American Amphibious Warfare
The Roots of Tradition to 1865
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Naval Institute Press
Published:30th Dec '17
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
American Amphibious Warfare: The Roots of Tradition to 1865 will fill the gap in the historiography of naval and military warfare. As the title implies, this book describes and analyzes early landing operations (from the Revolution through the Civil War) of American history, showing how they contributed to its rich amphibious tradition. No such study currently exists. This study does not attempt to describe every amphibious operation in early America, but focuses on seven major battles or campaigns providing a strong appreciation for the roots of American amphibious traditions. It will address in abbreviated form other amphibious operations and various land and naval battles as necessary to place these major actions in proper historical context.
It is important to remember that amphibious operations include both offensive and defensive actions; and both when viewed from the water’s edge can be instructive. Of the seven major amphibious campaigns examined in this book, five are offensive and two are defensive from the American perspective. (The New York and Baltimore campaigns are defensive and the Yorktown, Derna (Tripoli), California, Veracruz, and Fort Fisher are offensive.)
For many Americans, the concept of amphibious warfare derives from the World War II model where landing forces assaulted foreign shores against determined resistance. These actions resulted in very high casualties, yet proved uniformly success for American operations. The circumstances of geography coupled with the weapons and equipment available at that time dictated this type of warfare. During the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, no such equipment or weapons existed for assaulting defended beaches. Commanders attempted to land their forces in areas where the resistance would be light or nonexistent. The initiative and maneuverability inherent in naval forces permitted the establishment of combat power ashore before having to engage the enemy. The naval echelon could deliver forces to the point of attack faster that the land-based defenders could react.
The focus of this book is to analyze and explain how amphibious traditions began in this earlier era and, in the epilogue, show how they compare and contrast with modern amphibious forces, particularly the modern U.S. Marine Corps. One of the interesting conclusions it that weapons and equipment (modern amphibious ships, landing craft air cushioned, VSTOL fixed wing aircraft, helicopters, and theV-22 Osprey...
“American Amphibious Warfare: The Roots of Tradition to 1865 is a useful book for anyone with an interest in amphibious operations, and also for anyone studying the wars which it covers.” — Strategy Page
“Besides considering amphibious warfare, this wide-ranging book looks at other aspects of military planning and execution such as the development of the operational art and the concepts of operational manoeuvre and expeditionary warfare. Along the way, the author gives us a broad survey of American military history. In his postscript, Ohls writes, ‘The [concepts presented in this study] are timeless and provide the historian and analyst a basis for evaluating naval and military events from any period.’ Thoughtful readers will agree.” — The Journal of America’s Military Past review
"This extensively documented book covers those operations from its origins through the Civil War. The author, a retired Naval War College professor, shows how the initiative and maneuver inherent in amphibious warfare was used to advantage to land forces behind enemy strongholds, and how those traditions laid a foundation for the highly refined amphibious warfare of the 20th century." — SEAPOWER
ISBN: 9781682470886
Dimensions: 231mm x 154mm x 27mm
Weight: 575g
320 pages