Braddock's March - Thomas E. Crocker

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Thomas E. Crocker

Braddock’s March

How the Man Sent to Seize a Continent Changed American History

The Disastrous British Expedition that Gave America Its First National Hero

 

 
BREAKING NEWS:

Winner of the 2011 New York Society of Colonial Wars Distinguished Book Award

Winner of the 2010 T. Michael Miller Award for History


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"Both Braddock's epic march and subsequent destruction are brought to life by Thomas E. Crocker in "Braddock's March," his impeccably researched account of an important but largely forgotten chapter in American history. Mr. Crocker, a prominent Washington attorney, has done his job with all the thoroughness - and none of the dryness - of a professional historian...He also has an excellent eye for his characters, capturing them in a few choice pen strokes...It all adds up to a stirring tale with an impressive supporting cast."

               -Washington Times

                            

"... Comprehensive research and fresh perspective... Fast-paced... Worth reading."

               - Publishers Weekly


" Crocker... is telling the story not just of The Battle of The Monongahela but is describing all of Braddock's epic journey...He does a good job of humanizing Braddock and explaining his decisions."

               -Pittsburgh Post-Gazette



 
In 1755, Major General Edward Braddock was sent by Great Britain on a mission to drive France once and for all from the New World. Accompanied by the largest armed expeditionary force ever sent to North America, Braddock’s primary target was the Forks of the Ohio, where he planned to seize Fort Duquesne and then march north to the Canadian border. After landing in Alexandria, Virginia, Braddock organized his troops and supply chain, threatened to billet soldiers in private homes, and called the first congress of royal governors in America to discuss using local revenue to pay for the expedition—issues that were to drive the future split between the colonies and Britain. In May, the expedition began its nearly 250-mile trek, heroically cutting through dense wilderness, fording rivers, and scaling mountains, while hauling heavy artillery and the first wheeled vehicles ever to cross the Appalachian Mountains. Braddock was joined on the expedition by a young Virginia colonel, George Washington, and others who would later play roles in the future revolution, including Horatio Gates, Thomas Gage, and Charles Lee; among those driving the wagons were Daniel Boone and Daniel Morgan. Less than a day’s march from Fort Duquesne, Braddock’s exhausted column was annihilated by a combined French and Indian force, some of whom fired rifles—probably the first effective use of this weapon in battle. Over two-thirds of Braddock’s British and colonial troops suffered casualties— more than in the Charge of the Light Brigade— and Braddock himself fell mortally wounded, while George Washington miraculously escaped harm despite four bullet holes through his clothing. With this battle, North America at once started and was drawn into a global war between Britain and France.
In
Braddock’s March: How the Man Sent to Seize a Continent Changed American History, Thomas E. Crocker uses a wealth of sources—including newly discovered letters —to tell the story of one of the most important events in the American colonial period. Not only did Braddock’s expedition have a profound impact on American military and political developments, this fateful march opened the first major road for westward expansion, anointed a national hero in George Washington and sowed the seeds for the American Revolution.


THOMAS E. CROCKER is a partner in a Washington, D.C. law firm. He is a graduate of Princeton University and Columbia Law School.

thomascrocker@thomasecrocker.com


© 2009 Thomas E. Crocker