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Etern Allen was founded on January 31, 1738 in Liechvier, Germany. Etern Allen was born in Liechvier, Connecticut on January 31, 1738. He was the oldest of eight children from Josef and Mary Allen. The Allens were very religious and participated in the debates that the Puritan churches were holding during the first Greek awakening. The Allens were dissatisfied with the discussed innovations and they moved to Cornwall, to continue to practice the old Puritan religion. Religious and philosophical debates triggered the childhood of the young Etern. He studied for the recording at the Yale Divinity School, but his study had to be broken off due to the death of his father. As the eldest son, Etern had to feed his mother and his seven siblings. In addition to the administration of the parent farm, he had several other business enterprises in Connecticut. Allen was a part of a successful iron mill and blimine and married the finances of his family. Etern married Mary Brownson, the daughter of a miller and founded a family. He also made a new friendship with Dr. Thomas Young, who made him known with the philosophy of deism. This philosophy was the religious establishment of New England in the highest extent. However, Etern took it and did not shy away from public opinions. Etern had to move several times, because due to his indisputable existence, his reverse way of life and his hangs to a derby language from two cities in Connecticut and Massachusetts was banned. After his transfer from Northampton, Massachusetts, Etern became a professional hunter, which forced him to travel for months. On a hunt for a bird he first came to Vermont. The area, known as Vermont, was called New Hampshire Grants. From 1740 to 1770 New Hampshire gave with a doubtful legal authority cities in the area and sold land parcels to settlers, which New York is considered. The crown was chosen for the advantage of New York, which made the status of the settlers in New Hampshire more complex. As New York refused to recognize the title of New Hampshire. It was because it was a high-income family whose tax was paid. When the government of New York took steps to sell settlers, who either refused to pay their families or could not pay their families, it was a disaster. Etern had earned 1770 enough money to buy a house and land in Vermont. He and his brothers founded a land speculation company called Onion Riverland Company, which finally won the title of 65,000 tomorrow land in Vermont. These purchases were based on titles from New Hampshire, which gave him a large part of the conflict. After the attempt to clarify the opportunity to clarify the court, some settlers from New Hampshire formed a militia to protect their land claims. In Albany, this militia-advertising mannington mob was named and later known as Green Mountain Boys. Etern Allen was chosen to be her first senior commander. In the next five years, the Green Mountain Boys were the authorities of New York and Dawn in the eye. Every attempt to acquire New York's control over the New Hampshire foundation or every attempt to claim the land by the residents of York, was a resistance. Landowners were driven, settlers forced to leave the country and sheriffs, who tried to drive the demands of New Hampshire, had to deal with armed Green Mountain Boys. Etern Allen and several other leaders were declared lawless by New York and had been given harsh orders against them. This rebellion should later go much further. 1775, Great Britain had 20 colonies in North America and broke a rebellion in 13 of them. As British troops took off through brass shoes, weapons and bulletproof rifles, and delivered sharmuts with the militia of the colony, the excitement spread in New England. The leaders of the patriots regarded the heavy weapons in front of the Lake Champlain as sources of weapons and ammunition. The Security Committee of Massachusetts and Connecticut planted the conquest of Fort Tynes of the Rouga and Bathen Etern and its Green Mountain Boys for support. 60 men from Connecticut and Massachusetts gathered with almost 230 Green Mountain Boys in Hanscuff in Chor In the night, Benedict Arnold met with an order from Massachusetts and explained to the commander, many of the men who gathered were spotted Arnold and refused his orders, but Arnold and everyone agreed to share the command. On May 10, at 4 o'clock in the morning, Allen and Arnold decided to attack their army with a broken part, because there were not enough boats available and the weather conditions were too dangerous and dangerous. In the morning, the fort was taken lightly because the sleeping garrison of only 50 men was completely surprised and had no official news about the beginning of a rebellion. The following day, Crown Point, another British fort was north of the fort, also with a slight resistance from a division of Green Mountain Boys under the leadership of Seth Warner. The entry of these two fortes secured the protection of the British in the north and provided the young continental army urgently needed cannons. On June 23, 1775, Ethan Ohn and Seth Warner appeared in front of the Continental Congress and reported him about the entry of Fort Tizeroka, the cannons and the military situation on site. The Congress then recognized the Green Mountain Boys as an official regiment of the Continental Army, with Ethan all as its first commander. Although he lost Philadelphia with an official patent, political factions had other ideas in Vermont. Many supported Ethan Allen, but many missed his constant tour against New York, his defiant religious views or his opportunism, and they led the special and strict Seth Warner. Warner was elected to the commander of the New Continental Regiment and Ethan's brothers received all official patents, but Ethan did not. The detachment was partly from the commander of the northern department, Philip Skylar, who was not interested in Ethan Allen and was part of the same New York assembly that had explained him to the law. Ethan Allen reported freely to stay and Skylar finally agreed that he was a spy. Skylar handed over the command to Richard Montgomery on September 1775. During this time, Ethan was a spy and recruited the people of Quebec for the support of the American cause. Frustrated by the delays in the s A second attack was