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WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Medal of Independence (disambiguation)

Korean War Service Medal         
  • US Congressman Bob Goodlatte (''left'') presents a ROKWSM and other honors to a [[Korean War]] veteran in 2009.
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MILITARY DECORATION OF SOUTH KOREA
Republic of Korea War Service Medal
The Korean War Service Medal (KWSM, , ), also known as the Republic of Korea War Service Medal (ROKWSM), is a military award of South Korea which was first authorized in December 1950.
American Revolutionary War         
  • Allentown church]], the [[Liberty Bell Museum]] commemorates the Liberty Bell's successful concealment.
  • British]] in the [[Battle of the Chesapeake]] in September 1781
  • The [[1st Maryland Regiment]] at the [[Battle of Guilford Court House]] in [[Greensboro, North Carolina]] in March 1781
  • Continentals]] repulsing the British at the [[Battle of Springfield]] in June 1780; "Give 'em Watts, boys!"
  • The [[Continental Army]] at the [[Battle of Long Island]] in August 1776
  • Lexington and Concord]] on April 19, 1775
  • [[Saratoga campaign]] maneuver and (inset) the [[Battles of Saratoga]] in September and October 1777
  • 15px
  • Battle of Quebec]] in December 1775.
  • 19px
  • 19px
  • Oneida]] in the war
  • 0-7006-0284-4}}.</ref>
  • Continental Army]] uniforms
  • British Legion]] at the [[Battle of Cowpens]] in [[Cowpens, South Carolina]] in January 1781
  • Robert Livingston]], [[Thomas Jefferson]] (its principal author), and [[Benjamin Franklin]]
  • American Patriots]] at the [[Boston Tea Party]] on December 16, 1773, one of the most prominent acts of rebellion during the [[American Revolution]]
  • Sullivan]] at the [[Battle of Rhode Island]] in August 1778
  • Copy of smock issued to [[Black Loyalist]]s in 1776
  • Broadway]].
  • Fort Washington]] in the [[Battle of Fort Washington]] in November 1776.
  • alt=Formal painting of General George Washington, standing in uniform, as commander-in-chief of the Continental Army
  • A 1794 illustration of [[James Monroe]], the last U.S. President to have fought in the Revolutionary War as an officer
  • Mohawks]] in the war
  • Loyalists]] at the [[Battle of Kings Mountain]] in 1780, raising Patriot morale.
  • Military governors and staff officers in British North America and West Indies in 1778 and 1784
  • Captain John Barry]]
  • Loyalist]] soldiers who barged into her home intending to ransack it.
  • Kingdom of Spain]] in secret during 1762 are in light yellow.
  • [[Patrick Henry]]'s "[[Give me liberty, or give me death!]]" speech on March 23, 1775 was widely reported throughout the [[Thirteen Colonies]].
  • 15px
  • tarred and feathered]] under the [[Liberty Tree]] in [[Boston]] by the [[Sons of Liberty]], depicted in a 1774 illustration
  • Mass graves from the [[Battles of Saratoga]] in [[Salem, New York]]
  • A 1975 stamp commemorating [[Salem Poor]], a [[Black Patriot]] cited for bravery at the [[Battle of Bunker Hill]]
  • Henry Clinton]], British Commander from 1778 to 1782
  • [[Continental Army]] soldiers, including one from the [[1st Rhode Island Regiment]] on the left
  • The British [[Siege of Charleston]] in May 1780
  • ''Surrender of General Burgoyne'', an 1821 [[John Trumbull]] portrait of the [[Battles of Saratoga]] featuring the surrender of British General [[John Burgoyne]] to [[Continental Army]] General [[Horatio Gates]] in October 1777
  • Yorktown]] in October 1781
  • Washington]]'s victory at the [[Battle of Trenton]] in December 1776
  • Spanish]] ports
  • Sir [[Thomas Gage]], [[British Army]] Commander from 1763 to 1775
  • Morris, R.B. Morris 1983]]&nbsp;[1965], pp. 435–436</ref>
  • USMA History Dept., Map: "American Revolution Principal Campaigns"]]</ref> with British movements in red and American movements in blue; the timeline shows the British won most battles in the war's first half, but Americans won the most in the second.
  • Henry Hamilton]] surrenders to Colonel [[George Rogers Clark]] at [[Vincennes]] in July 1779
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  • Washington's crossing of the Delaware on December 25-26, 1776]]
  • In Philadelphia on July 15, 1775, [[George Washington]] (standing, center) was unanimously elected commander-in-chief of the [[Continental Army]] by the [[Second Continental Congress]]; Washington refused a salary.
  • Commander]] from 1775 to 1778
1775–1783 WAR BETWEEN GREAT BRITAIN AND THE THIRTEEN COLONIES, WHICH WON INDEPENDENCE AS THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
American war of independence; American War of Independence; United States Revolutionary War; War of American Independence; American Revolutionary War (1911 Encyclopedia, part 1); American Revolutionary War (1911 Encyclopedia, part 2); American Wars of Independence; American War of Indepedence; American Revolutionary War/Article from the 1911 Encyclopedia Part 2; American Revolutionary War/Article from the 1911 Encyclopedia Part 1; American revolutionary war; American War for Independence; U.S. Revolutionary War; British-American War (1776); U.S. War of Independence; United States War of Independence; American Revolutionary war; American war of Independance; American war of Independence; US Revolutionary War; War of the American Revolution; The American Revolutionary War; American Revolution, military history; American War of Independance; Revolutionary war 1775; 1776 War of Independence; American War of Indpendence; American rev war; United Colonies Revolutionary War; United Colonies War of Indepedence; American War of Independece; Us war of independence; Wars of the American Revolution; Liberation War of the United States of America; Revolutionary War (United States); American Revolution War; War of the American Independence; Caribbean theater of the American Revolutionary War; War of Independence in 1775; Revolutionary War of US; War of the Revolution; Colonial rebellion; British–American War (1776); Am Rev War

