George Washington’s Spies

How John Honeyman and Seymour the Mouse Helped George Washington Win the Battles of Trenton and Princeton During the American Revolution

by Alfred J. Walker

George Washington’s Spies
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George Washington’s Spies

How John Honeyman and Seymour the Mouse Helped George Washington Win the Battles of Trenton and Princeton During the American Revolution

by Alfred J. Walker

Published Oct 07, 2021
236 Pages
Genre: FICTION / Historical / General



 

Book Details

George Washington and his Spies win the Battles of Trenton and Princeton against the British in the Revolutionary War

Travel with George Washington as he leads the American Continental Army across New York and New Jersey, refusing to give up, with the British hot at their heels. Read how the intelligence gathered by two spies, John Honeyman and Seymour the Mouse, was instrumental in Washington’s daring assault, as his battered and bruised soldiers crossed the icy Delaware River on Christmas Eve 1776, catching the enemy in Trenton unaware. That victory, followed by a quick strike at Princeton, turned the tide against the British during the American War of Independence.

 

About the Author

Alfred J. Walker

Alfred J. Walker, a technology pioneer and author of three texts in the computer science field, has penned two other books featuring Seymour, the remarkable mouse. In the first, Seymour supported Sir Francis Drake when he defeated the Spanish Navy. There is quite a difference in the second book, when Seymour encounters evil scientists who are attempting to brainwash helpless animals in a New York City laboratory. Walker and his wife and editor, Heather, live in Hunterdon County, New Jersey and are members of the Lamington Presbyterian Church, the church in which John Honeyman and his family worshiped.