Small Boats and Daring Men
Maritime Raiding, Irregular Warfare, and the Early American Navy, Volume 66 (Campaigns and Commanders Series)
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Bob Neufeld
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Two centuries before the daring exploits of Navy SEALs and Marine Raiders captured the public imagination, the US Navy and Marine Corps were already engaged in similarly perilous missions: raiding pirate camps, attacking enemy ships in the dark of night, and striking enemy facilities and resources on shore. Even John Paul Jones, father of the American navy, saw such irregular operations as critical to naval warfare. With Jones’s own experience as a starting point, Benjamin Armstrong sets out to take irregular naval warfare out of the shadow of the blue-water battles that dominate naval history.
Beginning with the Continental Navy, Small Boats and Daring Men traces maritime missions through the wars of the early republic, from the coast of modern-day Libya to the rivers and inlets of the Chesapeake Bay. At the same time, Armstrong examines the era’s conflicts with nonstate enemies and threats to American peacetime interests along Pacific and Caribbean shores. Armstrong brings a uniquely informed perspective to his subject; and his work - with reference to original naval operational reports, sailors’ memoirs and diaries, and officers’ correspondence - is at once an exciting narrative of danger and combat at sea and a thoroughgoing analysis of how these events fit into concepts of American sea power.
The book is published by University of Oklahoma Press. The audiobook is published by University Press Audiobooks.
“An innovative history of a form of naval strategy often neglected by historians and strategists who focus on big fleets and guerre de course...pioneering scholarship...” (John T. Kuehn, author of America’s First General Staff)
“An action-packed journey from the War for Independence to the decades immediately following the War of 1812.” (Kevin D. McCranie, author of Utmost Gallantry)
©2019 University of Oklahoma Press (P)2021 Redwood Audiobooks