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Burgoyne and the Saratoga Campaign - His Papers (Paperback, Annotated Ed)
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Burgoyne and the Saratoga Campaign - His Papers (Paperback, Annotated Ed)
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The American victory over the British at Saratoga in 1777 was
arguably the pivotal event of the American Revolutionary War. The
British defeat led France and Spain to declare war on Britain,
transforming a colonial uprising into a world war and, by
distracting the British with a European conflict, assuring the
colonists' success. The British troops at Saratoga were led by
Lieutenant General John Burgoyne, and two years after his defeat he
faced a parliamentary investigation into his conduct of the
campaign.
In "Burgoyne and the Saratoga Campaign," Douglas R. Cubbison
presents the papers that Burgoyne gathered preparatory to his
appearance before Parliament, together with Cubbison's own
interpretive narrative of the campaign, based on these documents
and other sources. The papers, most of them published here for the
first time, comprise Burgoyne's correspondence with the governor
general of Canada, the British secretary of state for America, and
the commander of the British army during the Saratoga expedition.
The letters and reports outline the campaign's political
organization and planning, logistical preparations, and
implementation.
Burgoyne is one of the most colorful and fascinating figures of the
American Revolution. A successful British commander in Portugal
during the Seven Years' War, he was also a popular playwright, and
those of his letters included and carefully annotated here reflect
his literary gifts. At the outbreak of the revolution in 1775,
Burgoyne was promoted to major general. Thanks largely to his
political connections, he was dispatched in 1776 to lead the
detachment of the British army sent to stop the rebels from seizing
Canada. Cubbison concludes that the ultimate defeat of this
expedition at Saratoga was due to lax planning in London and in the
field. Burgoyne's cavalry career in Europe had not prepared him for
warfare along the waterways and deep in the woods of Canada and New
York. The general also seriously underestimated the capabilities of
the American rebels.
The documents Burgoyne assembled in 1779--and Cubbison's narrative
and analysis of the challenges faced by Burgoyne and his
associates--are crucial for understanding this turning point in the
Revolutionary War.
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