The American Revolutionary War (April 19, 1775 – September 3, 1783), also known as the Revolutionary War or American War of Independence, secured American independence from Great Britain. Fighting began on April 19, 1775, followed by the Lee Resolution on July 2, 1776, and the Declaration of Independence on July 4, 1776. The American Patriots were supported by the Kingdom of France and, to a lesser extent, the Dutch Republic and the Spanish Empire, in a conflict taking place in North America, the Caribbean, and the Atlantic Ocean.

Established by royal charter in the 17th and 18th centuries, the American colonies were largely autonomous in domestic affairs and commercially prosperous, trading with Britain and its Caribbean colonies, as well as other European powers via their Caribbean entrepôts. After British victory over the French in the Seven Years' War in 1763, tensions between the motherland and her 13 colonies arose over trade, policy in the Northwest Territory, and taxation measures, including the Stamp Act and Townshend Acts. Colonial opposition led to the Boston Massacre in 1770 which largely fostered the idea of independence from Britain. While the earlier taxation measures were repealed, Parliament adopted the Tea Act in 1773, a measure that led to the Boston Tea Party on December 16. In response, Parliament imposed the so-called Intolerable Acts in mid-1774, closing the Boston Harbor, revoking Massachusetts' charter, and placing the colony under control of the British government.

The measures stirred unrest throughout the colonies, 12 of which sent delegates to Philadelphia in early September 1774 to organize a protest as the First Continental Congress. In an appeal to Britain's George III seeking peace, the Congress drafted a Petition to the King but also threatened a boycott of British goods known as the Continental Association if the Intolerable Acts were not withdrawn. Despite attempts to achieve a peaceful solution, fighting began, after the Westminster Massacre in March, with the Battle of Lexington on April 19, 1775, and in June Congress authorized the creation of a Continental Army with George Washington as commander-in-chief. Although the "coercion policy" advocated by the North ministry was opposed by a faction within Parliament, both sides increasingly viewed conflict as inevitable. The Olive Branch Petition sent by Congress to George III in July 1775 was rejected, and in August Parliament declared the colonies in a state of rebellion.

Following the loss of Boston in March 1776, Sir William Howe, the new British commander-in-chief, launched the New York and New Jersey campaign. He captured New York City in November, before Washington won small but significant victories at Trenton and Princeton, which restored Patriot confidence. In summer 1777, Howe succeeded in taking Philadelphia, but in October a separate force under John Burgoyne was forced to surrender at Saratoga. This victory was crucial in convincing powers like France and Spain an independent United States was a viable entity. The Continental Army then went into winter quarters in Valley Forge, where General von Steuben drilled it into an organized fighting unit.

France provided the US informal economic and military support from the beginning of the rebellion, and after Saratoga the two countries signed a commercial agreement and a Treaty of Alliance in February 1778. In return for a guarantee of independence, Congress joined France in its global war with Britain and agreed to defend the French West Indies. Spain also allied with France against Britain in the Treaty of Aranjuez (1779), though it did not formally ally with the Americans. Nevertheless, access to ports in Spanish Louisiana allowed the Patriots to import arms and supplies, while the Spanish Gulf Coast campaign deprived the Royal Navy of key bases in the south.

This undermined the 1778 strategy devised by Howe's replacement, Sir Henry Clinton, which took the war into the Southern United States. Despite some initial success, by September 1781 Cornwallis was besieged by a Franco-American force in Yorktown. After an attempt to resupply the garrison failed, Cornwallis surrendered in October, and although the British wars with France and Spain continued for another two years, this largely ended fighting in North America. In April 1782, the North ministry was replaced by a new British government which accepted American independence and began negotiating the Treaty of Paris. With the treaty's ratification on September 3, 1783, Britain accepted American independence, and the war officially ended. The Treaties of Versailles resolved separate conflicts with France and Spain.

Independence Medal (Lithuania)         
  • obverse]] of the medal
STATE AWARD OF LITHUANIA
Lithuanian Independence Medal; Medal of Independence (Lithuania); Medal of Independence of Lithuania
In Lithuania, the Independence Medal () is a state medal of Lithuania, awarded for the contributions in the restoration of the independence of the state. The medal had two issues in 1928 and 2000.

ويكيبيديا

Medal of Independence

Medal of Independence may refer to:

  • Cross of Independence (Krzyż Niepodległości), one of the highest Polish military decorations between World Wars I and II
  • Fiji Independence Medal
  • Independence Medal (Lithuania)
  • Philippine Independence Medal, a Philippine military decoration awarded to military personnel who had participated in World War II
  • Medal of Independence (Turkey) (İstiklal Madalyası), a Turkish decoration for contributions during the Turkish War of Independence
  • Medal of Independence (Vietnam), one of the highest Vietnamese decorations since 1947, awarded to Trần Thị Liên
  • Zimbabwean Independence Medal, 1980