Fred Anderson.
Crucible of War: The Seven Years' War and the Fate of Empire in British
North America, 1754-1766.
New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2000. xxv + 862 pp. Illustrations, maps, notes,
index. $40.00 (cloth), ISBN 0-375-70636-4 .
Reviewed by:
Daniel J. Hulsebosch , Saint Louis University School of Law.
Published by:
H-Law
(September, 2001)
An Empire of
War and
Liberty
Fred Anderson's study of the Seven Years' War synthesizes
several lines of scholarship and offers many new insights into that
complex event and the decade that followed. His fundamental argument is
that the war initiated a dispute about the nature of the
British
Empire that continued after the peace treaty and led directly to American
Revolution. Here Anderson
picks up the venerable debate between historians who argue that the
Revolution was the "aftermath" of the Seven Years' War and others who
emphasize the Stamp Act and regulations.[1] The former concentrate on the
financial burden and the new western migration that the War brought in its
train. Those who finger the Stamp Act portray the Revolution as a conflict
over principle or at least ideology; they view the Revolutionaries as
deeply committed to the idea that the central government was subject to
principled limitations.
Anderson
believes that these two interpretations can be reconciled. The key to his
analysis is the effect that the War had on metropolitan and provincial
understandings of the Empire. Each side of the
Atlantic
drew different lessons from the conquest of New France. The colonists
thought that their participation in the imperial war had finally shown
them to be equal members in the Empire. By contrast, the War rigidified
the metropolitan view of the Empire as a pyramid of authority. The
Parliamentary revenue acts were designed to raise money to support the
continuing presence of the British military in America, forcing the
colonists to pay in taxes what they previously viewed as gifts due only in
times of war.
In short, London ministers and American colonists had
"competing visions of empire" (p. 746). This exposition of conflicting
constitutional visions calls to mind the work of John Phillip Reid and
Jack P. Greene.[2] They argue that the colonists drew on a traditional
English conception of government as limited by the customary restraints of
consent and fundamental law, while at home that conception had given way
to one of an unfettered British Parliament. These visions were
irreconcilable, and the question becomes why the rupture occurred when it
did. Anderson's answer is that a decade of mutual misunderstanding
accelerated the two sides toward open conflict. He also reminds us that a
lot of resonant constitutionalism, including much we still hear today,
sprang up as the first
British Empire
flexed its "sinews of power."[3]
One limitation of this bipolar interpretation is that it
simplifies the constitutional situation on both sides of the
Atlantic.
Those in the colonies, for example, did not all share the same vision of
the Empire. Different groups had different perspectives, and it will not
do to classify the imperial agents serving in the provinces as
metropolitan. For one thing, it was often those agents who formulated what
became at home the orthodox view of the colonies. In addition, they rested
their theory of imperial government on Crown power, not Parliamentary
sovereignty, and to them it mattered little if the Crown enacted the
policies they developed on the ground using its prerogative, as with the
Proclamation of 1763, or through Parliament. That choice was a function of
metropolitan politics. Similarly, the colonial opponents of the new
imperial regulation were not a coherent bloc with a single vision of
empire. Much divided urban merchants and lawyers, for example, from
frontier settlers. They were united in Revolution by their common
opposition, and the strains between them began to show soon afterward.[4]
Anderson
leaves off in 1766, but by then, he argues, the die was cast. He concludes
that we should view "the Seven Years' War and the Revolution together as
epochal events that yoked imperialism and republicanism in American
political culture" and then suggests that this perspective on the founding
era will help us understand "a national history in which war and freedom
have often intertwined" (p. 746). He even offers a tantalizing
counter-factual suggestion that a few changes in British policy would have
resulted not in revolution but rather in a commonwealth structure coming
much earlier than it did and including the thirteen mainland colonies. But
to flesh out these ideas would demand another volume, and perhaps
Anderson is writing it.
The one we have now opens with nine maps that set the stage
for what was truly a global conflict. These are well done and include a
chronological map of key battles, one of Native American nations, and
another of Quebec and the fateful Plains of Abraham. There are also maps
of the Caribbean, continental Europe, and India, demonstrating that by the
1750s the European empires had already moved well beyond the Atlantic
world.
But much of the fighting occurred in a small corner of
North America along the St. Lawrence River and in the Champlain Valley:
the early and, for a long while, lone British victory at Lake George; the
grisly siege of Louisbourg that led to the expulsion of 5,400
French-Canadians from Acadia (which Anderson likens to "ethnic cleansing"
(p. 114); and the storied siege of Quebec, memorialized in Benjamin West's
paintings of Major General James Wolfe and the Marquis de Montcalm each
dying on the battlefield.
Anderson
revises much of the conventional wisdom about these battles. Just one
example is the death of Wolfe.
