Silas Weeks, RWS. pg 1/11

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Silas Weeks, RWS pg 1/11 No Picture Available Born: 1737 NC Married: 1757 Zillar Hunter (children: James, Theophilus, & Ada) Died: 22 May 1778 Valley Forge, PA Parents: Theophilus Weeks & Grace Green Information gathered from online research

Silas Weeks died while encamped at Valley Forge with George Washington. pg 2/11

Information from online research at www.footnote.com pg 3/11

Pg 4/11 Battle at Brandywine 11 Sep 1777 The Battle of Brandywine, also known as the Battle of the Brandywine or the Battle of Brandywine Creek, was a battle of the Philadelphia Campaign of the American Revolutionary War fought on September 11, 1777, in the area surrounding Chadds Ford, Pennsylvania and the Brandywine River. The battle, which was a decisive victory for the British, left Philadelphia, the revolutionary capital, undefended. The British captured the city on September 26, beginning an occupation that would last until June 1778. Information from online research at: Wikipedia.com http://www.britishbattles.com/brandywine.htm

Pg 5/11 Battle at Germantown 4 Oct 1777 The Battle of Germantown, a battle in the Philadelphia campaign of the American Revolutionary War, was fought on October 4, 1777 at Germantown, Pennsylvania. The British victory in this battle ensured that Philadelphia, the capital of the self-proclaimed United States of America, would remain in British hands throughout the winter of 1777 1778.

Pg 6/11 History of the 6th North Carolina Regiment, Continental Line Formation of North Carolina's first two continental regiments was authorized by the Provincial Congress in 1775, in response to a proposal by the Continental Congress to form a Continental Army. After the Battle of Moore's Creek Bridge and later British forays in the lower Cape Fear region in the spring of 1776, the Continental Congress resolved that North Carolina could raise two additional regiments--the NC Assembly decided to raise four more regiments. Thus, the 6th North Carolina Regiment was formed in 1776. It was formed from men from the Wilmington and Hillsborough Military Districts, which made up nearly one-half the state including much of the backcountry. They were organized at Halifax, NC, under the command of Col. Alexander Lillington, hero of the Battle of Moore's Creek Bridge. When ready to march north to join the main army, they were instead called south to defend Charleston against a suspected second assault in 1776 (after the lst attack was repulsed in June). In the meantime, Col. Lillington stepped down due to ill health. He was replaced by Col. Gideon Lamb. The British did not return in 1776. The NC Line spent a miserable winter near Charleston without the supplies promised by South Carolina. The 6th marched north in the spring and joined the main army, brigaded under Gen. Francis Nash. They were in the battles of Brandywine and Germantown, being at the Chew House in the latter and serving as rear guard for the American withdrawal during which Gen. Nash was mortally wounded. They were noted by one diarist as having captured sixteen guns during the attack, but having had to abandon them in the retreat. They wintered at Valley Forge in Gen. Lachlan Macintosh's Brigade. The NC troops were noted by Washington to be the poorest supplied of all the destitute men there. Their desertion rate was 10 percent, the lowest in an Army that averaged 18 percent. It was a long way home. In the reductions of 1778, the 6th was merged with the lst NC, assuming the lower regimental number. The supernumerary officers of the 6th were sent home to NC to recruit. All troops recruited by the 6th for the next several years were taken immediately into the other NC units. The 6th ceased to exist officially in early 1781. In the meantime, the men of the 6th, now the lst, served at Monmouth, being engaged early and again late in the day, and in the Hudson Highlands. Some of them took part in the frontal assault by NC troops of Wayne's Light Infantry on Stony Point. In November 1779 they were ordered south to Charleston during the worst winter of the war. They arrived in time to take part in the defense and, along with the Virginians, took part in the only sortie during the siege. On 12 May 1780, they went into captivity with the fall of Charleston. Many of them were sent to the prison hulks in the harbor while others were imprisoned on John's Island. The 6th disappeared from the field and on paper. http://6nc.org/about6nc/6th_history.html

Pg 7/11

Pg 8/11 On December 19, 1777, when Washington's poorly fed, ill-equipped army, weary from long marches, struggled into Valley Forge, winds blew as the 12,000 Continentals prepared for winter's fury. Grounds for brigade encampments were selected, and defense lines were planned and begun. Though construction of more than a thousand huts provided shelter, it did little to offset the critical shortages that continually plagued the army. Undernourished and poorly clothed, living in crowded, damp quarters, the army was ravaged by sickness and disease. Typhoid, jaundice, dysentery, and pneumonia were among the killers that felled as many as 2,000 men that winter. 3. Waterman's Monument Text seen here at the base of this monument reads: To the soldier's of Washington's Army who sleep in Valley Forge 1777-1778

Pg 9/11 On the next 3 pages are copies of the original Land Warrant papers for a Philip Shackles, descendent of Silas Weeks, for Silas service in the North Carolina Militia. Philip Shackles was granted 640 acres.

Pg 10/11

Copy of original survey of land to Phillip Shackles Pg 11/11