Waging War in America: Operational Challenges of Armies During the American Revolution

Back to library

Waging War in America: Operational Challenges of Armies During the American Revolution
Don Hagist, Todd Braisted, Alexander Burns, John Rees, Robert Selig
August 1, 2024
01:18:02

Historian Don Hagist moderates a panel of contributors to the recent anthology Waging War in America 1775-1783exploring the significant operational challenges faced by American, Loyalist, French and German forces during the Revolution. From recruitment and training to tactics and logistics, the panelists also examine how the various armies adapted to the specific circumstances of this war. Panelists for this discussion include historians Todd Braisted, Alexander Burns, John Rees and Robert Selig.

About the Panelists

Moderator: Don Hagist is the managing editor of the Journal of the American Revolution (allthingsliberty.com). Mr. Hagist’s areas of interest include the demographics and material culture of the British army in the American Revolution, British operations in Rhode Island and wives of British soldiers. He has published numerous articles in academic journals, as well as books including Noble Volunteers: The British Soldiers Who Fought the American Revolution (Westholme, 2020).

Todd Braisted is an author and independent researcher specializing in Loyalist studies during the American Revolution. He has published over forty books and journal articles on a variety of period subjects, including Grand Forage 1778: The Battleground Around New York City (Westholme, 2016). Over the past four decades, he has served as president of the Bergen County Historical Society and the Brigade of the American Revolution, and as a Fellow in the Company of Military Historians. He likewise serves as a history advisor to Crossroads of the American Revolution, and on the Advisory Council of Revolution NJ.

Alexander Burns, Ph.D., is an assistant professor of history at Franciscan University of Steubenville. Dr. Burns studies North America and military Europe in the eighteenth century. He completed his Ph.D. under the supervision of Katherine B. Aaslestead at West Virginia University in 2021. His doctoral dissertation was entitled “The Entire Army Says Hello: Common Soldiers’ Experiences, Localism, and Army Reform in Britain and Prussia, 1739-1789.” Recently, he edited a volume in honor of the late Christopher Duffy, The Changing Face of Old Regime Warfare: Essays in Honour of Christopher Duffy (Helion Press, 2022). His next book, Infantry in Battle 1733-1783, will be published by Helion Press in 2024.

John Rees is an author and independent historian who has been writing on the experiences and material culture of common soldiers and women in the armies of the American Revolution for over thirty years. His research has focused on military foods, soldiers’ belongings and burden, army wagons and watercraft, campaign shelters and battle and campaign studies—many of his works being available online. Mr. Rees’ first book was “They Were Good Soldiers”: African Americans Serving in the Continental Army, 1775-1783 (Helion Press, 2019). He is currently working on his second book that will focus on the participation of Black soldiers in North America’s founding wars, 1754-1865, covering British, Spanish, French, German and American forces.

Robert Selig, Ph.D., is a historian and specialist on the role of French forces under the comte de Rochambeau during the American Revolution and serves as project historian for the Washington-Rochambeau Revolutionary Route National Historic Trail. His publications include Hussars in Lebanon! (2004) and nearly 150 articles in American, German and French scholarly and popular history magazines, as well as chapters in books and anthologies. His honors and awards include the French Ordre national du Mérite (2022), La Médaille d’Or des Valeurs Francophones of La Renaissance Française (2019), the Erick Kurz Memorial Award of the Steuben Society of America and the Distinguished Patriot Award, National Society of the Sons of the American Revolution (2012).