|
Angela Berkley, High School Student
|
Then she is chosen to give an oral report on Ethan Allen, first leader of the Green Mountain Boys, winner of the battle of Ticonderoga, and local boring dead guy.
|
|
Brian Mengel, Civil Servant
|
The Ethan Allen Express and Vermonter are financed in part through funds made available by the Vermont State Department of Transportation.
|
|
Miguel Cortez, Small Business Owner
|
ETHAN ALLEN (SSBN 608) is the second ship of the Fleet to be named in honor of Vermont's champion of independence and Revolutionary War leader of the Green Mountain Boys Ethan Allen.
|
|
Pete Trengle, Bass Player
|
Ethan Allen and Seth Warner from Vermont had nearly 200 Green Mountain Boys.
|
|
Keith Tennant, Factory Worker
|
In 1775, Ethan Allen and Benedict Arnold surprised the British and captured the fort.
Ethan Allen was foaled in 1849 at Ticonderoga, NY and was raised as a family pet.
|
|
Billie Kirgan, Machinist
|
For example, there is Ethan Allen's gun with his name engraved on the stock that he lent to Benedict Arnold.
|
|
Paddy McGuinness, Newsagent
|
The setting is Fort Ticonderoga in 1775, at a time when tensions ran high between American patriots and British loyalists A young American boy joins Ethan Allen's Green Mountain Boys despite the fact that his Father is a Tory.
|
|
Josh Hogan, Commander
|
The Association is open to all those who served aboard or participated in operations aboard USS Ethan Allen (SSBN/SSN-608) during her long and illustrious career.
After Ethan Allen seized Fort Ticonderoga in 1775, the Americans built a floating bridge from Fort Ticonderoga to Mount Independence completing the Military Road.
Service in the Continental Army As a militia colonel, Arnold joined with Ethan Allen to take Fort Ticonderoga in New York from the British at the start of the American Revolution in 1775.
|
|
|