Service Record
| Designation | Date | Brigade | Department |
| 1st New Hampshire Regiment | 22 May 1775 | none | none |
| 1st New Hampshire Regiment | 14 June 1775 | none | Main Army |
| 1st New Hampshire Regiment | 22 July 1775 | Sullivan's | Main Army |
| 5th Continental Regiment | 1 January 1776 | Sullivan's | Main Army |
| 5th Continental Regiment | 27 April 1776 | none | Canadian |
| 5th Continental Regiment | 2 July 1776 | none | Northern |
| 5th Continental Regiment | 20 July 1776 | Stark's | Northern |
| 5th Continental Regiment | 26 November 1776 | Sullivan's | Main Army |
| 1st New Hampshire Regiment | 1 January 1777 | Sullivan's | Main Army |
| 1st New Hampshire Regiment | 14 February 1777 | none | Northern |
| 1st New Hampshire Regiment | 28 April 1777 | New Hampshire | Northern |
| 1st New Hampshire Regiment | 20 October 1777 | New Hampshire | Main Army |
| 1st New Hampshire Regiment | 19 August 1781 | New Hampshire | Highlands |
| 1st New Hampshire Regiment | 10-14 October 1781 | New Hampshire | Northern |
| 1st New Hampshire Regiment | 12 November 1782 | New Hampshire | Main Army |
| New Hampshire Regiment | 1 March 1783 | none | Main Army |
| New Hampshire Battalion | 22 June 1783 | none | Main Army |
| New Hampshire Battalion | 1 January 1784 | none | disbanded |
Read more about this topic: 5th Continental Regiment
Famous quotes containing the words service record, service and/or record:
“We too are ashes as we watch and hear
The psalm, the sorrow, and the simple praise
Of one whose promised thoughts of other days
Were such as ours, but now wholly destroyed,
The service record of his youth wiped out,
His dream dispersed by shot, must disappear.”
—Karl Shapiro (b. 1913)
“Let not the tie be mercenary, though the service is measured in money. Make yourself necessary to somebody. Do not make life hard to any.”
—Ralph Waldo Emerson (18031882)
“All photographs are there to remind us of what we forget. In thisas in other waysthey are the opposite of paintings. Paintings record what the painter remembers. Because each one of us forgets different things, a photo more than a painting may change its meaning according to who is looking at it.”
—John Berger (b. 1926)