
One of the things I really wanted to do in 2026 is paint my way through my giant pile of American Revolution figures. They’re all 28’s, metal. Some I’ve had for a number of years, mostly Perry figures, with some Old Glory and Front Rank/Gripping Beast figures thrown in for good measure. I inherited David Sullivan’s mega pile of AWI figures too, and they leaven my Perry/OG/Front Rank pile with more Perry figures and some nice Foundry figures.
How many are there? Really? You want me to count them? Let’s just say there is a lot. I think that since the first of the year with all my other projects I’ve worked on I’ve painted about 125 AWI figures. How committed am I to sticking with it? Well, I’m hoping that by the end of the week it will be closer to 150 figures.


These figures are, I believe, Foundry figures and came from David Sullivan’s giant pile of AWI figures. And there are so many more. These are painted as Provincial regulars from the New Jersey Loyalists. This was a very large Provincial formation that raised six battalions and will appear in my Take Action game on August 15th in Chehalis.
As I’ve written before, my AWI Project, like my Hundred Years War project is torn between two projects differing in scale. I have my bunch of semi-skirmish units that I can do small scale actions with. I play these with Daniel Mersey’s Rebels and Patriot rules, or I can use the Take Action semi-skirmish rules under construction by my friend Chris Leach.These rules both use 12-figure units. A lot of the figures I’ve been painting are for these games. One doesn’t need a ton of units to play these games. Really a player should only command 3-4 units to manage them effectively. But it’s really important to have a nice mix of different unit types and that’s where I am now. I have lots of militia troops for both sides. I’m currently painting some New Jersey provincial troops for the British. I’ve done a pile of Hessians, with a few more to come. For these games I’m mostly considering the “forage wars” that persisted in New Jersey from 1777 to the end of the war. But I’m also really drawn to the persistent conflict between Patriot and Loyalist militias in the Carolinas and Georgia from 1779-81. The most important thing is to have the right mix of representative units . . . which admittedly could be endless.
I’ve painted a lot of troops for this skirmishy stuff, but have overlooked one of my bucket list projects–building the units for Nathaniel Greene’s southern campaign from Guilford Courthouse to Eutaw Springs. I’m not sure why I’ve let this slip. I’ve always had an interest. I continue to read a lot about this, but I haven’t added to the units I have. The American regulars stay pretty much the same with a few adds and subtractions, but the British change considerably. After Guilford, the first of Greene’s semi-victories, Cornwallis slips away with his army to Wilmington and then on to Virginia and its eventual doom at Yorktown. The remaining British commanders in Charleston are left to hold South Carolina with a handful of British regulars, provincial troops and whatever else they can get their hands on. I’ll play this out with Regimental Fire and Fury.


These are Lawson’s Virginia militia that were in the first line at Guilford Courthouse. These are Perry figures, that seem just a little too well armed with their bayonets. The remaining pile of southern militia are being combined with other figures for less well clothed regulars for the early war. See Connecticut infantry above.
Yes, I know Regimental Fire and Fury is considered kind of Old School, but I like ’em. I love the Maneuver Chart which is the chief play engine of the game. The firing chart seems to work fair and equitably. I would say the rules are of medium complexity, but not impossible to figure out by a newbie. Good stuff.
I just finished my first F and F unit in a long time. Just some Virginia militia for Guilford Courthouse, but there are a lot of them, so I gotta start somewhere. There are British Guards and line infantry, more Americans, lots to do, but it is all work I enjoy doing them.
I do have a game I’m planning. We have a game day scheduled for August 15th in Chehalis at the Veteran’s Museum (be there or be square.) I’m going to run a hypothetical game based on the burning of a Patriot town in New Jersey in the early summer of 1777. It will be called Burning Hesselberg and will include patriot militia and Continentals vs Loyalist regulars, some mounted and dismounted cavalry, and raw Loyalist militia. We’ll see how this goes. Will keep you updated.




















