Anderson
argues that Wolfe, suffering from tuberculosis and taking opiates, felt
overwhelmed by the grueling war and sought an honorable exit. His aides
thought his plan to attack Quebec directly was unwise, but Wolfe was
choreographing a heroic end for himself; he was not trying to grab real
estate for the Empire. As it turned out, the defense was more bedraggled
that Wolfe expected, and Montcalm, dependent on a Canadian militia for
which he felt little but contempt, could not match the disciplined British
army. At the end of the day Wolfe got his heroic death, and by the way the
British Empire won Canada.
Anderson's
first book analyzed the War's effect on Massachusetts militiamen who
served the Empire,[5] but there is little social history from the bottom
in Crucible of War. His focus on the larger players yields its own
rewards. Anderson
gleefully romps through successive British administrations and the
military hierarchy and has a Namierite talent for sizing up individual
ambitions. As Benedict Anderson notes, there was often a "stagey quality"
to elite affection for empire.[6] You get that sense in Fred Anderson's
book as well. Imperial war was a theatrical exploit for many, a chance to
make a mark and win appointment to some remunerative post--ideally at home
but more likely abroad. Empire was opportunity, and the difference between
the diplomats and generals on the one hand and the merchants in
counting-houses on the other may not have been quite as large as the
Weberian distinction between speculation and capitalism. Renewed attention
to these rational mercenaries also sheds light on the controversy about
the essential character of the Empire--military or commercial?[7]--and
suggests that yet another binary may be synthesized.
Older histories of the War end after the deaths of Montcalm
and Wolfe.[8] But they die only midway through
Anderson's
narrative, which helps demonstrate his principal argument that the battles
were only half the War, and that the War defined future battles too.
Anderson's book also visits Hanover, Bengal, and elsewhere. Correcting the
usual American-centered interpretation, Anderson declares that "the Battle
of Quiberon Bay," on the southwest coast of France, "and not the more
celebrated Battle of Quebec, was the decisive military event of 1759" (p.
383). Again, "in the end, it was Lagos and Quiberon Bay that proved
decisive at Quebec, and control of the Atlantic that settled ownership of
Canada" (p. 395). Now here is revisionism. The reader wants more on this,
and wonders why Anderson writes so much about the deaths of Montcalm and
Wolfe but gives no other reference to Lagos in these pages.[9] Also
curious is this thick book's thin treatment of the Caribbean.
Why did the War have one legacy for thirteen mainland colonies and another
for the additional thirteen British colonies to the north and south?[10]
But this book focuses on mid-century
North
America, and perhaps the greatest difference between older and newer
histories of this time and place is the role of the Native Americans. Here
they share the stage with European and provincial characters. The index
refers to thirty Indian nations, and Anderson
shows that there were divisions among them, although the War itself
encouraged a "nativist" identity in the Ohio Valley (p. 332). On the
advice of imperial agents like Sir William Johnson, the Crown treated the
Indians within its territory as quasi-subjects to whom it owed duties, not
as savages barriers to expansion--more or less the provincial view. If
Anderson follows this volume with another, he will probably explore the
way the Empire finally cut its ties with those quasi-subjects, leaving
them to fend for themselves in a nation where they were, legally,
"domestic dependent nations,"[11] but, practically, obstacles to be
removed.[12]
Much more is in this book. There is grist for those
interested in the tension between European and American styles of warfare,
the problems of supply, the role of the British military in America
between the War and the Revolution, and other important issues. For the
number of topics canvassed, the geography covered, and the deft sketches
of leading figures, this book is a tour de force. It's also quite
handsome. In addition to the maps, paintings, and drawings, Anderson has
broken his work into eight parts that are further divided into many short
chapters, which keep the whole from feeling unwieldy. It is well-written,
and it has an excellent index. Anderson wanted to write a book for
"general readers" as well as professional historians (p. xv). He has
succeeded.[13] This is a book you will keep in a prominent place for a
long time.
Finally, Crucible of War is a tribute to Lawrence
Henry Gipson's monumental, fifteen-volume history of the British Empire in
America. That work is the single most cited source in Anderson's
footnotes, and he is among the few to have read it all.[14] Gipson
conceived his project in 1924 and published the volumes between 1936 and
1970, but, with their epic battles and diplomatic intrigue, they all seem
closer in spirit to the date of conception than completion. Imperial
history fell out of fashion after the Second World War and has only
recently enjoyed a renaissance, of which Anderson's work is a part.[15]
Gipson called the Seven Years' War "the great war for the empire" and
Anderson must agree. The difference is that Gipson saw the American
continent as the booty of imperial war, whereas Anderson views empire less
as an object than structures, practices, and other legacies that were
bequeathed to the independent states. Gipson's new nation was a young
rogue; Anderson's early republic is precocious and more purposefully
dangerous. It was born an empire.
