
Major General, Continental Army
"We fight, get beat, rise, and fight again."
Washington considered Greene the only general he could safely entrust with independent command. Taking over the shattered Southern Army after the catastrophic defeat at Camden in 1780, Greene rebuilt it from virtually nothing. His Fabian strategy — avoiding decisive engagement while fighting a war of attrition that the British could not sustain — was strategic genius. He never won a major battle in the South, yet he reconquered the entire Southern theater. By the time Cornwallis chased him north to Yorktown, Greene had cleared South Carolina and Georgia of British forces.
Did you know?
Greene had a permanent limp from a knee condition since childhood and was rejected from his local militia unit for it. He nonetheless became Washington's most trusted general. After the war he was given the confiscated Loyalist plantation Mulberry Grove in Georgia, where he died of sunstroke at 43.
December 26, 1776 · 924 total casualties
Thomas Paine wrote 'These are the times that try men's souls' just weeks before. Trenton reversed the catastrophic momentum of the New York campaign, re-enlisted thousands of soldiers, and restored patriot morale across the continent. The crossing became one of the most iconic images in American history.
January 3, 1777 · 518 total casualties
Together with Trenton, Princeton completed Washington's 'Ten Crucial Days,' reversing the war's trajectory. The New Jersey campaign demonstrated Washington's strategic genius — using mobility to compensate for numerical weakness.
December 19, 1777 – June 19, 1778 · 2,500 total casualties
Valley Forge was the crucible that forged the Continental Army. Von Steuben's training manual became the standard for the U.S. Army for decades. The army that marched out in June 1778 could stand and fight in the European manner — as proven at Monmouth six days later.
June 28, 1778 · 720 total casualties
Monmouth was the last major battle in the North. The new French alliance shifted British strategy south, and Washington's army had proven it could fight on equal terms. General Lee was court-martialed and never held command again.
March 15, 1781 · 793 total casualties
Charles James Fox told Parliament: 'Another such victory would ruin the British army.' Cornwallis, unable to hold North Carolina, marched north to Virginia — into the trap that ended the war. Greene's Fabian strategy had worked perfectly.
August 7, 1742
🌅 Birth
Born in Potowomut (Warwick), Rhode Island
1775
⚔️ Battle
Commands Rhode Island forces at the Siege of Boston
Winter 1777–1778
📍 Posting
Serves as Quartermaster General at Valley Forge; transforms army logistics
December 1780
📍 Posting
Takes command of destroyed Southern Army at Charlotte, NC
January 1781
⚔️ Battle
Detaches Morgan's force; wins at Cowpens; retreats north drawing Cornwallis out
March 15, 1781
⚔️ Battle
Bloodied but unbowed at Guilford Court House; Cornwallis abandons Carolinas
June 19, 1786
✝️ Death
Dies of sunstroke at Mulberry Grove Plantation, Georgia, age 43