5. The evaluation of the following military titles has been furnished to the editors
by Alan C. Aimone, Military History Librarian of the Library of the United States
Military Academy, and Robert K. Wright Jr., historian in the Organizational History
Branch of the Department of the Army. The former's overall assessment, given in a
letter of 10 Sept. 1976, is the following: “Most of the books . . . would be among
the best military science works of his age. None indicates new departures such as
light infantry tactics or even basic cavalry sources. Such military writers of the
time as . . . Lewis Lochée, James Wolfe and Timothy Pickering are missing . . . that
would reflect a balanced military library of the John Adams era.”
Campbell Dalrymple,
A Military Essay, London, 1761. Considered current literature, this dealt with the problems of recruiting,
clothing, arming, and disciplining infantry and cavalry, furnishing information basic
for establishing an army. An abridgement,
Extracts from a Military Essay, Phila., 1776, is listed in the
Catalogue of JA's Library.
Maurice, Marechal de Saxe,
Reveries, Edinburgh, 1759. Considered basic, this work regularly appears in military inventories
of the time. Listed in the
Catalogue of JA's Library.
W. H. Dilworth, The Life and Heroic Actions of Frederick III [II], King of Prussia . . . containing All the Military Transactions of Germany from the
year 1740, and including All the Operations of the Campaign of 1757, London, 1758.
Guillaume Le Blond, A Treatise of Artillery, London, 1746. Translated from the French, this work was considered important along
with those of Muller's listed below.
Gen. Henry Lloyd, The History of the Late War in Germany; between the King of Prussia and the Empress
of Germany and Her Allies, London, 1763.
None of the standard catalogues lists Muller's works in eight volumes, but these titles
are found in American libraries: La Mamye Clairac, The Field Engineer, transl. Muller, London, 1773. The Attack and Defence of Fortified Places in Three Parts; the Third Edition . . .
enlarged, . . . also Belidor's New Method of Mining; and Valliere on Countermining, London, 1770. A Treatise Containing the Elementary Part of Fortification, London, 1746, 1756, 1774. A Treatise Containing the Practical Part of Fortification, London, 1755, 1774. A Treatise of Artillery, London, 1757, 1768. Muller was the leading English writer on military science.
William Young, Manoeuvres, or Practical Observations on the Art of War, London, 1770, 1771.
Thomas Simes,
The Military Guide for Young Officers, London, 1772. A popular work, this contained a section on military terms arranged
alphabetically. Volume 2 of the 1776 edition is listed in the
Catalogue of JA's Library.
The next three works in
JA's listing are of uncertain identity. No standard catalogue lists an art of war by
Anderson. Robert K. Wright Jr. suggests two possibilities: Marechal de Puysegur,
L'art de la guerre, Paris, 1747, or Granmaison,
La petite guerre, Paris, 1756. The British Museum
Catalogue lists
New Art of War, London, 1726, which was also published under the title
The Art of War, neither with author given.
Evans lists —— deLamont and others,
{ 196 } The Act of War, Phila., 1776 (No. 14816). Conceivably
JA knew of its forthcoming publication.
According to Wright, “Prussian Field Regulations” might be one of several works: Regulations for the Prussian Infantry, transl. William Fawcett, London, 1757; Thomas Hanson, The Prussian Evolutions in Actual Engagements, 2 vols., Phila., 1775; The Prussian (Short) Exercise, N.Y., 1757, this last probably a reprint of the Fawcett translation.
The “King of Prussia's Advice to Young Officers,” again in Wright's view, seems a
garbled title derived from two works perhaps: Frederick the Great, Instructions for His Generals, transl., London, 1762; Gen. James Wolfe, Instructions to Young Officers, London, 1768.
J. L. Pleydell, An Essay on Field Fortification, London, 1768.
Thomas Simes, The Military Medley, London, 1768.
Bernard Forest de Belidor, “the 18th-century Vauban of fortifications,” wrote a number
of widely circulated books, almost none apparently translated: La science des ingénieurs dans la conduite des travaux de fortification et d'architecture
civile, Paris, 1729, 1739, 1754, 1775. Le bombardier françois ou nouvelle méthode de jetter les bombes avec précision, Paris, 1731. Traité des fortifications, Paris, 1735. Nouveau cours de mathématiques, à l'usage de l'artillerie et du génie, Paris, 1725, 1757. Oeuvres diverses . . . concernant l'artillerie et le génie, Amsterdam, 1764.
It should be added that although
JA lists authors and in some instances brief titles, he apparently knew little at this
time about his selections, for later he asks Tudor who Belidor is and in what language
he wrote (
JA to Tudor,
14 Nov., below).