On July 29; 1778; a powerful French naval squadron sailed confidently to the entrance of Narragansett Bay. Its appearance commenced the first joint French and American campaign of the Revolutionary War. The new allies' goal was to capture the British garrison at Newport; Rhode Island. With British resolve reeling from the striking patriot victory at Saratoga the previous autumn; this French and American effort might just end the war.As the French moved into the bay; surprised British captains scuttled or burned many of their vessels rather than risk capture; resulting in the most significant loss of warships suffered by the British navy during the war. French Admiral Comte d'Estaing then turned to sea to engage the main British fleet but his ships were scattered and damaged by a huge storm. After his flagship and two other ships were attacked; d'Estaing's squadron was taken out of the campaign. The American army under General John Sullivan; meanwhile; was stranded on a small island near Newport without the expected French naval support. When they tried to retreat off the island; British and Hessian regulars were sent to destroy Sullivan's army; instead of a rout; a running battle ensued that lasted for more than six hours. Continentals; brimming with confidence after their training during the winter of Valley Forge; once more proved that they were an effective fighting force. While the Rhode Island Campaign ended in failure for the Americans and French; there were positive signs for the future of the alliance and the Revolution.
#2466348 in Books 2004-11-01Original language:EnglishPDF # 1 .41 x 10.30 x 11.06l; 1.40 #File Name: 1592286666128 pages
Review
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. The book is great i just didn't realize it was bought as a ...By SandraThe book is great i just didn't realize it was bought as a gift for someone else and I bought it for a gift as well and there is an inscription very large inscription in the front.. I will be returning it and hopefully buy the book new!! GREAT book; fabulous pictures...0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. A nice collectionBy G. JohnsonA bit of a forgotten world; and a glimpse at a very different way of life our forebears led only a couple generations ago. Real daily life; not idealized movie visions.19 of 19 people found the following review helpful. Wonderful collection of historic cowboy photographsBy Ronald ScheerThere are 110 pages of vintage photographs in this oversize book; by a half-dozen or so early photographers working with bulky equipment out on the plains during the years of open rangeland. Most of the photographs chosen for this book date from 1885 into the first decades of the 20th century; with a few as recent as the 1930s.Besides herding; driving; and working cattle and horses; which have become familiar images over the years; the editor has included shots of meal-time and preparation of food at the chuckwagon. Some of these are nights shots; lighted by the campfire.There are shots of cowboys with fiddles and guitars; one a younger man on a cot in a cabin; the photograph rich with details: the layers of worn blankets on the cot; the cowboy's big white hat; the two shirts he's wearing; the cuffs of his jeans turned up; two pairs of boots (the more beat-up pair shoved against one corner of the cot); a towel hanging against the log wall behind him; and a copy of Liberty magazine lying open on a seat in the foreground.There are cowboys on horseback performing the remarkable trick of drinking water from their hat brims. (One of these is on the cover.) There are many groups shots of men lined up to face the camera. Two of them from early 1880s Montana show artist and writer Charles Russell. Another shows over 30 men at a cowboy's funeral; hats off; standing around a patch of freshly turned prairie sod; two of them holding shovels.A group of ten trail cowboys from the XIT ranch sit for a portrait shot; two with revolvers drawn in their laps; each of them dressed very differently. There are two studio portraits of individual cowboys from the 1890s; one of them with long; shoulder-length hair; the other a fresh-faced youth; with silk scarf; woolly chaps; leather gloves with wide cuffs; gunbelt; and a monogrammed shirt with big medallion buttons.There are a few shots of cowboying in winter; taken in the 1920s and 30s. In one remarkable two-page spread; a cowboy on his horse watches a long; long line of Herefords moving across a landscape totally whited out by snow. Also interesting are shots of early ranch houses and cow camp cabins; one of them against the eroded rocks of the Missouri Breaks.The opening essay by Bob Edgar; curator of The Museum of the Old West; Cody; Wyoming; gives a general overview of the period; focusing on the cattle drives and talking briefly about the career of one dedicated photographer; Charles Belden. For more of a historical background to go with the photographs; there is Andy Adams' "Log of a Cowboy;" "Cowboy Life" by William Savage; Jr.; Ramon Adams' book about chuckwagons and the camp cook "Come an' Get It;" and Larry McMurtry's novel "Lonesome Dove." For another book of vintage photographs of the Old West; look at "The Early Days in Jackson Hole" by Virginia Huidekoper.