DC -- Dupont Circle -- Society of the Cincinnati (Anderson House) -- Exhibit: Books in the Field: Studying the Art of War in Revolutionary America:
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Description of Pictures: Books in the Field: Studying the Art of War in Revolutionary America
September 27, 2017 — March 4, 2018
"In a country where every gentleman is a soldier, and every soldier a student in the art of war, it necessarily follows that military treatises will be considerably sought after, and attended to."
-- Hugh Henry Ferguson, editor of the American edition of Military Instructions for Officers Detached in the Field (Philadelphia, 1775)
The young officers of the Continental Army who pledged their lives to the cause of American independence were enthusiastic and ambitious, but most entered service without military experience or training. Even the senior commanders were self-taught warriors, relying on knowledge learned from books to expand on lessons learned in the field. George Washington, Henry Knox, and other leaders urged their men to study the growing literature on the art of war to prepare for the role of leading troops in battle against the British army.
To meet the demand for military texts, a flood of printings began to appear from the American presses. Much of this activity was centered in Philadelphia, where more than thirty works on military subjects were published in the years 1775 and 1776 alone. Initially these books were reprints or new editions of British or European standards, but publishers quickly turned to a new generation of American military authors whose works reflected the immediacy of the war.
In 1779, Congress ordered the publication of the first official manual for the Continental Army, Regulations for the Order and Discipline of the Troops of the United States. Written by Gen. Friedrich Wilhelm Steuben, the Prussian volunteer who had transformed the army at Valley Forge, the Regulations codified the governance of the army, from the basic drill to the specific duties of each officer rank. Finally Washington's army was reading from the same book, a crucial step in building the fighting force that would win American independence.
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Specific picture descriptions: Photos above with "i" icons next to the bracketed sequence numbers (e.g. "[1] ") are described as follows:
FIELD_171116_005.JPG: Books in the Field
FIELD_171116_010.JPG: The Robert Charles Lawrence Fergusson Collection
FIELD_171116_013.JPG: General Washington's Reading List
FIELD_171116_017.JPG: Le General Washington, 1780
FIELD_171116_024.JPG: Humphrey Bland
Treatise of Military Discipline, 1759
Known to officers as "Old Humphrey," Bland's treatise on discipline set the standards for the British military, going through nine editions between 1727 and 1762. George Washington read and recommended this work throughout his military career.
FIELD_171116_029.JPG: Lancelot, comte Turpin de Crisse
An Essay on the Art of War, 1761
Comte TUrpin's Essai sur Art de la Guerre was a favorite work of British general John Forbes, under whom Washington served in the expedition against Fort Duquesne in 1758. Washington added the English translation by Joseph Otway to his personal library.
FIELD_171116_034.JPG: Roger Stevenson
Military Instructions for Officers Detached in the Field, 1775
The American edition of Stevenson's Military Instructions was a bestseller for Philadelphia printer Robert Aitken. In recommending this work to Woodford, Washington did not mention the book's dedication: "TO the Honourable George Washington Esq. General and Commander in Chief of all the Forces of the United American Colonies."
FIELD_171116_039.JPG: Louis Michel de Jeney
The Partisan, or, The Art of Making War in Detachment, 1760
"The Partisan" on Washington's list refers to this English translation of Le Partisan, ou, L'Art de Faire la Petite-Guerre avec Success by a Hungarian officer in French service.
FIELD_171116_042.JPG: William Young
Manoeuvres, or, Practical Observations on the Art of War, 1771?
This compilation of several treatises on exercise, fortification and maneuvers also includes a printing of General Wolfe's Instructions to Young Officers. Shown here is a plate diagramming maneuvers for a brigade of infantry.
FIELD_171116_045.JPG: "Oh that I were a soldier! ... I am reading military books."
-- John Adams to Abigail Adams, May 29, 1775
Citizens Studying War
FIELD_171116_054.JPG: Advice from Henry KNox
FIELD_171116_059.JPG: Maurice, comte de Sase
Reveries, or Memoirs upon the Art of War, 1757
Of Saxe's Reveries, Knox wrote to Adams: "There is a variety of Books translated into English which would be of great Service but none more so than the great Marechal Saxe 'who stalks a God in war.' Tis he who has done more towards reducing war to fix'd principles that perhaps any of other man of the age."
FIELD_171116_062.JPG: Campbell Dalrymple
A Military Essay Containing Reflections on the Raising, Arming, Cloathing, and Discipline of the British Infantry and Cavalry, 1761
Dalrymple's Military Essay appeared on John Adams's master list of the best military books. This copy belonged to Brig. Gen. Anthony Wayne, who inscribed his name across the top of the title page.
