| MAINE |
Old Fort Western - staging ground for Quebec invasion
Fort O'Brien (Fort Machias) - oversaw the first naval engagement of the war
Fort McClary - used during the Revolutionary War
| NEW HAMPSHIRE |
Fort Constitution Historic Site - built to protect Revolutionary War shipbuilding industry
Fort Stark Historic Site - built to protect Revolutionary War shipbuilding industry
| VERMONT |
The Hubbardton Battlefield - General Burgoyne's advance was checked here in 1777
The Bennington Battle Monument - British General Burgoyne met defeat here
Bennington Museum - includes information about the battle of Bennington
| MASSACHUSETTS |
Minute Man NHP - the turning point in the long struggle between England and the colonies
Bunker Hill Monument - site of military engagement in the struggle for Boston
Buckman Tavern - minutemen gathered here in April 19, 1775 to await the British arrival in Lexington Massachusetts
Munroe Tavern - command post for British Lord Percy during the withdrawal from Concord
Dorchester Heights National Historical Park - cannons placed here helped drive the British out of Boston
Longfellow National Historic Site - site where General George Washington planned the Siege of Boston
| CONNECTICUT |
Fort Griswold - in 1781, Benedict Arnold's British forces captured the fort and massacred 88 defenders
| RHODE ISLAND |
Fort Barton Nature Walk - staging area for the Battle of Rhode Island
Fort Wetherill State Park - fort built by the colonials
| NEW YORK |
Morris-Jumel Mansion - headquarters for George Washington, and later for British and Hessian soldiers
Dey Mansion - General Washington's headquarters in 1780
Bennington Battlefield State Historic Site - British General Burgoyne fought against the American forces here in August 1777
Crown Point State Historic Site - at the outbreak of the war, colonists captured the fort, securing cannons and heavy ordnance; later occupied by General John Burgoyne's army in 1777
Knox's Headquarters State Historic Site - major General Henry Knox established military headquarters here
New Windsor Cantonment State Historic Site - Continental Army's winter quarters in 1782
Oriskany Battlefield State Historic Site - the battle fought on August 6, 1777 is described as one of the bloodiest battles of the war
Stony Point Battlefield State Historic Site - the British captured the peninsula in May 1779
Washington's Headquarters State Historic Site - General George Washington made his military headquarters and residence here April 1782 - August 1783
Fort Ticonderoga - Ethan Allen and Benedict Arnold took the fort from the British, giving America its first victory
Fort Stanwix NM - British forces were repulsed while attempting to besiege this fort
Saratoga NHP - site of the first significant American military victory
Old Fort Niagara State Park - British controlled fort that was a key point of contact between the British and the Iroquois
Van Wyck Homestead Museum and Library - Headquarters for the Continental Army during the Revolutionary War
United States Military Academy - forts and redoubts were built here by colonials to protect against the British
Gracie Mansion - General Washington built a fort here to defend New York City
| NEW JERSEY |
Monmouth Battlefield State Park - one of the largest battles of the American Revolution took place in here in June 1778
Princeton Battlefield State Park - on January 3, 1777, American troops under General Washington surprised and defeated a force of British Regulars
Trenton Battle Monument - site of American artillery emplacement during the Battle of Trenton, December 26, 1776
Wallace House - General Washington's headquarters from December 11, 1778, to June 3, 1779
Clarke House - scene of heavy fighting during the Battle of Princeton
Craig House - during the Battle of Monmouth, this farmhouse was used as a hospital by the British force
Camp Morristown NHP - occupied by General George Washington and the Continental Army during the Revolutionary War
Summerseat - site of Washington's headquarters before crossing the Delaware River
Nelson House - the American Army utilized this ferry site to cross the river on the night of December 25, 1776
| PENNSYLVANIA |
Brandywine Battlefield Park - largest engagement of the Revolutionary War was fought here on September 11, 1777
Fort Mifflin on the Delaware - on November 10th, British warships attacked this fort
Upsala - mansion built on the site of the Battle of Germantown
Valley Forge NHP - site of the colonial army encampment in winter of 1777-78
Fort Washington - built by Washington's Troops in 1777
Washington Crossing - where General Washington began his famous crossing of the Delaware River
Peter Wentz Farmstead - twice used by Washington as headquarters during the Pennsylvania Campaign of 1777
The Moland House - George Washington's headquarters on August 10, 1777
| WEST VIRGINIA |
| INDIANA |
| MARYLAND |
Fort Frederick State Park - served as a prison for Hessian (German) and British soldiers
| VIRGINIA |
Endview - used by General Thomas Nelson's Virginia Militia as a resting place on September 28, 1781
| KENTUCKY |
Fort Boonesborough State Park - withstood an attack in 1778
| TENNESSEE |
| NORTH CAROLINA |
Guilford Courthouse NMP - battle fought here on March 15, 1781, part of the Southern Campaign
Moores Creek NB - decisive victory by 1,000 Patriots over 1,600 Scots Highlanders and other Loyalists on February 27, 1776
| SOUTH CAROLINA |
Cowpens NB - on January 17, 1781, Daniel Morgan's colonials defeated Banister Tarleton's force of British regulars here
Fort Moultrie NM - place of victory for colonial forces
Kings Mountain NMP - a victory by American Patriots over American Loyalists during the Southern Campaign on October 7, 1780
Ninety Six NHS - scene of Nathanael Greene's siege in 1781
Historic Brattonsville - site of the Battle of Huck's Defeat, a skirmish fought on July 12, 1780
| GEORGIA |
Fort Morris - site of battle on January 9, 1779
Savannah History Museum - interprets the siege and battle of Savannah
Old Fort Jackson - a fort fortified during the Revolution
| ARKANSAS |
Arkansas Post National Memorial - site of the "Colbert Incident" in 1783