I am in the final stages of a DAR application and need to document what my ancestor actually DID during the Revolution, not just what he SAID he did. He served from Connecticut. I have his pension application, the list of men in his company, and the individual cards from the National Archives file on him that say he was a carpenter. From his pension application I know what he SAID he did. What I need to do is document the particulars if that is possible. Here in Massachusetts we have the "Massachusetts Soldiers and Sailors of the Revolutionary War" series that lists each man and includes a few lines such as, "Enlisted in _______ company and marched to _____________ for a raid, and later performed garrison duty at __________ and was discharged on ____________." That sort of thing. Does Connecticut have the equivalent, and what is it called? My Abel Tuttle enlisted in January of 1778 as a private, a foot soldier, in Capt. Jarius Wilcox's Company, Col. Baldwin's division. That much I can document. He SAID that he "served faithfully two years and nine months and was discharged on account of sickness at West Point, in writing under the hand of General Greene, with honour." That's the part I need to document. Is there a particular book of official records that would verify that quoted information? I'm nearing a deadline here and would very much like to find it to complete the file. Joanne Garland