Bloody Mohawk: The French and Indian War & American Revolution on New York’s Frontier

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Bloody Mohawk: The French and Indian War & American Revolution on New York’s Frontier by Richard Berleth

Loss not just loss of life, but loss of the common stuff that holds humanity together scarred the survivors and shaded the recollections they left to posterity. Loss is what gives the wind in the valley its special remorsefulness, the fog and lake-effect snow its isolating loneliness. Something happened here that was more intense, more shattering, than the ordinarily sorrowful consequences of war. — Richard Berleth

In this narrative history of the Mohawk River Valley and surrounding region from 1713 to 1794, Professor Richard Berleth charts the passage of the valley from a fast-growing agrarian region streaming with colonial traffic to a war-ravaged wasteland. The valley’s diverse cultural mix of Iroquois Indians, Palatine Germans, Scots-Irish, Dutch, English, and Highland Scots played as much of a role as its unique geography in the cataclysmic events of the 1700s – the French and Indian Wars and the battles of the American Revolution.

Patriots eventually wrenched the valley from British interests and the Iroquois nations, but at fearsome cost. When the fighting was over, the valley lay in ruins and as much as two-thirds of its population lay dead or had been displaced. But by not holding this vital inland waterway – the gateway to the West, “the river between the mountains” – America might have lost the Revolution, as well as much or all of the then-poorly-defined province of New York.

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Weight .624 kg