Napoleonic War scholar Martin R. Howard presents a revelatory history
about a little known British military campaign in Walcheren 1809. In
July 1809, with the Dutch coast a pistol held at the head of England,
the largest British expeditionary force ever assembled, over 40,000
men and around 600 ships, weighed anchor off the Kent coast and sailed
for the island of Walcheren in the Scheldt estuary. After an initial
success, the expedition stalled and as the lethargic military
commander, John Pitt, Lord Chatham, was at loggerheads with the
opinionated senior naval commander, Sir Richard Strachan, troops were
dying of a mysterious disease termed Walcheren fever. Almost all of
the campaign’s 4,000 dead were victims of disease. The Scheldt was
evacuated and the return home was followed by a scandalous
Parliamentary Inquiry. Walcheren fever cast an even longer shadow. Six
months later 11,000 men were still registered sick. In 1812,
Wellington complained that the constitution of his troops was much
shaken with Walcheren. One of the most disastrous campaigns in British
military history, Walcheren 1809: Scandalous Destruction of a British
Army explores every aspect of the mission from the command decisions
to the tragic aftermath. “For anyone with a soldier or sailor at
Walcheren this book tells the story well, explaining with
documentation how details may differ in other histories. For
researchers, the bibliography of official documents and identification
of numerous surviving memoirs is excellent.” —FGS FORUM
Les mer
Scandalous Destruction of a British Army
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781783033331
Publisert
2020
Utgiver
Independent Publishers Group (Chicago Review Press)
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter