Stop in for a cup of coffee

No. I don't think so anyway. I saw one of the chapters mentions Calver and Bolton but I think just as a comparison. Calver and Bolton went around the New York City area investigating and recording encampment sites around 1900 - just before new streets or construction destroyed the sites.

Probably the way to find to the most about where Bloss served is to try to find records of who he enlisted with. Start with where he lived before enlisting - almost all soldier's served with companies raised locally. That's true regardless of whether it was a local militia unit, state service, or Continental. Very likely he signed up more than once. For the first couple years of the war, enlistment terms were short.
Did that and more... problem is no way to tell which Conrad did what. Only one enlistment that I have seen, But lose track of all 3. The son shows up later in other records. DAR ‘credits’ father with the service, but I believe that was based less on knowledge of him and more due to lack of knowing about the other 2. The father would have been near 60years old. Much more likely that one of the others in their 20’s enlisted.