrogant and indiscreet … he ridiculed efforts …” (Chernow 113).Β 

β€œLee, whose true character still remains enigmatic, mossed a charm which had won him many friends among the officers who delighting in his caustic wit and his colorful tales of adventure in faroff Poland, Hungary and Constantinople. Lee’s appearance was not prepossing–thin as a match with an ugly face dominated by an quinine nose … Lee encouraged Monroe to overcome hisΒ β€˜mauvaise honte,’ which he felt was preventing the young officer from displaying his real talents … Lee sensed abilities of the first order.” (Ammon 17).Β 

[Letter from Charles Lee to James Monroe]Β β€œThere are few young men for whom I have higher esteem and affection. I am extremely concerned that fortune has been so unkind as not to admit of your cultivating the talents which nature has bestowed on you to a greater advantage than your present situation seems to promise.”

β€œLee thought the [study of] law [was]Β β€œa most worried narrower of the mind.” (DeRose 41).Β 

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More sketchdump, some Democratic-Republicans: Aaron Burr, Thomas Jefferson, and an attempt at a wigless James Madison

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queenapple

I can’t get over that white college girl who pretended to be a sex trafficking victim with HIV, Chinese-Pakistani non binary person living in India so they wouldn’t get flack for their high school HIV Hamilton AU? Why have I been banished to such a cursed timeline. How does this site always manage to one-up it’s previous drama.

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king george: is that your hand on my ass?
samuel: it was an accident.
king george: samuel, your hand's still on my ass.
samuel: IT'S STILL AN ACCIDENT.
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Wow History Fact #14

George III regularly went on horseback rides through Windsor Park with his pages and Equerries. However, he has only reportedly fallen off his horse twice. The first occasion that the King fell from his horse was caused by accidentally touching it with his spur, the horse jerking forwards. The King lost his balance and fell onto the road but clear of his horse, before immediately getting up and telling his entourage not to mention it to anyone that he fell while laughing, then proceeding to ride on. The Queen later interviewed Greville about the whole situation, which she most likely heard about from the King himself. Greville writes that George III found the situation quite hilarious, much like he did with his second accident.

The second accident was a bit more frightening to his equerries. During a stag chase, while the King was crossing the Mill Dam in Blackwater, his horse was frightened by the rush of water, throwing George into the pool. The King wentΒ  below the surface of the water and his attending equerry, Major Price, dragged him out. Luckily he had not been harmed but swallowed a bit of water, causing him to be dizzy and confused at first. Still, he recovered himself quickly and rode home. Yet again he found the situation quite amusing, later in the day mentioning to Col. Greville (whom we know this from) that β€˜he had a glimpse of Blackwater and added, β€œthat He did not like it” .’

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