![header=[Marker Text] body=[The first battalion in the colonies authorized by Congress, June 1755. Totaling nine companies, it was initially led by Col. William Thompson of Carlisle. Later the organization became the First Pennsylvania Continental Regiment.] sign](kora/files/1/10/1-A-16B-139-ExplorePAHistory-a0a8p2-a_450.gif)
Mouse over for marker text
Name:
Thompson's Rifle Battalion
Region:
Hershey/Gettysburg/Dutch Country Region
County:
Cumberland
Marker Location:
E. South St. at Old Graveyard
Dedication Date:
November 11, 1986
Behind the Marker
The Continental Army was a hybrid organization from the very beginning. Founded by Congress in June of 1775, the core of the Continental Army was composed of Massachusetts" "Minute Men" and the other local militia units who chased the Redcoats from the small villages of Lexington and Concord back to Boston two months earlier. Some Congressmen saw the creation of a national army as an essential step toward Independence. Others emphasized the need to restore order in New England and prevent any subsequent provocations that might destroy the dwindling possibility of negotiating a truce with Britain. On June 14, 1775, Congress decided to take charge of the army and transform it into a national institution. They made Virginian George Washington its commander in chief, and recruited soldiers from the states at large.
Pennsylvanians were reluctant to join the army and had far less experienced in military affairs than many other colonists, but they still surpassed Congress's authorization to raise six companies of soldiers by three. These nine companies were commanded by Col. William Thompson of Carlisle, a surveyor and early activist in the resistance against Britain.
The men who volunteered for Thompson's "Rifle Battalion" represented "a general cross section of the Pennsylvania frontier's ethnic population." Most of them were Scots-Irish and Germans from the counties west of the Susquehanna River, although some came from as far east as
Reading. Most, too, were single, eighteen-to-twenty-five-year-old farmers whose families held farmsteads of less than 100 acres. This profile makes the early Pennsylvania troops comparable to those which most other states raised early in the Revolution. As the war dragged on, Continental privates tended to be poorer and younger.
The companies of Thompson's Battalion marched separately from their areas of origin on the Pennsylvania frontier to New England. They arrived near Washington's headquarters at Cambridge, Massachusetts, between late July and late August of 1775. These first Pennsylvania troops were similar to the New England soldiers that composed the nucleus of the early Continental Army, men whom Washington found "an exceedingly dirty and nasty people." The patriotism that inspired men to enlist was no substitute for the discipline that would only come with experience and the sifting out of unqualified individuals. The Pennsylvania companies showed early signs of being undisciplined and, in several cases, blatantly mutinous.While the new Continental Army maintained a siege at Boston, two of the Pennsylvania companies in late 1775 participated in Benedict Arnold's heroic but disastrous winter march across the wilderness of Maine to the St. Lawrence River, and the unsuccessful assault on Quebec.
Other companies moved with the main army to New York City in August of 1776, where they experienced the demoralizing reversal of fortune that led to their retreat across New Jersey into Pennsylvania. This was the time that, in Thomas Paine's vivid words, "tried men's souls." A few of them probably participated in the crossing of the Delaware River on December 25, 1776, and the successful defeat of a Hessian garrison at Trenton. After 1776, Pennsylvania's military units were reorganized, along with the Continental Army as a whole. General Washington, and a reluctant, often divided Congress, tried to balance the ideas and principles that had precipitated the Revolution, with the military realities of the day by creating a force that could secure independence without threatening the liberty of citizens.
The Continental Army was a hybrid organization from the very beginning. Founded by Congress in June of 1775, the core of the Continental Army was composed of Massachusetts" "Minute Men" and the other local militia units who chased the Redcoats from the small villages of Lexington and Concord back to Boston two months earlier. Some Congressmen saw the creation of a national army as an essential step toward Independence. Others emphasized the need to restore order in New England and prevent any subsequent provocations that might destroy the dwindling possibility of negotiating a truce with Britain. On June 14, 1775, Congress decided to take charge of the army and transform it into a national institution. They made Virginian George Washington its commander in chief, and recruited soldiers from the states at large.
Pennsylvanians were reluctant to join the army and had far less experienced in military affairs than many other colonists, but they still surpassed Congress's authorization to raise six companies of soldiers by three. These nine companies were commanded by Col. William Thompson of Carlisle, a surveyor and early activist in the resistance against Britain.
The men who volunteered for Thompson's "Rifle Battalion" represented "a general cross section of the Pennsylvania frontier's ethnic population." Most of them were Scots-Irish and Germans from the counties west of the Susquehanna River, although some came from as far east as

The companies of Thompson's Battalion marched separately from their areas of origin on the Pennsylvania frontier to New England. They arrived near Washington's headquarters at Cambridge, Massachusetts, between late July and late August of 1775. These first Pennsylvania troops were similar to the New England soldiers that composed the nucleus of the early Continental Army, men whom Washington found "an exceedingly dirty and nasty people." The patriotism that inspired men to enlist was no substitute for the discipline that would only come with experience and the sifting out of unqualified individuals. The Pennsylvania companies showed early signs of being undisciplined and, in several cases, blatantly mutinous.While the new Continental Army maintained a siege at Boston, two of the Pennsylvania companies in late 1775 participated in Benedict Arnold's heroic but disastrous winter march across the wilderness of Maine to the St. Lawrence River, and the unsuccessful assault on Quebec.
Other companies moved with the main army to New York City in August of 1776, where they experienced the demoralizing reversal of fortune that led to their retreat across New Jersey into Pennsylvania. This was the time that, in Thomas Paine's vivid words, "tried men's souls." A few of them probably participated in the crossing of the Delaware River on December 25, 1776, and the successful defeat of a Hessian garrison at Trenton. After 1776, Pennsylvania's military units were reorganized, along with the Continental Army as a whole. General Washington, and a reluctant, often divided Congress, tried to balance the ideas and principles that had precipitated the Revolution, with the military realities of the day by creating a force that could secure independence without threatening the liberty of citizens.