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Founding Fighters - The Battlefield Leaders Who Made American Independence (Hardcover, Annotated edition)
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Founding Fighters - The Battlefield Leaders Who Made American Independence (Hardcover, Annotated edition)
Series: Praeger Security International
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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American independence was won not just with ideas and words, but
also through force of arms. A key element of that battlefield
victory was the combat leadership provided by a fierce list of
hard-fighting warriors at the regimental, brigade, and division
echelons or their naval equivalents. Founding Fighters recounts the
stories of fifteen of the American Revolution's most important and
colorful battlefield commanders. Collectively, these men
participated in virtually all of the war's significant battles and
campaigns. They experienced the conflict in all its variants:
conventional contest between opposing armies, brutal guerilla
struggle between partisans and regulars, frontier and naval
fighting, and civil war pitting neighbors, and even family members
against each other. These "founding fighters" helped win stunning
victories, knew ignominious defeats, and suffered physical and
spiritual privation through times when ultimate victory and
independence appeared impossibly remote. While the "Founding
Fathers" remain eternally popular with the general American reading
public, a number of important Revolutionary-era military figures
remain much less known (and, in some cases, forgotten). Cate
rectifies this. Richard Montgomery, Charles Lee, and Horatio Gates
were former British officers who turned from redcoats to rebels,
casting their lots with the patriot cause. Henry Knox and Nathanael
Greene were self-taught amateurs who shared New England roots and
an innate genius for war. Benedict Arnold and John Paul Jones each
possessed burning personal ambition and zeal for glory, traits that
led one to ignominy and disgrace and the other to immortality as
the father of the American Navy. A trioof South Carolinians--Thomas
Sumter, Andrew Pickens, and Francis Marion--waged savage partisan
warfare in some of the war's darkest days against British occupiers
and their Loyalist supporters. Three rough and ready
frontiersmen--Ethan Allen, George Rogers Clark, and Daniel
Morgan--inspired their followers to important victories. More than
a mere examination of battlefield exploits and personalities,
however, this book illuminates fascinating aspects of American
military and cultural history and offers a superb window for
investigating two of the enduring themes of the American military
tradition, civil-military relations and the respective roles and
worth of professional and citizen soldiers.
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