FIELD_171116_068.JPG: John Muller
A Treatise Containing the Elementary Part of Fortification, Regular and Irregular, 1782
Col. Charles Cotesworth Pinckney of South Carolina had a notable library on the art of war. This is his copy of Muller's treatise on fortification, a work Henry Knox recommended.
FIELD_171116_072.JPG: Bernard Forest de Belidor
La Science des Ingenieurs, 1775
In his letter to John Adams about books in circulation in the army, Judge Advocate William Tudor wrote that "Bellidore (which General Gates tells me is worth all the rest) is not own'd by any Gentlemen in the army."
FIELD_171116_077.JPG: "Victory in War depends not absolutely on Numbers or mere Courage; Conduct and Discipline only will ensure it."
-- Vegetius
Taking Notes
FIELD_171116_086.JPG: R. Aitken, Printer, Book-binder, and Bookseller, Opposite the Coffee-House, Front Street, Philadelphia, 1779
This mid-war advertisement from Robert Aitken's shop lists several military works among the titles to be sold "Single or by the Dozen." At the bottom of the sheet he notes "The Highest Price given at the above Store, for Clean Linen Rags," which would be used for making paper.
FIELD_171116_090.JPG: Patriot Printers
FIELD_171116_098.JPG: Thomas Stone
The Military Guide for Young Officers, 1776
The publishers sent General Washington an incomplete set of advance sheets for this reprint edition of a popular British work. Simes's Military Guide is a synthesis of the works of many military authors, including Humphrey Bland and the comte de Saxe. This copy bears the ownership signature of William Floyd, a signer of the Declaration of Independence.
FIELD_171116_102.JPG: Thomas Simes
A New Military, Historical, and Explanatory Dictionary, 1776
The second volume of the Simes set was also sold separately. In addition to a military dictionary, this volume includes General Wolfe's Instructions to Young Officers, extracts from Dalrymple's Military Essay and The Manual Exercise, as ordered by His Majesty, in the Year 1764.
FIELD_171116_105.JPG: A New and Correct Plan of the Town of Boston, and Provincial Camp
Engraved by Robert Aitken, July 1775
Robert Aitken was not only a printer, binder and bookseller -- he also engraved the plates for many of his publications. His map of the siege of Boston showing American forts and entrenchments accompanied an article in the July 1775 issue of Aitken's Pennsylvania Magazine.
FIELD_171116_109.JPG: Thomas Auguste Le Roy de Grandmaison
A Treatise on the Military Service of Light Horse and Light Infantry, 1777
George Washington also owned a copy of the English translation of this influential treatise on light horse and light infantry by a Flemish cavalry officer. Opposite the title page is the publisher's advertisement for another new work on the art of war.
FIELD_171116_113.JPG: Richard Lambart, earl of Cavan
A New System of Military Discipline, Founded upon Principle, 1776
The price of this Philadelphia edition of the sixth early of Cavan's handbook is given on the title page -- one dollar in boards and ten shillings bound. This copy belonged to Robert Coleman of Pennsylvania, a second lieutenant in Cunningham's Battalion of the Flying Camp in 1776.
FIELD_171116_120.JPG: Revolutionary Printing
FIELD_171116_132.JPG: American Authors
FIELD_171116_136.JPG: Timothy Pickering
An Easy Plan of Discipline for a Militia, 1775
For the title page of the first edition of his Plan, Pickering chose a quotation from a 1753 military treatise by Charles Sackville, duke of Dorset: "For Freedom cannot be maintained without Power, and Men who are not in a Capacity to defend their Liberties, will certainly lose them."
FIELD_171116_139.JPG: Timothy Pickering
An Easy Plan of Discipline for a Militia, 1776
In May 1776, Pickering's Plan was adopted by the Massachusetts Council and House of Representatives in a resolution commending it for being "well adapted to the use and practice of the militia, as it contains all the motions in the manual exercise that are necessary and useful and is not... clogged with many superfluous motions which only serve to burden the memory and perplex the learner." This plate for the Boston edition suggests that the exercise was complex enough.
FIELD_171116_144.JPG: Timothy Pickering
Born in Salem, Massachusetts, in 1745, Timothy Pickering was a thirty-year-old lawyer and judge when he was elected colonel of the First Militia Regiment of Essex County in 1775. He served in the siege of Boston and went on to become adjutant general and quartermaster general of the Continental Army.
