Front cover image for Benedict Arnold, revolutionary hero : an American warrior reconsidered

Benedict Arnold, revolutionary hero : an American warrior reconsidered

Bendict Arnold stands on one of the most vilified figures in American history. Stories of his treason have so come to define him that his name, like that of Judas, is virtually synonymous with treason. Yet Arnold was one of the most heroic and remarkable individuals of his time, indeed in all of American history. A brilliant military leader of un-common bravery, Arnold poured his all into the Revolutionary cause, sacrificing his family life, health, and financial well-being for a conflict that left him physically crippled, sullied by false accusations, and profoundly alienated from the American cause of liberty. Distinguished historian James Kirby Martin's landmark biography, the result of a decade's labor, stands as an invaluable antidote to this historical distortion. Careful not to endow the Revolutionary generation with mythical proportions of virtue, Martin shows how self-serving, venal behavior was just as common in the Revolutionary era as in our own time. Arnold, a deeply committed patriot, suffered acutely because of his lack of political savvy in dealing with those who attacked his honor and reputation. Tracing Arnold's life from his difficult childhood through his grueling winter trek across the howling Maine wilderness, his valiant defense of Lake Champlain, and his crucial role in the Quebec and Saratoga campaigns, Martin has given us a whole new perspective on this dramatic and exceptional figure, set against the tumultuous background of the American Revolution
Print Book, English, ©1997
New York University Press, New York, ©1997
collective biographies
xvii, 535 pages, 24 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations, maps ; 24 cm
9780814755600, 0814755607
36343341
Prologue : treason! treason! treason! black as hell
A childhood of legends
A person to be reckoned with in New Haven
Irrepressible acts of martial resistance
The provincial politics of rebellion
Into the howling Maine wilderness
Hannibalian breakthrough to Quebec
Liberty or death at the walls of Quebec
A winter's worth of making brick without straw
Reduced to a great rabble
Malevolent spirits in the summer of 1776
A most tenacious naval commander
The valiant defense of Lake Champlain
Fundamental matters of military rank and personal honor
The humiliating part of a faithful soldier
An unsettled return to the northern theater
The Battles of Saratoga
A violated right not fully restored
Epilogue : the current coinage of ingratitude