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Date: July 05, 2026 01:25PM
"As America celebrates its 250th birthday and another Fourth of July,
it’s worth remembering that one of the men who helped win the Revolutionary
War would not be welcome in Pete Hegseth's Pentagon.
Baron Friedrich von Steuben was almost certainly gay.
He also built the army that crushed the British military.
When von Steuben arrived at Valley Forge in the winter of 1778, the Continental
Army was a disaster. Soldiers lacked standardized training, officers improvised,
and camps were filthy while supplies often vanished. Washington had brave men,
but bravery alone wasn’t going to beat the most powerful military on
Earth.
Von Steuben changed that.
He drilled soldiers until every regiment fought the same way. He reorganized
camp sanitation, reducing disease. He taught officers how to lead instead of
simply barking orders. Then he wrote the “Blue Book,” a training manual that
shaped the U.S. Army for decades after independence.
Military historians still rank him among the most important architects of the
American victory.
Despite his obvious talent, several German states had quietly become
uncomfortable with allegations that von Steuben had intimate relationships with
other men. Whether every accusation was true is impossible to know.
Eighteenth-century Europe wasn’t exactly a place where gay men left diaries
labeled “My Boyfriends.” But the evidence that survives paints a familiar
picture.
After the Revolution, von Steuben spent the rest of his life surrounded by
younger male companions, especially William North and Benjamin Walker. They
shared his household, cared for him, remained devoted to him for years, and
inherited much of his estate when he died. Modern historians debate the precise
nature of those relationships - because of course they do - but very few dismiss
the possibility that they were romantic. Images of the two men are engraved on
the statue of von Steuben in Washington, DC.
It seems that Washington and the other leaders of the Revolution didn't care
much about his dalliances.
Benjamin Franklin had recommended von Steuben to Washington while tactfully
glossing over the European gossip. If Washington knew the details, history
leaves little sign that he cared. What mattered was whether the Baron could
transform the Continental Army.
He could and he did.
So while the fireworks go off this Fourth of July to celebrate our 250th
birthday, remember this: One of the men who helped secure American independence
loved other men.
George Washington needed someone who could build an army, not fit into someone
else’s idea of respectability. Turns out, that was enough to help change the
world."
-Bill Browning