Atlantic Politics, Military Strategy and the French and Indian War

TitleAtlantic Politics, Military Strategy and the French and Indian War
Publication TypeBook
Year of Publication2016
AuthorsHall, Richard
Number of Pages266
PublisherPalgrave Macmillan
CityBasingstoke, UK
Abstract

1755 marked the point at which events in America ceased to be considered subsidiary affairs in the great international rivalry that existed between the colonial powers of Great Britain and France. This book examines the Braddock Campaign of 1755, a segment of the wider ‘Braddock Plan’ that aimed to drive the French from all of the contested regions they occupied in North America. Rather than being an archetypal military history-styled analysis of General Edward Braddock’s foray into the Ohio Valley, this work argues that British defeat at the infamous Battle of the Monongahela should be viewed as one that ultimately embodied military, political and diplomatic divergences and weaknesses within the British Atlantic World of the eighteenth century.  These factors, in turn, hinted at growing schisms in the empire that would lead to the breakup of British North America in the 1770s and the birth of the future United States.

URLhttps://www.palgrave.com/gp/book/9783319808642
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BH

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1041518101

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