Independently Published
Pirates, Privateers, and the U.S. Navy
Product Code:
9798702361345
ISBN13:
9798702361345
Condition:
New
$18.38
Pirates, Privateers, and the U.S. Navy
$18.38
The primary problem of the American Colonies in their quest to win independence from Great Britain was not the British Army, though it was formidable. Instead, it was how to deal with the overwhelming might of the British Navy. The Continental Congress had no ships and no taxing authority to fund the creation a a navy in 1775. The first U.S. Navy was a combination of the few merchant ships Congress was able to acquire and a large number of privateers who joined the cause of independence. The privateers were privately owned and operated by individuals and businesses. By the end of the war, there were more than 2,000 of them. The British called them pirates. From the Boston tea Party to the battle of the U.S.S. Bonhomme Richard with the British man-of-war, the H.M.S. Serapis, this is their story.
| Author: Mark L. Hopkins |
| Publisher: Independently Published |
| Publication Date: 44226 |
| Number of Pages: 278 pages |
| Binding: Fiction |
| ISBN-10: |
| ISBN-13: 9798702361345 |