The First Salute by Barbara Tuchman
I finished reading The First
Salute by Barbara Tuchman
This evening I finished reading The
First Salute by Barbara Tuchman. This is the second time I've read it - the
first was in 1989. To be honest, the only thing I remembered was how important
the French naval blockade under Admiral DeGrasse was to the American victory.
Tuchman has a very strong ability to shape history into a narrative, one of the
things I like so much about her books. Her approach in this book is to look at
the Revolutionary War as a part of great power conflict - particularly between
England, France and the Netherlands. One of the truly astounding things is that
at the time, the West Indies was considered more important than America - that
is one of the reasons Admiral Rodney did not sail to the Chesapeake to engage
deGrasse, or even really try to stop DeGrasse from leaving. Once DeGrasse got
there, Washington was able to march down to Yorktown, while Lafayette marched
up. With DeGrasse blockading the Chesapeake so that no reinforcements or
supplies could reach him Washington was able to destroy Cornawallis's army and
end the war.
Posted: Tue - March 2, 2004 at 11:24 PM