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Loading... George Washington's Secret Navy: How the American Revolution Went to Seaby James L. Nelson
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Focuses on the early phases of the Revolution, when Britain ruled the seas and George Washington sought to challenge its dominance. No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)973.3History & geography History of North America United States Revolution and confederation (1775-89)LC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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What Washington did was not so much create a navy as commission quasi-privateers. These were miscellaneous small merchant ships hastily outfitted with whatever small cannon the army could spare and sent to seize ships supplying Boston. Simultaneously the Continental Congress got into the act and commissioned some “warships” of its own. Plus various colonies had their own navies. (The confusion over whose ships were what results in both Beverly and Marblehead, Massachusetts claiming to be “the birthplace of the American Navy”). With a few minor exceptions, not much came of this. The privateers were understandably cautious about venturing out to sea in the face of the Royal Navy; their major success was capturing a vessel loaded with much needed gunpowder. The other ships didn’t do much better, completely disregarding orders to intercept some munitions ships known to be bound for Canada and instead capturing a number of American vessels, and, despite explicit orders not to annoy the Canadians (in hopes of getting them to join in the revolution) staging a raid on Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island with no discernable results.
Like Nelson’s other books, this is an excellent read. It covers a part of the Revolutionary War that isn’t very well known. The various blunderings of the Continentals and the British makes you appreciate the axiom that “winner of a battle is the one to make the second to last mistake”. ( )