How did an ambitious British army officer advance his career in
mid-eighteenth-century North America? What was the nature of
political opportunism in an imperial system encompassing an old
world and a new?
This study examines the career of an Anglo-Irish-Acadian army
officer, treating in considerable detail the network of old-world
connections and patrons which at times facilitated his advancement.
John Bradstreet was born in Nova Scotia and died in New York. He
was a major participant in colonial North American military events
ranging from the capture of Louisbourg in 1745 to the British
campaign against Pontiac in 1764. Early in his career he became
lieutenant-governor of St. John's, Newfoundland, and eventually
rose to the rank of major-general in the British army, while
linking his military performance to a relentless pursuit of profit
and preferment. He was a man consistently on the periphery of both
English and American societies; yet his career reveals a great deal
about the mid-eighteenth-century trans-Atlantic world and about the
dilemma of proponents of Empire who were viewed with increasing
suspicion in both mother country and colonies.
The author draws upon British, American, and Canadian archival
sources, taking advantage of Bradstreet's prolific correspondence
to support and develop his narrative.
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