Soldiers for Sale

German "Mercenaries" with the British in Canada during the American Revolution (1776-83)

Livre numérique

The British Army that fought the American Revolutionaries was in fact an Anglo-German army. The British Crown had doubts about the willingness of English soldiers to fight against other English-speaking people in North America. It also doubted the loyalty of the Canadiens who had only just been taken over after the conquest of New France. It thus turned to the princes of German States, who were also relatives of England’s ruling family, to obtain troops. To the Americans, these soldiers are known as The Hessians. In return for large amounts of money, German princes and barons provided about 30,000 soldiers, of whom some 10,000 were located in Canada for up to seven years and 2,400 chose to remain in Canada after the war. Many were dragged unwillingly from their families and sent to fight in a war in which they had no interest. Those who remained in Canada represented close to 5 percent of the male population at the time. They melted into the French and English-speaking societies, their names were Gallicized or Anglicized, but their history was unknown until this book appeared, even to their own descendants.

Table des matières

Table des matières
Soldiers for Sale 1
Notes 7
Table of contents 9
Preface by Virginia Easley Demarce, ph.d. 13
Preface by the Late Marcel Trudel 15
Foreword 17
Acknowledgements 21
Introduction 23
Chapter I. England's Search for Mercenaries 33
Chapter II. Recruiting the German Mercenaries 49
Chapter III. The Germans and the Warfrom 1776 to 1778 69
Chapitre IV. The Germans and the War from 1778 to 1783 115
Chapter V. The Germans after the War: Return or Settlement and their Lasting Contribution in Canada 141
Conclusion 179
Appendix A. The German Military Corps in Canada, 1776-17831 183
Appendix B. The Names and Companies of the Regiments of the German Corps 199
Appendix C. Organization of the Hessians in the U.S.A. 203
Appendix D. List of the Mercenaries' Professions 209
Appendix E. List of the Mercenaries by Country of Origin 211
Appendix F. General Description of the German Uniforms Worn in North America, 1776-83 213
Appendix G. Names of German Soldiers who Remained in Canada and their Main Quarters during the American Revolution 221
Appendix H. A Citadel Called Temporary... 261
Bibliography 271

Compléments