Adopted Son
Washington, Lafayette, and the Friendship that Saved the Revolution
Lafayette came to America a rebellious youth whose defiance of his king made him a celebrity in France. His money and connections attracted the favor of the Continental Congress, which advised Washington to keep the exuberant Marquis from getting himself killed. But when the boy-general was wounded in his first battle, he became a hero of two countries. As the war ground on, Washington found in his young charge the makings of a courageous and talented commander whose loyalty, generosity, and eagerness to please his Commander in Chief made him one of the war’s most effective and inspired generals. Lafayette’s hounding of Cornwallis’s army was the perfect demonstration of Washington’s unconventional “bush-fighting” tactics, and led to the British surrender at Yorktown.
Their friendship continued throughout their lives. Lafayette inspired widespread French support for a struggling young America and personally influenced Washington’s antislavery views. Washington’s enduring example as general and statesman guided Lafayette during France’s own revolution years later.
Using personal letters and other key historical documents, Adopted Son offers a rare glimpse of the American Revolution through the friendship between Washington and Lafayette. It offers dramatic accounts of battles and intimate portraits of such major figures as Alexander Hamilton, Benedict Arnold, and Benjamin Franklin. The result is a remarkable, little-known epic of friendship, revolution, and the birth of a nation.
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Creators
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Release date
January 30, 2007 -
Formats
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Kindle Book
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- ISBN: 9780553903423
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- ISBN: 9780553903423
- File size: 3984 KB
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Languages
- English
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Reviews
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Publisher's Weekly
November 20, 2006
Personal friends and political allies, George Washington and the Marquis de Lafayette had one of the most important friendships of the 18th century. In this enjoyable study, Clary (The Place Where Hell Bubbled Up
: A History of the First National Park
) argues that although each man was a hero of the American Revolution, it was their partnership that secured American victory. Both men were orphans, and their devotion to each other was motivated by a deep psychological bond. As the title suggests, Washington was something of a father figure to the younger Frenchman, and Lafayette gave the general "unwavering loyalty, truly filial devotion." But the mentoring was not wholly one-sided: Lafayette was committed to the abolition of slavery, and Clary suggests that it was because of Lafayette's influence that Washington chose to free his slaves on his wife's death. The chapters on Lafayette's role in the French Revolution and Washington's anguish over Lafayette's imprisonment make this book far broader than the usual 1776 account. Occasionally, Clary gives over to cutesy Frenchisms (about Lafayette being wounded at the Battle of Brandywine, he writes, "If this was martial glory, très bien
"). Still, on the whole, Clary has satisfyingly woven together grand military history with an intimate portrait of deep affection. Illus. -
Library Journal
January 1, 2007
In this study of the 18th-century French military and political leader, the Marquis de Lafayette (1757-1834), who came to America to aid in its Revolution, Clary (history, Eastern New Mexico Univ.; "Rocket Man: Robert H. Goddard and the Birth of the Space Age") focuses on the relationship between Lafayette and George Washington. He says that Lafayette found in the older Washington a father figure whom he could emulate, while Washington discovered in Lafayette a courageous and loyal admirer to mentor and love as a son. Clary ably portrays how the immature and excitable Lafayette grew under General Washington's tutelage. He then chronicles the sad missteps that the politically naïve Lafayette took in trying to transform France into a constitutional monarchy and the years of imprisonment and exile that resulted. Clary admirably contributes to an understanding of Lafayette's importance to American independence; of the uncertainty, in Lafayette's time, of that independence; and of the private side of Washington. This well-researched work is generally quite readable, but its length and Clary's tendency to pepper his text with quotations (e.g., "Knox scarcely ever quitted the batteries, ' the chevalier de Chastellex reported") may put off some casual readers. It would be a valuable addition to most academic and larger public libraries.Lawrence R. Maxted/Gannon Univ., Erie, PACopyright 2007 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
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Booklist
February 1, 2007
In 1777 a wealthy 19-year-old nobleman from France presented his untested military services to the Continental army. Prudent as always, Washington tried the kid out as an aide before consenting to a command for Gilbert du Motier, Marquis de la Fayette. After proving his courage with a severe wounding at that year's Battle of Brandywine Creek, Lafayette was on his way to the military glory he sought, and the Americans had in him an advocate for French intervention against the British, which they sought. As Clary shows from the extensive correspondence that Washington and Lafayette conducted, their relationship deepened into an unabashedly paternal-filial one. His work's tone captures the sincere mutual solicitude that arose between the two, characterized by gratitude from Washington for Lafayette's personal loyalty, and by near idolization of Washington by Lafayette. Clary acquits himself well in narrating the military action of the major battles in which Lafayette commanded: Monmouth in 1778 and Yorktown in 1781. Portraying youth learning from experience, Clary's history will deservedly tap the readership for the War of Independence.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2007, American Library Association.)
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Formats
- Kindle Book
- OverDrive Read
- EPUB ebook
Languages
- English
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