Noble Volunteers cover art
 Noble Volunteers cover art

Noble Volunteers
The British Soldiers Who Fought the American Revolution

by Don N. Hagist, Foreword by Rick Atkinson

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About This Book

Winner of the 2020 American Revolution Roundtable of Philadelphia Book of the Year Award

The First Full Account of the Men Who Came to America to Defend an Empire

Redcoats. For Americans, the word brings to mind a occupying army that attempted to crush a revolution against king and country. For centuries these soldiers have remained hidden despite their major role in one of the greatest events in world history. There was more to these men than their red uniforms, but the individuals who formed the ranks are seldom described in any detail in historical literature, leaving unanswered questions. Who were they? Why did they join the army? Where did they go when the war was over?

In Noble Volunteers: The British Soldiers Who Fought the American Revolution, Don N. Hagist brings life to these soldiers, describing the training, experiences, and outcomes of British soldiers who fought during the Revolution. Drawing on thousands of military records and other primary sources in British, American, and Canadian archives, and the writings of dozens of officers and soldiers, Noble Volunteers shows how a peacetime army responded to the onset of war, how professional soldiers adapted quickly and effectively to become tactically dominant, and what became of the thousands of career soldiers once the war was over.

In this historical tour de force, introduced by Pulitzer Prize winner Rick Atkinson, Hagist dispels long-held myths, revealing how remarkably diverse British soldiers were. They represented a variety of ages, nationalities, and socioeconomic backgrounds, and many had joined the army as a peacetime career, only to find themselves fighting a war on another continent in often brutal conditions. Against the sweeping backdrop of the war, Hagist directs his focus on the small picture, illuminating the moments in an individual soldier’s life—those hours spent nursing a fever while standing sentry in the bitter cold, or writing a letter to a wife back home. What emerges from these vignettes is the understanding that while these were “common” soldiers, each soldier was completely unique, for, as Hagist writes, “There was no ‘typical’ British soldier.”

DON N. HAGIST is managing editor of the Journal of the American Revolution. An expert on the British army in the American Revolution, he is the author of many books and articles, including British Soldiers, American War: Voices of the American Revolution (Westholme 2012) and The Revolution’s Last Men: The Stories Behind the Photographs (Westholme 2015). He lives in Providence, Rhode Island.

Praise for Noble Volunteers:

“A detailed and often entertaining history. . . . The author’s research in American and British archives turns up a great deal of technical, statistical, and organizational details as well as personal writings of the large percentage of enlisted men who were literate. Readers will enjoy many revealing stories of soldiering in that distant era.”—Kirkus

“Few stereotypes from the American Revolution are as well-developed as that of the soldier who fought for Britain. . . . In Noble Volunteers, Don Hagist invites us to peer beneath the red coat. . . . We follow the British soldiers in America from Boston in 1773, before hostilities break out, to Yorktown in 1781. But it is not the battlefield that is most intriguing here; it is instead Mr. Hagist’s wealth of detail about all other aspects of a British soldier’s life. . . . Every reader is sure to learn something. . . . Lavishly illustrated, the book includes several images from the manuscripts on which Noble Volunteers relies; archives are mined in the United States and England, but also in Canada, Ireland and Scotland. Scouring those remains and “piecing together fragments,” Mr. Hagist’s “patchwork biographies” bring life to the British soldiers who fought in the American Revolution, giving human dimensions to those anonymous figures beneath their red coats whose caricature we should put to rest.”—Wall Street Journal

“Few American readers know anything about the British soldiers who fought against their colonial forefathers during the Revolutionary War. This book solves that problem by delving into myriad primary sources to illuminate details of the lives of the British soldiers who fought and died so far from home. The author, Don N. Hagist, is the editor of the Journal of the American Revolution, and he knows this subject well. . . . Only a few British soldiers left accounts of their days in uniform, but the author has conducted impressive research in archives located in the United Kingdom, as well as in Canada and the United States, in order to produce this very thorough study. All those readers who are interested in the American Revolution will definitely want to add Noble Volunteers to their military libraries.”Journal of America’s Military Past

“No one has studied the British enlisted ranks in the Revolution with greater diligence and insight than Don N. Hagist. Now he has given us a remarkable group portrait of these men, illuminating who they were, why and how they fought, and what their lives were like.”—Rick Atkinson, from the Foreword to Noble Volunteers

“Don Hagist has written what will prove to be the definitive account of British soldiers who fought in the American Revolution. Compelling, interesting, and brilliantly conceived—using previously unpublished records, Hagist’s impeccable research unearths the hidden war of the British enlisted men during the Revolution.”—Patrick K. O’Donnell, author of Washington’s Immortals

“Anchored upon vivid vignettes of military life, many taken from previously unpublished documents, Noble Volunteers is a significant, ground-breaking study that reconstructs the entire arc of the humble redcoat’s experience, from recruitment to demobilisation. Above all, it restores humanity to the thousands of rank-and-file soldiers who fought so tenaciously in an ultimately futile effort to keep the rebellious American colonies within the British Empire.”—Stephen Brumwell, author of Turncoat: Benedict Arnold and the Crisis of American Liberty

 

Images from the book, from left to right, top to bottom: Recruiting poster for the 52nd Regiment of Foot, appealing to young men aspiring to become “Gentleman Soldiers,” courtesy Eric H. Schnitzer. A fifer depicted in the frontispiece of a British fife instruction book, dressed in conformance with the clothing regulations of the 1770s and 1780s. In the near background is a tent that is shaped like a bell tent for storing arms, albeit rendered much too large. Five-man soldiers’ tents appear in rows in the background. From Entire New and Compleat Instructions for the Fife, London: John Preston, no date. “British troops on the March, 1790, Anne S. K. Brown Military Collection. “The Relief” by H. W. Bunbury, 1781, Anne S. K. Brown Military Collection.

Information

Trim 6 x 9
Pages 392
Imagery 20 illustrations
Published November 2020
Categories American Revolution & Founding Era
Military
Social History
ISBN Hardback: 978-1-59416-349-4
eBook: 978-1-59416-668-6

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