Read The Riddle of Penncroft Farm Online
Authors: Dorothea Jensen
Everything that happens in the historical part of this book is as true as I could make it, except for the insertion of Geordie (along with his family, Sandy, the Derrys, and the Owenses) and minor liberties taken with the sequence of Revolutionary events and with George Washington's wig (he didn't wear one). In addition to the famous (and infamous) figures of the Revolution, many other minor characters are based on actual people or events involving people whose names have faded into the past. For example, a Squire Cheyney tried to warn Washington, who was then reluctantly guided by Mr. Brown. American vedettes were surprised at Welsh's tavern and had to escape on foot. Quakers carried on their regular worship service despite skirmishing outside Kennett Meetinghouse. The manager of the elegant City Tavern was a man named Daniel Smith (a Tory who left with the British). There really was an orderly book that may have helped alert the patriots about British plans to attack Whitemarsh. Philadelphia was despoiled, and American prisoners did shiver and starve in the State House. The men at Valley Forge chanted “No bread, no soldier” and joked in the face of terrible hardships while the Conway Cabal tried to get Congress to replace Washington with Gates. Spies for both sides passed back and forth between Valley Forge and British-occupied Philadelphia with astonishing ease. In addition, Sandy's letter refers to real events (although she's right to doubt the story about the Indians and the Grenadiers scaring each other off at Barren Hill).
My central aim in making up this story, however, was not to gather anecdotes about the Revolution but to show that it was, indeed, the First American Civil War. There were many people who felt the same way Geordie's parents did, and for excellent reasons. It has been said that of the people living in America at the time of the Revolution, nearly one-third were loyalist and one-third were neutral. This means only one-third were active patriots. Of these, some (like my made-up Mr. Owens and the regrettably real Benedict Arnold) embraced the Revolution for personal gain or ambition. Most patriots, however, were genuinely committed to winning freedom from England, or they would not have given up so much to achieve it. An understanding of the complexities, the risks, the terror, and the uncertainties faced by our forefathers helps us see how remarkable their achievement was. Yet they were only people, and if they could muddle through incredibly difficult times, so can we.
Penncroft Farm, Blackberry Hill Farm, and Seek-No-Further Pike cannot be found on any map. Geordie and his family lived only on these pages. But there were many families that were as divided as theirs, and there were many Tories who suffered worse fates than a partly burned barn. Most lost their property. Some lost their lives. All lost their homeland, either literally or figuratively. They were part of our national history and should be remembered. They were the losers in the First American Civil War. Thank goodness.
agog
âin a state of excited eagerness
apoplectic
âliable to have a stroke (apoplexy)
bedlamite
âinsane person (Bedlam was a British insane asylum)
benighted
âstranded by nightfall
buff
âtan in color, bare skin (“in the buff” means “naked”)
bumpkin
âa hick, an ignorant person
bussing
âkissing
charity
âgood will, friendship
ciphering
âarithmetic, writing in secret code
cockade
âa leather hat ornament showing political loyalty
Conestoga
âA Pennsylvania Indian tribe
Continental
âreferred to the American continent, therefore applied to American soldiers, Congress, and paper money
crop
âa small whip
dab hand
âan expert
deucedly
âextremely (used in mild oath)
doleful
âunhappy
doodle
âa fool
farthing
âa small British coin, worth only half a
ha'penny
fathom
âto understand thoroughly
flying hospital
âtemporary hospital
fortnight
âtwo weeks
furlong
âabout â
of a mile (a standard plowed furrow length)
gaiters
âcovering for the lower part of the leg
gewgaws
âtrinkets, toys
gull
âto fool
ha'penny
âa coin worth half a penny
Hessian
âperson from Hesse, a kingdom of central Germany
hob
âthe shelf inside a fireplace for keeping food warm
hornbook
âreading chart covered with thin layer of cow's horn
huzzlecap
âgame in which players throw coins into a hat
larder
âfood storage area
leading strings
âa sort of leash for toddlers
leeching
âputting leeches on the skin to suck out “bad” blood
linsey-woolsey
âcoarse cloth made of linen and wool fiber
lobsterbacks
âred-uniformed British soldiers
loyalist
âa person who was loyal to the King of England
mite
âa little bit (also, a tiny insect, see
scabies
)
mobcap
âa woman's loose cap
mollycoddle
âbaby, overprotect
mulled
âheated and flavored with spices
nattered
âchattered, complained
ninnyhammer
âa stupid person
nunchion
âsnack, light lunch
orderly book
âa book containing battle plans
pallet
âa straw mattress
periwigged
âwearing a wig
perry
âpear cider, fermented so it contained alcohol
pioneer
âarmy scout
pomace
âcrushed pulp of fruit pressed for juice
puddingheart
âa fearful person, a scaredycat
puncheon
âa rough wooden surface made of split logs
putrid
âinfected, rotten (modern slang: “yucky”)
redcoat
âa British soldier (the uniforms were red)
redoubt
âditch with dirt piled up to provide shelter from attack
riddle
âa word puzzle, a mystery, a coarse sieve
rucksack
âbackpack
rushlights
âcandles with wicks made of rushes (a grassy plant)
sapskull
âa fool
scabies
âa skin disease caused by mites burrowing into the skin and laying eggs, causing intense itching
score
âtwenty
shot
âbill, account
sideboard
âa piece of dining-room furniture
slugabed
âlazy person who sleeps late
smockfaced
âbaby faced
stake and rider
âcolonial fence made by bracing stakes together in Xs and laying pieces of wood (called riders) across the top
stentorian
âvery loud; from Stentor, a Greek herald in the Trojan War whose voice was louder than fifty men
tankard
âlarge drinking mug, sometimes with a lid
toadeater
âsomeone who always agrees with his superiors
toddy
âa hot spiced drink made of whiskey or brandy
Tory
âa loyalist
totty-headed
âsilly
traces
âstraps hooking an animal to the vehicle it pulls
trencher
âcarved wooden platter or bowl
trice
âan instant, a moment
tricorne
âa hat with three corners
tuppence
âa coin worth two pennies
twigged
âobserved, saw through
vedettes
âsentries (guards) on horseback
witcrachers
âpeople who made jokes
witling
âa fool
zany
âcrazy (person)
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D
OROTHEA
J
ENSEN
is a former teacher of English. After moving to Minnesota from Philadelphia, she wrote
The Riddle of Penncroft Farm
to make the American Revolution come alive for her own children. She lives in southern New Hampshire, in a colonial house built in the 1700s.
* Definitions adapted from standard dictionaries, the
O.E.D
., Eric Partridge's
Dictionary of Slang and Unconventional English
, and from recent reissues of
Samuel Johnson's Dictionary
(1755), Noah Webster's
Compendious Dictionary of the English Language
(1806), and the
1811 Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue
(Capt. Francis Grose).