A Generous and Merciful Enemy: Life for German Prisoners of War during the American Revolution

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Some 37,000 soldiers from six German principalities, collectively remembered as Hessians, entered service as British auxiliaries in the American War of Independence. At times, they constituted a third of the British army in North America, and thousands of them were imprisoned by the Americans. Despite the importance of Germans in the British war effort, historians have largely overlooked these men. Drawing on research in German military records and common soldiers’ letters and diaries, Daniel Krebs places the prisoners on center stage in A Generous and Merciful Enemy, portraying them as individuals rather than simply as numbers in casualty lists.

Setting his account in the context of British and European politics and warfare, Krebs explains the motivations of the German states that provided contract soldiers for the British army. We think of the Hessians as mercenaries, but, as he shows, many were conscripts. Some were new recruits; others, veterans. Some wanted to stay in the New World after the war. Krebs further describes how the Germans were made prisoners, either through capture or surrender, and brings to life their experiences in captivity from New England to Havana, Cuba.

Krebs discusses prison conditions in detail, addressing both the American approach to war prisoners and the prisoners’ responses to their experience. He assesses American efforts as a “generous and merciful enemy” to use the prisoners as economic, military, and propagandistic assets. In the process, he never loses sight of the impact of imprisonment on the POWs themselves.

Adding new dimensions to an important but often neglected topic in military history, Krebs probes the origins of the modern treatment of POWs. An epilogue describes an almost-forgotten 1785 treaty between the United States and Prussia, the first in western legal history to regulate the treatment of prisoners of war.

Author(s): Daniel Krebs
Series: Campaigns and Commanders Series, 38
Publisher: University of Oklahoma Press
Year: 2015

Language: English
Pages: 396
City: Norman

Contents
Illustrations
Tables
Acknowledgments
A Note about Spelling,Terminology, and Currencies
Introduction
PART I German Soldiers in British Service
1 Subsidy Treaties
2 Recruitment Patterns
3 Social Composition
PART II Into Captivity
4 Prisoners of War in Western Warfare
5 Capture and Surrender
PART III Prisoners of War
6 The First Prisoners of War in Revolutionary Hands, 1775–1776
7 German Prisoners of War, 1776–1778
8 Provisions and Exchange, 1778
9 The Convention Army, 1777–1781
10 Continuity and Change, 1779–1783
11 Release and Return
Epilogue
APPENDIX Common German Soldiers Taken Prisoner
Notes
Bibliography
Index