Notes
[1]. Compare Lawrence Henry Gipson, "The American
Revolution as an Aftermath of the Great War for Empire," Political
Science Quarterly 65 (1950-51): 86-104, and Theodore Draper, A
Struggle for Power: The American Revolution (New York, Times
Books/Random House, 1996), with Edmund S. and Helen M. Morgan, The
Stamp Act: Prologue to Revolution (Chapel Hill: University of North
Carolina Press, 1953; 3d rev. ed., 1998), and John M. Murrin, "The French
and Indian War, the American Revolution and the Counter-Factual
Hypothesis: Reflections on Lawrence Henry Gipson and John Shy," Reviews
in American History 1 (1973): 307-18. See also Bernard Bailyn,
The Ideological Origins of the American Revolution (Cambridge,
Mass.: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 1967; expanded ed.,
1992).
[2]. John Phillip Reid, The Constitutional History of
the American Revolution, 4 vols. (Madison: University of Wisconsin
Press, 1986-1993; one-vol. abr. ed., 1995); Jack P. Greene, Peripheries
and Center: An Interpretation of British-American Constitutional
Development, 1607-1788 (Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1986).
[3]. John Brewer, The Sinews of Power: War, Money and
the English State, 1688-1783 (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1989).
[4]. See Daniel J. Hulsebosch, "Imperia in Imperio: The
Multiple Constitution of Empire in New York, 1750-1777," Law and
History Review 16 (1998): 319-79; Margaret M. Spector, The American
Department of the British Government, 1768-1782 (New York: Columbia
University Press, 1940).
[5]. Fred Anderson, A People's Army: Massachusetts
Soldiers and Society in the Seven Years' War (Chapel Hill: University
of North Carolina Press, 1984).
[6]. Benedict Anderson, Imagined Communities:
Reflections on the Origin and Spread of Nationalism, rev. ed. (London
and New York: Verso, 1991), 111.
[7]. Compare Stephen S. Webb, "The Data and Theory of
Restoration Empire," William and Mary Quarterly, 3d ser., 43
(1986): 431-59, with Richard R. Johnson, "The Imperial Webb: The Thesis of
Garrison Government in Early America Considered," William and Mary
Quarterly, 3d ser., 43 (1986): 408-30.
[8]. See, e.g., the final volume, Montcalm
and Wolfe, in Francis Parkman's epic France and England in North
America, 7 vols. (Boston, Little, Brown, 1865-92; reprint in 2 vols.,
edited by David Levin, New York: Library of America, 1983).
[9]. Lagos is on the coast of Portugal, Britain's ally at
the time. The British navy under Admiral Edward Boscawen defeated a French
force there in 1759. Lawrence H. Gipson, The Great War for the Empire:
The Culmination, 1760-1763 (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1954), 14-15.
[10]. For an exploration of the Caribbean in this era, see
Andrew J. O'Shaughnessy, An Empire Divided: The American Revolution and
the British Caribbean (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press,
2000).
[11]. Cherokee Nation v. Georgia, 30 U.S. (5 Peters)
1, 17 (1831).
[12]. See Colin Calloway, Crown and Calumet:
British-Indian Relations, 1783-1815 (Norman: University of Oklahoma
Press, 1987); Eric Hinderaker, Elusive Empires: Constructing
Colonialism in the Ohio Valley, 1673-1800 (New York: Cambridge
University Press, 1997).
[13]. Crucible of War won the 2001 Francis Parkman
Prize, awarded by the Society of American Historians to the book that
"best represents the union of the historian and the artist."
[14]. As John Shy remarks, it's hard to think of any modern
historian who won more awards and had less influence than Gipson. John
Shy, "The Empire Remembered: Lawrence Henry Gipson, Historian," in John
Shy, A People Numerous and Armed: Reflections on the Military Struggle
for American Independence (New York: Oxford University Press, 1976),
109-31.
[15]. Another sign is the newly re-written Oxford
History of the British Empire, ed. Wm. Roger Louis, 5 vols (New York:
Oxford University Press, 1998).
Library of Congress
Call Number: E199 .A59 2000
Subjects:
* United States -- History -- French and Indian War,
1755-1763.
* Seven Years' War, 1756-1763.
* Great Britain -- Colonies -- History -- 18th century.
* United States -- History -- French and Indian War, 1755-1763 --
Influence.
Citation: Daniel J. Hulsebosch . "Review of Fred Anderson,
Crucible of War: The Seven Years' War and the Fate of Empire in British
North America, 1754-1766," H-Law, H-Net Reviews, September, 2001. URL:
http://www.h-net.org/reviews/showrev.cgi?path=1085999891595.
“…this most attractive book…will command a wide readership among everyone
interested in colonial or military history and will immediately become the
premiere account of the North American War.”
Ian K. Steele, review of Crucible of War: The Seven Years’ War and the
Fate of Empire in British North America, 1754-1766, by Fred Anderson,
The William and Mary Quarterly, 57 (October 2000): 864-868.