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  1. When American troops faltered, Baron von Steuben helped whip them into shape. Erick Trickey. April 26, 2017. Baron Friedrich Wilhelm von Steuben was a Prussian soldier designated inspector general ...

    • By Pablo Villa — NCO Journal
    • What’s in A Name
    • A Military Life; A False Baron
    • A Chance Meeting; A Damaging Accusation
    • From Portsmouth to Valley Forge
    • The Model Company
    • The Blue Book
    • Later Years

    September 18, 2015 Download the PDF The Army’s 239-year history is laden with momentous battles and monumental figures. But perhaps no personality had as great an impact on that story than the man called in to help start it — Friedrich von Steuben. Steuben’s portrait doesn’t grace any currency. His name may not evoke the same familiarity as Washing...

    The man who would help the Continental Army shift the direction of the Revolutionary War was christened Friedrich Wilhelm Ludolf Gerhard Augustin von Steuben on Sept. 24, 1730, in Magdeburg, Prussia, about 80 miles southwest of Berlin. The verbose name paid tribute to the exalted men who stood witness as Steuben’s godfathers: Ludolf von Luderitz, r...

    Steuben was born Sept. 17, 1730, near Magdeberg to Wilhelm August von Steuben and his wife, Elizabeth von Jagvodin. The elder Steuben, a captain in the Prussian military’s engineering arm, was ordered to Russia by King Friedrich I before his son’s first birthday to help rebuild the army of Czarina Anna Ioannovna for their efforts in the War of Poli...

    While in Karlsruhe, Germany, in May 1777, Steuben learned about the political challenges unfolding for Britain in America from Peter Burdett. Burdett was a scout working for America’s commissioner in Paris, Benjamin Franklin, who was looking for European military officers to whip the colonies’ upstart militias into a real army. Though Burdett becam...

    Steuben made landfall at Portsmouth, N.H., in December 1777. He went before the Continental Congress on Feb. 5, 1778, in York, Pa., where it conducted business after its ouster from Philadelphia. Congress accepted Steuben’s services and sent him to work under the command of Washington. Steuben reached Valley Forge on Feb. 23 and quickly impressed W...

    In March 1778, Steuben came up with a plan to form what he called a model company. He selected 180 to 200 Soldiers and drilled them under a system of infantry drill. The training was meticulous and was hindered by a language barrier; Steuben didn’t speak English. Instead, his daily drill instructions were written in French and were translated into ...

    When Steuben needed a way to spread his training approach, he wrote the Regulations for the Order and Discipline of the Troops of the United States. The manual, which was completed in 1779, is known as the Blue Book and served as the Army’s standard training tome into the 19th century. More importantly, the manual offered lessons and knowledge for ...

    Steuben held field command in Virginia in 1780 but struggled in this post because of the unreliability of the militias that were in his command. After the war, Steuben hoped to return to a profitable station in Europe, but to no avail. He settled in New York City but had severe financial issues when Congress initially denied his pension, which was ...

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  3. Friedrich Wilhelm August Heinrich Ferdinand von Steuben (born Friedrich Wilhelm Ludolf Gerhard Augustin Louis von Steuben; September 17, 1730 – November 28, 1794), also referred to as Baron von Steuben (German: [fɔn ˈʃtɔʏbm̩]), was a Prussian military officer who played a leading role in the American Revolutionary War by reforming the Continental Army into a disciplined and ...

    • 1744–1762, 1778–1783
  4. Mar 12, 2021 · March 12, 2021. POTSDAM, Germany — Georg Friedrich Prinz von Preussen’s quest to recover thousands of artworks and artifacts that were once in his family’s possession is not going well. As ...

  5. When Albrecht Friedrich von Hohenzollern was born on 1 June 1580, in Königsberg, East Prussia, Prussia, Germany, his father, Albrecht Friedrich von Hohenzollern, Herzog von Preußen, was 27 and his mother, Prinzessin Marie Eleonore von Jülich-Kleve-Berg, was 29. He had at least 1 son. He died on 8 October 1580, in his hometown, at the age of 0.

  6. Baron von Steuben. Date of Birth - Death September 17, 1730 - November 28, 1794. Baron Friedrich Wilhelm Augustus von Steuben was born on September 17, 1730, in the fortress town of Magdeburg in Prussia but spent most of the first decade of his life in Russia with his father. At age 10 he returned to Germany and attended more formal schooling.

  7. On February 23, 1778, George Washington rode out of Valley Forge to meet Baron Friedrich Wilhelm von Steuben. According to reports from Benjamin Franklin, writing from his post in France, Steuben was a Lieutenant General from a noble Prussian family who had served his ruler, Frederick the Great, faithfully on the battlefield and who now lived ...

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