Continental Army Recruitment Poster - This poster is actually from 1798, over two decades after the outbreak of the revolution. By war’s end as many as 175,000 soldiers had served in the continental army, although at any given moment troop levels never exceeded 20,000 men. It appears on the websites of patriot organizations and reenactment clubs, which, under banners. This poster uses much hyperbole, including a “truly liberal and. “take notice” appears in textbooks desperate for visual images to represent the continental army and the lives of its soldiers. Things you will need to teach this lesson: [ 1] at some points in the war, it dwindled to fewer than 5,000 soldiers! The widely circulated take notice poster is often erroneously presented as a recruitment effort for the revolutionary war.
Things you will need to teach this lesson: It appears on the websites of patriot organizations and reenactment clubs, which, under banners. “take notice” appears in textbooks desperate for visual images to represent the continental army and the lives of its soldiers. The widely circulated take notice poster is often erroneously presented as a recruitment effort for the revolutionary war. This poster is actually from 1798, over two decades after the outbreak of the revolution. By war’s end as many as 175,000 soldiers had served in the continental army, although at any given moment troop levels never exceeded 20,000 men. This poster uses much hyperbole, including a “truly liberal and. [ 1] at some points in the war, it dwindled to fewer than 5,000 soldiers!