A letter written by George Washington in 1777 that is valued at $150,000 is up for sale this Presidents Day.
The letter, acquired by the Raab Collection, was written during the Revolutionary War, when the British took the war to Danbury, Conn., and raided the supply depot and burned military stores and equipment.

The British encountered little resistance when they got to the town, but the local colonists formed “a hastily assembled, self-armed form of militia,” and gathered in the surrounding towns to prepare for a counterattack.

When the British tried to withdraw, they faced a two-hour battle before the British were able to advance.

The British claimed victory, but Washington — in his 1777 letter — said he saw in the colonists’ resistance a spirit of a new nation willing to take up arms against its oppressor. He suggested the British might take greater caution before making similar decisions in the future.

“I am inclined to believe they [the British] will pursue such measures with a great degree of caution,” Washington wrote in the letter. “For tho’ they afforded themselves the stores at Danbury, yet it was with considerable loss and they are convinced whenever they make an impression, the Country will recur to arms.”

A press release from the Raab Collection, located outside of Philadelphia, described the letter as one “that goes to the heart of the American Revolution and the spirit of the colonists to take up their own arms to fight off the oppressors.”

“This is a powerful expression of the spirit of the American uprising from the mind of its Commander in Chief and future first President, a truly remarkable find and an evocative piece of our national history,” Nathan Raab, president of the Raab Collection, said in a statement.

The Hill