FROZEN LIBERTY
THE MEN WHO SUFFERED TO BIRTH A NATION
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Narrado por:
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Virtual Voice
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De:
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N S RILEY
Este título utiliza narración de voz virtual
The American Revolution is often remembered through portraits of generals, declarations, and decisive victories. Yet the nation was not born in halls of power or on parchment alone. It was forged in frozen camps, muddy roads, disease-ridden hospitals, and the exhausted bodies of ordinary men who endured suffering few modern readers can imagine.
Frozen Liberty: The Men Who Suffered to Birth a Nation tells the story of the American Revolution from the ground level, through the eyes of common soldiers, militia members, and civilians whose sacrifices made independence possible. These were farmers, laborers, craftsmen, immigrants, teenagers, and aging fathers who left their homes to face hunger, cold, unpaid service, primitive medicine, and the constant threat of death. They did not know they would win. Many never lived to see the nation they helped create.
This book explores the brutal realities of Revolutionary War service: barefoot marches through snow, weeks without proper food, outbreaks of smallpox and dysentery, amputations performed without anesthesia, and winter encampments where survival itself was uncertain. It examines the psychological toll of prolonged fear, exhaustion, and despair, as well as the devastating conditions aboard British prison ships where thousands perished in captivity.
Drawing from primary sources including letters, diaries, pension records, and eyewitness accounts, Frozen Liberty brings authentic voices forward, allowing soldiers and officers to speak in their own words wherever possible. These firsthand perspectives reveal why men continued to fight despite overwhelming odds, unreliable pay, and constant hardship. Liberty was not an abstract slogan to them. It was bound to family, land, dignity, and the refusal to live under unchecked power.
Rather than glorifying battle or simplifying history into triumph and inevitability, this book confronts the Revolution as it was lived: uncertain, costly, and deeply human. Victories are shown alongside loss. Survival is presented as its own form of courage. The reader is invited to understand independence not as a guaranteed outcome, but as something earned through endurance.
Frozen Liberty is a work of narrative history grounded in documented evidence and written with respect for those who endured the war without expectation of reward or remembrance. It is a reminder that the United States exists because ordinary people chose to remain standing when surrender would have been easier, warmer, and safer.
Freedom was not given. It was survived.