Student Worksheet Packet
Marblehead: The Fishermen Who Saved the Revolution
Marblehead, MA
This lesson introduces middle school students to the remarkable story of the Marblehead Regiment — a unit of seasoned fishermen and sailors whose maritime expertise proved indispensable to the Continental Army at its most desperate moments. Students will examine how Colonel John Glover organized his townsmen into the 14th Continental Regiment, how these mariners ferried Washington's army across the East River after the disastrous Battle of Long Island in August 1776, and how they manned the boats during the famous Christmas night crossing of the Delaware River before the Battle of Trenton. The lesson emphasizes how a small fishing community's everyday skills became a strategic military asset, and how ordinary working people — men who hauled cod and sailed schooners — shaped the outcome of the American Revolution. Students will analyze primary sources including muster rolls and period accounts to understand the composition and character of this uniquely skilled regiment.
This Packet Includes
- Learning Objectives & Essential Questions
- 2 Primary Source Analysis Worksheets
- Assessment Quiz (7 questions)
Learning Objectives
By the end of this unit, you will be able to:
- Students will explain how Marblehead's fishing and maritime economy shaped the skills of the Marblehead Regiment
- Students will analyze the strategic importance of the Marblehead Regiment at the Delaware River crossing and the retreat from Long Island
- Students will evaluate Colonel John Glover's leadership and organizational abilities
- Students will describe how a community's civilian skills can become critical military assets during wartime
Essential Questions
Keep these questions in mind as you work through this packet:
- How did Marblehead's identity as a fishing community change the course of the American Revolution?
- Why were maritime skills so valuable to an army that fought primarily on land?
- What does the Marblehead Regiment teach us about the kinds of people who actually fight revolutions?
Muster rolls are among the most underused primary sources in classroom teaching, yet they offer a uniquely democratic window into the past. Unlike letters and diaries, which survive disproportionately from the literate and the wealthy, muster rolls record every soldier who served — regardless of social status, literacy, or historical prominence. For the Marblehead Regiment, these rolls are especially revealing. Guide students to examine the occupational data first: the overwhelming prevalence of maritime occupations (fisherman, mariner, shoreman, cordwainer for the fishing fleet) tells us that this was not a cross-section of colonial society but a community of seafarers who enlisted together. This unit cohesion — men who had sailed together, weathered storms together, and trusted each other on the open ocean — helps explain why the regiment performed so effectively in high-pressure water operations. Push students to notice the racial diversity documented in the physical descriptions. The rolls record men described as "Negro" and "mulatto" serving alongside white soldiers, reflecting the integrated nature of Marblehead's maritime workforce where skill mattered more than race. This challenges the simplified narrative of the Revolution as a white man's war and opens rich discussion about who actually fought and why their stories are less well known.
Analysis Questions
Read the document carefully, then answer each question in complete sentences.
What occupations appear most frequently on the muster rolls? What does this tell us about Marblehead's economy?
What can the physical descriptions on the rolls tell us about the men who served?
How does the racial composition of the regiment compare to what you know about other Continental Army units?
Why would military records list civilian occupations? What was the purpose of this information?
What can muster rolls tell us that letters and diaries cannot — and what are their limitations as sources?
Reflection
How does this source connect to what happened in Marblehead, MA? What does it tell you about the people involved?
Glover's correspondence offers students a rare opportunity to examine leadership from the inside — not the polished narratives of postwar memoirs but the real-time frustrations, anxieties, and improvisations of a commander in the field. Glover was not a professional military officer. He was a Marblehead merchant who understood boats, men, and logistics, and his letters reveal how he translated those civilian competencies into military effectiveness. Guide students to pay attention to the different audiences Glover addresses. His letters to Washington and other generals are formal, focused on operational readiness and supply needs. His private correspondence is more candid — he complains about the difficulty of imposing military discipline on men who were accustomed to the relative independence of fishing crews, where authority was earned through competence rather than rank. This tension between maritime work culture and military hierarchy is a rich theme for classroom discussion. Ask students: what makes a good leader? Does the answer change depending on who is being led? Glover's letters also provide firsthand operational detail about the regiment's most famous actions. His accounts of moving men and equipment across water under dangerous conditions bring specificity and humanity to events that textbooks often reduce to a single dramatic painting. Use these letters to help students see that behind every famous historical moment are exhausted people solving practical problems under enormous pressure.
Analysis Questions
Read the document carefully, then answer each question in complete sentences.
How does Glover describe the challenges of commanding fishermen as soldiers? What does this reveal about military culture?
Compare Glover's letters to military superiors with his letters to family. How does the audience change what he writes?
What logistical problems does Glover describe? What do these tell us about the realities of Revolutionary War service?
How does Glover describe the Delaware crossing? What details does he emphasize, and what might he leave out?
Reflection
How does this source connect to what happened in Marblehead, MA? What does it tell you about the people involved?
The Marblehead Regiment and the American Revolution
Answer all questions based on our study of Marblehead in the American Revolution. For short answer questions, use specific evidence from sources we studied.
1. What was the primary civilian occupation of most soldiers in the Marblehead Regiment?
2. Why was the Marblehead Regiment's role in the Long Island evacuation of August 1776 so critical?
3. The Marblehead Regiment was notably diverse for its time, including Black and Indigenous soldiers who served alongside white soldiers.
4. Who commanded the Marblehead Regiment?
5. Explain how the everyday skills of Marblehead fishermen translated into military capabilities that the Continental Army desperately needed. Give at least two specific examples.
Answer:
6. What are the strengths and limitations of muster rolls as primary sources for understanding the Marblehead Regiment? Why might historians value them despite their limitations?
Answer:
7. Compare Glover's letters to military superiors with his private correspondence. How does the intended audience shape what a historical source contains? Why does this matter for historians?
Answer: