Greenwich Resident, Author, Tells Story About Revolutionary War Hero Nathan Hale

Historical Society Presents the Extraordinary Saga of War Spy and Hero Nathan Hale Oct. 24

"I only regret that I have but one life to lose for my country."

Hear Greenwich resident Scott Smith, author of ‘The Spy and the Seamstress’, tell the thrilling tale of how Nathan Hale supported Washington in 1776 at a dire period in the war when the Continental Army was surrounded by the British in New York.

Autographed copies of the book will be available for purchase the day of the lecture which takes place at the Historical Society on Tuesday, October 24th, from 6 –7:30 pm. For reservations and more information: https://greenwichhistory.org/event/the-spy-and-the-seamstress/.

Hale was handsome, Ivy League educated, and like his peer Alexander Hamilton a trusted captain in Washington’s Continental Army. Unlike Hamilton whose legacy vaulted on Broadway, Hale’s heroics ended in an unmarked grave following his execution as a spy. Yet his last words before the noose was tightened remain immortalized in the history of America’s bitter war for independence.

After writing two contemporary thrillers, Smith yearned to go back in time. Hamilton, the Musical first hooked him on the Revolution, and inadvertently led him to Nathan Hale. Smith will recount the time when Hale’s fate was sealed when he was the only one to volunteer to go behind enemy lines to support Washington. The Revolutionary tale is filled with action, suspense, and romance, while also probing deeper moral issues that still resonate today.

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Submitted by Cos Cob, CT

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