FIELD_171116_146.JPG: Louis-Andre de La Mamie, chevalier de Clairac
L'Ingenieur de Campagne, or, Field Engineer, 1776
Lewis Nicola immigrated to America from Ireland in 1766, settling with his family in Philadelphia. He was active in literary circles, running a lending library, editing The American Magazine and serving as curator of the American Philosophical Society. When the war began he opened a school, taught mathematics necessary for military service, and he collaborated with local printers on the publications of several military treatises. He later commanded the Invalid Corps of the Continental Army.
FIELD_171116_150.JPG: Thomas Hanson
The Prussian Evolutions in Actual Engagements, 1775
Thomas Hanson, an adjutant to the Second Battalion of the Philadelphia Associators, admired the military innovations of Frederick II of Prussia. His book presents the specific commands of the Prussian manual exercise adapted for the training of American troops, as well as a section on the theory and practice of gunnery. George Washington appears on the book's five-page subscriber's list, with an order for eight copies noted beside his name.
FIELD_171116_154.JPG: Military Medicine
FIELD_171116_159.JPG: John Jones
Plain Concise Practical Remarks on the Treatment of Wounds and Fractures, 1775
This copy of the first edition of Dr. John Jones's treatise "designed of the Use of young Military Surgeons in North-America" belonged to Henry Latimer of Delaware, who directed the army's "Flying Hospital," a mobile surgical unit.
FIELD_171116_169.JPG: Surgical kit
This surgical kit was used by Dr. Justus Storrs, who served as a surgeon's mate in the Connecticut Continental Line from 1780 to the end of the war. The kit includes thirteen small instruments, mostly scalpels and needles.
FIELD_171116_178.JPG: William Brown
Pharmacopoeia simplicorum et efficaciorum, 1778
William Brown, physician general of the Middle Department of the Continental Army, wrote this handbook of formulas for medicinal prepartions while stationed at Lititz, Pennsylvania, in 1778.
FIELD_171116_181.JPG: Benjamin Rush
Directions for Preserving the Health of Soldiers: Recommended in the Consideration of the Officers of the Army of the United States, 1778
FIELD_171116_188.JPG: A Hessian's View
FIELD_171116_191.JPG: Frederick II
Military Instructions, Written by the King of Prussia, for the Generals of His Army, 1762
FIELD_171116_196.JPG: Knapsack owned by Sgt. Elisha Gross of the Third Continental Artillery, ca 1777
FIELD_171116_202.JPG: Steuben's Regulations
FIELD_171116_211.JPG: Timothy Pickering, War Office
Letter to Col. William Duer
June 2, 1778
FIELD_171116_214.JPG: Friedrich Wilhelm Ludolf Gerhard Augustin Steuben
Regulations for the Order and Discipline of the Troops of the United States, 1779
FIELD_171116_220.JPG: Friedrich Wilhelm Ludolf Gerhard Augustin Steuben
Regulations for the Order and Discipline of the Troops of the United States, 1779
FIELD_171116_228.JPG: George Washington, Newburgh, New York
Letters to Thomas Lancaster Lansdale
January 25 and February 7, 1783
This pair of letters, written by the commander-in-chief to an officer of the Maryland Continental Line, reveals General Washington's personal attention to the order and discipline of his troops. In the first, he severely chastises Major Lansdale for the appearance of his men and the conditions of their camp during the army's final cantonment, citing Steuben's Regulations as the standard to which they must adhere. In the second letter, dated just two weeks later, he warmly compliments Lansdale for the "very great alteration for the better in the appearance of the Maryland Detachment."
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[Museums (History)]
2017 photos: Equipment this year: I continued to use my Fuji XS-1 cameras but, depending on the event, I also used a Nikon D7000.
Trips this year:
Civil War Trust conferences in Pensacola, FL, Chattanooga, TN (via sites in Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Tennessee) and Fredericksburg, VA,
a family reunion in The Dells, Wisconsin (via sites in Ohio, Indiana, and Wisconsin),
New York City, and
my 12th consecutive San Diego Comic Con trip (including sites in Arizona).
For some reason, several of my photos have been published in physical books this year which is pretty cool. Ones that I know about:
"Tarzan, Jungle King of Popular Culture" (David Lemmo),
"The Great Crusade: A Guide to World War I American Expeditionary Forces Battlefields and Sites" (Stephen T. Powers and Kevin Dennehy),
"The American Spirit" (David McCullough),
"Civil War Battlefields: Walking the Trails of History" (David T. Gilbert),
"The Year I Was Peter the Great: 1956 — Khrushchev, Stalin's Ghost, and a Young American in Russia" (Marvin Kalb), and
"The Judge: 26 Machiavellian Lessons" (Ron Collins and David Skover).
Number of photos taken this year: just below 560,000.
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