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American Naval History, 1607-1865

Overcoming the Colonial Legacy

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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

For its first eighty-five years, the United States was only a minor naval power. Its fledgling fleet had been virtually annihilated during the War of Independence and was mostly trapped in port by the end of the War of 1812. How this meager presence became the major naval power it remains to this day is the subject of American Naval History, 1607–1865: Overcoming the Colonial Legacy. A wide-ranging yet concise survey of the U.S. Navy from the colonial era through the Civil War, the book draws on American, British, and French history to reveal how navies reflect diplomatic, political, economic, and social developments and to show how the foundation of America's future naval greatness was laid during the Civil War.

Award-winning author Jonathan R. Dull documents the remarkable transformation of the U.S. Navy between 1861 and 1865, thanks largely to brilliant naval officers like David Farragut, David D. Porter, and Andrew Foote; visionary politicians like Abraham Lincoln and Gideon Welles; and progressive industrialists like James Eads and John Ericsson. But only by understanding the failings of the antebellum navy can the accomplishments of Lincoln's navy be fully appreciated. Exploring such topics as delays in American naval development, differences between the U.S. and European fleets, and the effect that the country's colonial past had on its naval policies, Dull offers a new perspective on both American naval history and the history of the developing republic.

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    • Booklist

      December 1, 2012
      Produced by an award-winning Yale research associate, this is an excellent summary of how the U.S. Navy grew from next to nothing at the end of the American Revolution into a force without which the Union could not have defeated the Confederacy, and became a world-class power in the twentieth century. Dull looks not only at our naval actions but also at American views of the use for a navy during the country's first 85 years. We were not an island nation, like the British, and we depended on our distance from Europe to keep us out of trouble. But as soon as the provisional peace treaty with Great Britain was signed, in 1783, we discovered that our merchant vessels needed protection and that every nation with a navy regarded us as easy to invade. Bit by painful bit, the lesson sank in (e.g., the burning of Washington in 1814). Dull has pulled personalities, diplomacy, technology, and politics into a nicely executed summary. This is a superior reference for someone who wants a different look at our early history.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2012, American Library Association.)

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