"A valuable contribution to our understanding of the relationship between the American revolution and national identity in the early republic."-Journal of the Early Republic"Thoughtful and engaging. . . . Purcell's book effectively demonstrates the transformation in the political language and discourse surrounding wartime military sacrifice."-American Historical Review"This book examines what Sarah J. Purcell calls the military memory of the War of American Independence in American life. . . . She convincingly contends that the experience of war from 1775 to 1783 and the selective memory of that experience figure largely in Americans' understanding of the nation they created. . . . A sophisticated exploration of the diverse uses to which dramatic war experiences could be put."-Military History"Not only a significant contribution to the field; [Sealed with Blood] is also a good read."-North Carolina Historical Review"A substantial contribution to the scholarship in early republic cultural and political history, and in many ways an exemplary study of public memory because of its wide vision, its attentiveness to context, and its careful delineation of change over time."-David Waldstreicher, author of In the Midst of Perpetual Fetes: The Making of American Nationalism, 1776-1820