The Major Operations of the Navies in the War of American Independence. A. T. Mahan. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: A. T. Mahan
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Жанр произведения: Документальная литература
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isbn: 4057664628954
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and Keppel, off Ushant, July 27, 1778

      Figure 1 86

      Figures 2 and 3 90

      D'Estaing and Byron, July 6, 1779 106

      Rodney and De Guichen, April 17, 1780, Figures 1 and 2 132

      Rodney and De Guichen, May 15, 1780 143

      Cornwallis and De Ternay, June 20, 1780 156

      Arbuthnot and Des Touches, March 16, 1781 172

      Graves and De Grasse, September 5, 1781 180

      Hood and De Grasse, January 25, 1782, Figures 1 and 2 201

      Hood and De Grasse, January 26, 1782, Figure 3 203

      Rodney and De Grasse, April 9 and 12, 1782

      Figures 1 and 2 210

      Figure 3 212

      Figures 4 and 5 215

      Figure 6 218

      Johnstone and Suffren, Porto Praya, April 16, 1781 237

      Hughes and Suffren, February 17, 1782 240

      Hughes and Suffren, April 12, 1782 243

      Hughes and Suffren, July 6, 1782 243

      Hughes and Suffren, September 3, 1782 249

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

      Macaulay, in a striking passage of his Essay on Frederick the Great, wrote, "The evils produced by his wickedness were felt in lands where the name of Prussia was unknown. In order that he might rob a neighbour whom he had promised to defend, black men fought on the coast of Coromandel, and red men scalped each other by the Great Lakes of North America."

      The War of American Independence was no exception to the general rule of propagation that has been noted. When our forefathers began to agitate against the Stamp Act and the other measures that succeeded it, they as little foresaw the spread of their action to the East and West Indies, to the English Channel and Gibraltar, as did the British ministry which in framing the Stamp Act struck the match from which these consequences followed. When Benedict Arnold on Lake Champlain by vigorous use of small means obtained a year's delay for the colonists, he compassed the surrender of Burgoyne in 1777. The surrender of Burgoyne, justly estimated as the decisive event of the war, was due to Arnold's previous action, gaining the delay which is a first object for all defence, and which to the unprepared colonists was a vital necessity. The surrender of Burgoyne determined the intervention of France, in 1778; the intervention of France the accession of Spain thereto, in 1779. The war with these two Powers led to the maritime occurrences, the interferences with neutral trade, that gave rise to the Armed Neutrality; the concurrence of Holland in which brought war between that country and Great Britain, in 1780. This extension of hostilities affected not only the West Indies but the East, through the possessions of the Dutch in both quarters and at the Cape of Good Hope. If not the occasion of Suffren being sent to India, the involvement of Holland in the general war had a powerful effect upon the brilliant operations which he conducted there; as well as at, and for, the Cape of Good Hope, then a Dutch possession, on his outward voyage.