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The United States Army in the War of 1812
Michigan State University Press, 1997 Cloth: 978-0-87013-441-8 | eISBN: 978-0-87013-947-5 Library of Congress Classification E355.Q56 1997 Dewey Decimal Classification 973.524
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ABOUT THIS BOOK
This two-volume work by historian Robert Quimby presents a comprehensive and detailed analysis of military strategy, operations, and management during one of America’s most neglected and least understood military campaigns, the War of 1812. With causes that can be traced to the epic contest against Napoleon in Europe beginning in 1803, the war itself was the first conducted by the young Constitutional government of the United States. Quimby demonstrates that failed American initiatives at the beginning of hostilities shattered the unrealistic optimism of the war’s staunchest advocates; and while initial failures were followed by military success in 1813, whatever advantage might have been gained was soon lost to incompetent leadership. Major exceptions occurred in the Old Northwest, and in what was then the Southwest, where U.S. forces finally broke the strength of the long-successful Indian-British alliance. See other books on: Army | Campaigns | Command of troops | United States. Army | War of 1812 See other titles from Michigan State University Press |
Nearby on shelf for United States / Revolution to the Civil War, 1775/1783-1861 / By period:
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