In this dramatic retelling of one of history’s great “what-ifs,” Mark R. Anderson examines the American colonies’ campaign to bring Quebec into the Continental confederation and free the Canadians from British “tyranny.” This significant reassessment of a little-studied campaign examines developments on both sides of the border that rapidly proceeded from peaceful diplomatic overtures to a sizable armed intervention. The military narrative encompasses Richard Montgomery’s plodding initial operations, Canadian partisan cooperation with officers like Ethan Allen, and the harrowing experiences of Benedict Arnold’s Kennebec expedition, as well as the sudden collapse of British defenses that secured the bulk of the province for the rebel cause. The book provides new insight into both Montgomery’s tragic Québec City defeat and a small but highly significant loyalist uprising in the rural northern parishes that was suppressed by Arnold and his Canadian patriot allies. Anderson closely examines the evolving relationships between occupiers and occupied, showing how rapidly changing circumstances variously fostered cooperation and encouraged resistance among different Canadian elements. The book homes in on the key political and military factors that ultimately doomed America’s first foreign war of liberation and resulted in the Continental Army’s decisive expulsion from Canada on the eve of the Declaration of Independence. The first full treatment of this fascinating chapter in Revolutionary War history in over a century, Anderson’s account is especially revealing in its presentation of contentious British rule in Quebec, and of Continental beliefs that Canadiens would greet the soldiers as liberators and allies in a common fight against the British yoke. This thoroughly researched and action-packed history will appeal to American and Canadian history buffs and military experts alike.
Author(s): Mark R. Anderson
Publisher: University Press of New England
Year: 2013
Language: English
Pages: 460
City: Hanover
Contents
Maps
Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1 | The Only Link Wanting
2 | New Subjects to the King
3 | Fuel for Rebellion
4 | Authors and Agitators
5 | Preemptive Strikes
6 | That Damned Absurd Word "Liberty"
7 | To Erect the Glorious Standard of American Liberty in Canada
8 | The Canadians Opened the Road
9 | The Treachery and Villainy of the Canadians
10 | Another Path to the Heart of Quebec
11 | To Winter in Canada
12 | Time to Consider Politics
13 | Contest of Wills at Québec
14 | The Question of Loyalists
15 | A Critical Month
16 | Evolving Occupation
17 | A Spirit of Cooperation and Understanding
18 | Patriot Zealots
19 | Spring of Unrest
20 | A Late-Changing Cast
21 | May Tides
22 | The Sad Necessity of Abandoning Canada
23 | The Causes of the Miscarriages in Canada
Conclusion
Appendix 1: Canadian Voices
Appendix 2: The Polarized Legacy of General David Wooster
Notes
Select Bibliography
Index