This is largely a fable of mistaught American history. The major battles in the WoI were fought using British tactics and arms. The British did have to content with partisans and asymmetric warfare, which is common when one side has overwhelming power. The British won a lot of battles in the WoI, just not the last one, which is to a large degree due to help from the French.
No it's not,I've read it,saw it on the History Channel/PBS segments. There are paintings/drawings from actual participants of the War that they clearly show the Minute Men recessed in tree lines popping Redcoats in their ridiculous formations out in the open. Of course even those toffee nosed bastards would break and run when they realised they were getting filleted and upstarts weren't folding like before. T
he Minute Men blended many tactics,remember not everyone was from England - Count Pulaski,Marquis de Lafayette,Baron Von Stueben - gotta love those names,no wonder they won the fookin' war.Also some guy named Washington was with General Braddock when he got whacked in the French & Indian Wars. No doubt George tooks some notes on concealment/ambush tactics. Colonists weren't daft and going to play by the silly rules laid out by the Aristocratic A-holes that benefitted them and the Hessians pressed into service.
Evidently the Hessians had no axe to grind, the German princes sold their subjects into the King's service as the soldiers didn't recieve a dime.So it didn't take much coercing for them to bolt allegiance. I can't find the source but evidently part of Washington's command were Pennslvannia Dutch who encouraged the colonials on the Christmas attack at Trenton.As amongst the British types(English,Scottish,Irish,Welsh,Cornish) Christmas was more of a somber/austere occasion
at that time.Where as the Tuetonic types (Germans,Swiss,Danish,Austrian) there was more merry making,the Christmas Tree,singing,Schnapps & Suds. They were betting the Gerries maybe sleeping it off - and it was recorded that some may have been.They certainly were surprised none the less. Supposedly Johann Rall a Hessian commander killed at the Battle was concerned about the forward exposed position of the Garrison at Trenton but high command didn't move them. Gosh the higher ups weren't very bright back then either
Fun Fact Cindy on her mother side traces her lineage back to a Hessian named Conrad Auble,who was captured,swore allegiance switched sides and recieved I don't know how many Acres. I heard his name mentioned on a PBS Special.Out of 13,000 Hessians 5,500 stayed and became Americans. Like many soldiers many died of disease/wound infections. The rest either were killed or went back.
It appeared between the English/French/Irish/Polish/Scots/Africans/Swiss-Germans - Washington recruited rather well.
A Republic - if you can keep it - Ben Franklin