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America's First Ally

France in the Revolutionary War

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
The Revolutionary War historian provides “a comprehensive and accessible guide” to the vital influence France had on America’s path to independence (Publishers Weekly).
 
French support for United States independence was both vital and varied, ranging from ideological inspiration to financial and military support. In this study, historian Norman Desmarais offers an in-depth analysis of this crucial relationship, exploring whether America could have won its independence without its first ally.
 
Demarais begins with the contributions of French Enlightenment thinkers who provided the intellectual frameworks for the American and French revolutions. He then covers the many forms of aid provided by France during the Revolutionary War, including the contributions of individual French officers and troops, as well as covert aid provided before the war began. France also provided naval assistance, particularly to the American privateers who harassed British shipping. Detailed accounts drawn from ships’ logs, court and auction records, newspapers, letters, diaries, journals, and pension applications.
 
In a more sweeping analysis, Desmarais explores the international nature of a war which some consider the first world war. When France and Spain entered the conflict, they fought the Crown forces in their respective areas of economic interest. In addition to the engagements in the Atlantic Ocean, along the American and European coasts and in the West Indies, there are accounts of action in India and the East Indies, South America and Africa.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      May 27, 2019
      Desmarais (The Guide to the American Revolutionary War), editor-in-chief of the Brigade of the American Revolution’s journal, The Brigade Dispatch, provides a comprehensive and accessible guide to the vital role of France in that conflict. Desmarais, who has translated relevant primary sources from the French, starts his narrative in 1774, with Louis XVI’s appointment of a new French foreign minister, Charles Gravier, who was charged with reducing British power. That directive led to covert support for the colonists in the form of weapons and other military materiel, and then increasingly overt support. Even readers conversant with this aspect of the Revolutionary War are likely to learn something new, such as the extent to which French privateer attacks on British merchant vessels created significant indirect costs in the form of raised shipping rates and marine insurance premiums. Desmarais’s nonchronological organization—separating the chapter on French naval assistance from one about the troops on the ground France supplied—will not be optimal for everyone, and the level of detail may sometimes exceed the lay reader’s needs, but this is still a persuasive look at the significant role of foreign aid in the revolution’s success. Readers intrigued by the international dimensions of the Revolutionary War will find this a worthy volume.

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  • English

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