This lively book recounts the story of the antagonism between the
American colonists and the British armed forces prior to the
Revolution. Douglas Leach reveals certain Anglo-American attitudes
and stereotypes that evolved before 1763 and became an important
factor leading to the outbreak of the Revolutionary War.
Using research from both England and the United States, Leach
provides a comprehensive study of this complex historical
relationship. British professional armed forces first were
stationed in significant numbers in the colonies during the last
quarter of the seventeenth century. During early clashes in
Virginia in the 1670s and in Boston and New York in the late 1680s,
the colonists began to perceive the British standing army as a
repressive force.
The colonists rarely identified with the British military and naval
personnel and often came to dislike them as individuals and groups.
Not suprisingly, these hostile feelings were reciprocated by the
British soldiers, who viewed the colonists as people who had failed
to succeed at home and had chosen a crude existence in the
wilderness. These attitudes hardened, and by the mid-eighteenth
century an atmosphere of distrust and suspicion prevailed on both
sides.
With the outbreak of the French and Indian War in 1754, greater
numbers of British regulars came to America. Reaching uprecedented
levels, the increased contact intensified the British military's
difficulty in finding shelter and acquiring needed supplies and
troops from the colonists. Aristocratic British officers considered
the provincial officers crude amateurs -- incompetent, ineffective,
and undisciplined -- leading slovenly, unreliable troops.
Colonists, in general, hindered the British military by
profiteering whenever possible, denouncing taxation for military
purposes, and undermining recruiting efforts. Leach shows that
these attitudes, formed over decades of tension-breeding contact,
are an important development leading up to the American
Revolution.