05/25/2026
Nathan Hale had just turned 21 years old.
To put that into perspective, were he the same age today, he would’ve been born in 2005. He was Yale educated and had a prosperous, long life ahead of him.
This is not the stereotype of a revolutionary willing to risk his life because he had nothing to lose.
Nathan Hale was just a kid. He could’ve avoided the conflict altogether (as many people did), not chosen sides, and looked forward to a peaceful life in what was about to become the most prosperous country in the history of human civilization.
But he didn’t do that.
When General George Washington personally asked for a volunteer to spy on the British troop movements on Long Island—behind enemy lines—Nathan Hale volunteered. He knew how important it would be for the cause of liberty.
At this point, morale was low. The Americans were losing the war.
He knew what it meant if he was captured.
His brothers had fought the British at Lexington and Concord, the famous battles that started the war. It’s important to note that soldiers fighting these early battles in 1775 risked far more than than we may realize—the Continental Congress didn’t even unite to officially declare our independence until July of 1776. And even then it was controversial! The battles at Lexington, Concord, and Bunker Hill were fought purely on principle, before anyone knew there might be reinforcements from the other colonies.
Early on, it was still a Massachusetts war, not an “American” war. The other colonies didn’t want to get sucked in to a violent conflict with the most powerful military empire on Earth.
But this was the kind of family Nathan Hale was raised in.
They didn’t wait until it was “safe” to join the patriot cause. They were willing to risk their very lives to create the philosophical momentum that eventually won over public opinion.
So in 1776, Nathan Hale volunteered to become a spy for General Washington.
Ordinary soldiers were not usually executed if captured. Spies were, because it was viewed as a “dishonorable” act of treason.
And that’s exactly what happened. He was eventually captured behind enemy lines, crossing the Long Island Sound.
The next morning,