'26 USA U23 Nationals, 5/29-31, thread

Corby2

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Jul 14, 2025
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The only thing last weekend got you was a spot on the Pan Am team. Top 4 on national team would get the world team spot if u23 eligible or not they can pick.
So look for Mendez at 65 and Barr at 97
57 Luke Knox get it before a pick
61 Blaze Jax get it before a pick
65 Bassett gets it before a pick
70 Robideau gets it before a pick
74 James then Sealey get it before a pick
79 Haines gets it before a pick
86 Sinclair gets it before a pick
92 Shumate gets it before a pick
97 Is open to pick
125 Merrill gets it before a pick

U23 is 10 days before Sr worlds I don't think anyone who makes SRs will wrestle u23 worlds
 
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zzs006

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Mar 27, 2017
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The only thing last weekend got you was a spot on the Pan Am team. Top 4 on national team would get the world team spot if u23 eligible or not they can pick.
So look for Mendez at 65 and Barr at 97
57 Luke Knox get it before a pick
61 Blaze Jax get it before a pick
65 Bassett gets it before a pick
70 Robideau gets it before a pick
74 Sealey gets it before a pick
79 Haines gets it before a pick
86 Sinclair gets it before a pick
92 Shumate gets it before a pick
97 Is open to pick
125 Merrill gets it before a pick

U23 is 10 days before Sr worlds I don't think anyone who makes SRs will wrestle u23 worlds
Pretty sure James gets 74kg ahead of Sealey
 

PASLP2

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Dec 27, 2019
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How come nobody is talking about their ancestors who fought for Britain in the American Revolution? 😀
You Sound Like Youre From London GIF
 
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Mstan85

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Nov 29, 2022
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The brother of my 5th great grandfather, moved the liberty bell during the Revolutionary War. I had a crazy aunt who told us about the story, but no one believed her. We were able to trace it about 10 years ago using ancestry.com

The Liberty Bell has been moved several times throughout its history, most famously during the Revolutionary War to prevent its capture.
The most notable figures who moved the bell include:
  • John Jacob Mickley & Frederick Leaser (1777): When British troops threatened Philadelphia, Mickley (a local patriot) and militiamen secretly loaded the bell onto a wagon and transported it to Allentown, Pennsylvania.
 

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CarolinaFan1

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Jun 7, 2025
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The only thing last weekend got you was a spot on the Pan Am team. Top 4 on national team would get the world team spot if u23 eligible or not they can pick.
So look for Mendez at 65 and Barr at 97
57 Luke Knox get it before a pick
61 Blaze Jax get it before a pick
65 Bassett gets it before a pick
70 Robideau gets it before a pick
74 James then Sealey get it before a pick
79 Haines gets it before a pick
86 Sinclair gets it before a pick
92 Shumate gets it before a pick
97 Is open to pick
125 Merrill gets it before a pick

U23 is 10 days before Sr worlds I don't think anyone who makes SRs will wrestle u23 worlds

Is Caleb Henson u23 eligible? Couldn’t he end up 3rd after true third match at Final X if he beats Robideau?
 
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SRATH

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Good question. People who have traitorous ancestors that fought against the USA in the Civil War seem to speak pridefully of their family connections.
Ok...........

A cousin did genealogy on our family.....most arrived in the late 1800's from both Wales and Germany. One leg of the family traced back to the late 1770's.......appearing out of nowhere in SE PA. No parents. No brothers or sisters. Very Germanic name which he modified slightly. My cousin was pissed he couldn't find anything else.

He had completely whiffed on the fact our relative was very likely a Hessian mercenary soldier hired by the British. Approx 30k fought for Britain and approx 5k stayed ( Thanks Google ).

The largest Hessian POW camp was in Reading ( my hometown area ) where many of the residents already spoke German.

My family roots probably go back to a traitor who was not a good soldier. Thank God.
 

Tom McAndrew

BWI Staff
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The largest Hessian POW camp was in Reading ( my hometown area ) where many of the residents already spoke German.

My family roots probably go back to a traitor who was not a good soldier. Thank God.

Reading was one of the larger prisoner camps in the Rev War. Claiming it was the largest Hessian prisoner camp is somewhat problematic, for a few reasons.

1. the prisoners got moved around a good bit
2. there were some camps that only held Hessians
3. there were other camps that held Hessians and British
4. large number of troops (Hessian and British) escaped during their treks between camps
5. in addition, a large number escaped while in camp (especially in camps located in PA, where there was an organized group that housed them, fed them, and helped them escape to NYC, where the British and Hessian forces were located
6. the Patriots made concerted efforts to induce all prisoners, but especially the Hessians, to flip. In general, they were offered land and money as an inducement

Some of the larger prisoner camps were in:

Albemarle (around Charlottesville, VA)
Lancaster, PA
Winchester, VA
Reading, PA
Frederick, MD

And I'm not including in that list some of the temporary camps, where large number of prisoners were held for a short time.

As a side note, Hessians is a convenient term, because the greatest number of troops from a German territory were from Hessen-Kassel and Hessen-Hanau. Historians generally prefer the term German auxiliary soldiers/troops, in part because they weren't mercenaries -- the rulers of the Six German territories where the troops came from were paid for providing troops, but the troops were not paid.
 

SRATH

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Thanks for the clarification.

I misread AI's summary. When I read......."The largest and most notable camps were located in Reading and Allentown, Pennsylvania; Frederick, Maryland; and Charlottesville and Winchester, Virginia", my assumption would be the first camps listed would be the largest / most notable. Given the proximity to Trenton, it would be a fair assumption.....but wrong. Clearly some of the other camps, especially those with British POW's had more Hessian POW's.

After weeding in the yard for an hour and rolling this around in my head, I want to find a good book on the Hessians, how they arrived here, how they fought and what their post war lives were like.
 
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Split Shot

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Apr 11, 2020
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Thanks for the clarification.

I misread AI's summary. When I read......."The largest and most notable camps were located in Reading and Allentown, Pennsylvania; Frederick, Maryland; and Charlottesville and Winchester, Virginia", my assumption would be the first camps listed would be the largest / most notable. Given the proximity to Trenton, it would be a fair assumption.....but wrong. Clearly some of the other camps, especially those with British POW's had more Hessian POW's.

After weeding in the yard for an hour and rolling this around in my head, I want to find a good book on the Hessians, how they arrived here, how they fought and what their post war lives were like.
This is just a guess, but I bet Tom McAndrew could help you with that.
 

Tom McAndrew

BWI Staff
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Oct 27, 2021
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After weeding in the yard for an hour and rolling this around in my head, I want to find a good book on the Hessians, how they arrived here, how they fought and what their post war lives were like.

@Split Shot, thanks for the kind words. I could provide a good bit of info on the Hessians. However, you'd be better served by picking up a copy of Friederike Baer's 2022 book, Hessians: German Soldiers in the American Revolutionary War. It has become the definitive book on the Hessians. FWIW, I serve on the Book Award committee of an organization that hands out an annual award for the best book on the American Revolution for a calendar year. For 2022, we gave the award to Friederike. The book gives an amazing degree of details on how the Hessians arrived here (it's kind of stunning to read some of what they went through before arriving), and an equally amazing amount of details on where and how they fought. It has some info on their post-war lives, but not as much as the two other areas you specified. And for good measure, Friederike was a history professor at Penn State Abington, though in recent years she's moved into administration at that Penn State branch campus.