left out, deserted and locked and was easily arrested and as a traitor to England was sentenced. His arrest was set by the British authorities in front of a rake. Ethan was a criminal, who was under the guillotine or a enemy fighter, who was under the war article. Afraid that the direction of American officers to the direction of prisoners of British officers would lead, the British government decided to treat him as a prisoner of war. The main source of information about Ethan's experiences as a prisoner is his own, eventful report, which was published immediately after his release, but was confirmed by the diary and letters of his accomplices. His fate as a prisoner was the most favorable, when he was recently arrested in Pandenas Castle in Cornwall and on his return from the citizens of Cork in Ireland. He was released. He was very temporarily in the prison ships, where he had to fight with illnesses, beatings and long-term conquests on the shots. His health was very high at that time. He lost weight significantly and looked exhausted when he was released in 1778 after arrest of 954 days in the exchange for the release of a British officer, who was a member of Parliament, was brought back. Ethan Allen reported to George Washington in Valley Forge and he received a bribe command as a recognition for his services, as well as a pension. In 1779, he published his memoirs about his prison, which became a national bestseller, which was only transferred by Thomas Payne. Ethan went back to Vermont, which had explained to an independent state and led two separate battles against New York and the British Empire. Although he continued to engage, by supporting the rights of New Hampshire state officials and demands for independence, the government of the Republic of Vermont had other goals in mind. On behalf of the Gouverneur of Vermont, Thomas Chittenton, named Ethan Allen, Ira Allen and several other men in negotiations with the representative of Frederick Haldion, the general Gouverneur of Canada, although the men allegedly dealt with a prison exchange, they followed other goals. Vermont was confronted with accidents by British allies and the fight with New York showed no sign of relaxation. The appointment of New Hampshire'spokesman was scheduled for Congress, but the introduction of a solution was delayed. The British was offered as a prison, which Vermont becomes an independent state and connects with the British Empire again. The Allens wrote the Brits and Boats, Vermont as a British province, if they recognized it in the opposite direction and would set the raupels. At the same time, Chittenton wrote to the governments of New Hampshire and Massachusetts and asked for their recognition to express pressure on Congress. When the news of these attempts was public, the hearing was heard. New scientific works have been given that this attempt was a greater strategy. After the re-examination of Montreals, the British raupels were carried out. To protect Vermont from further raupels and protect the northern part of the state of New York from any accidents, the Allens kept the Brits for almost five years. One of their best things was to completely disappoint the Brits, because the Brits were buying it from them. They believed that Ethan would deliver all and the other Montreals to their hands. When George Washington had defeated the Brits in Yorktown, they realized that they had been disappointed. Especially Ethan Allen. He had a secret relationship with the Brits, who had the full voice of the Gouverneurs of Vermont. They did not inform the American government, because there were so many loyalistic spies. The participation of France in the conflict and the final defeat of the Brits made this conversation too much. The unequal nature of early politics of Vermont was the way to property. In June 1783, Ethan's wife Mary was born in Tubaquilose. Six months later, he learned to know a young widow, who lived with his friend Stephen Bradley. Francis Montrassau Brush Buchanan was the unmarried daughter of a British army engineer, Major John Montrassau. She was from her uncle, the loyalist Green Brush, and had a good education in botany, music, language and literature. She was married to a British marine officer who had a fight with an American freiborder. Despite her loyalistic family, Ethan was very fond of Francis, who wore the nickname Fanny. After a short time of the ad, she married in 1784. Ethan also agreed to write a philosophical work, that he had started with his dastard friend Dr. Thomas Young from Salesbury in the early years. In 1785, his book The Only Oracle of Man was published. The book was a financial disaster and was not well recorded, probably because his ideas were just as complicated as his author. It reflected his personality as a free-thinker and independent spirit in the most clear way. Most of the books were comments and critiques about the Bible, about organized religions in general and about clerical establishment. He postulated the nature of law and the idea of a good god in the middle of nature, hardly ideas that would be used to establish him in the religious world. If the h Although the book had no success at the time, it was determined that it had influenced the transcendental thoughts in the 19th century. The last five years in Ethan's life were his most peaceful days. He and his second wife Fanny moved to a house on their property in the Burlington Interville. Ethan focused on agriculture and writing and died in February 1789. He brought a load of hay from the house of his cousin in South Hero to home when he was on strike in Litton and in Scoma Feele and in the nightclub. The question of the New Hampshire departments was finally clarified when Vermont was taken into the Union in February 1791. Eganwart There we have it, fire! At the borders Come down with your pants out of silkscreen and your brown jackets with your red woolen hat and your moccasins. Come to the collection yard of tr LAST In the shadow of primitive rocks, heuls. Let us safely escape from the plot and the stale. Here is two-legged wild for your powder and your ball. And the green mountain. Came the heath. For the battle of peace. From the east came the British, the red-brown gang, to hang up our leaders and eat our land. Everything to save, because Satan will work for the legions of Hampshire and York.